Good project management is invisible when it’s done right. If everything just feels like it’s flowing, that’s not an accident. That’s Julie.
Julie moved around enough when she was young to learn that adapting isn’t just a skill, it’s a superpower. But it was a work-study role under her college director at a small music school that cracked everything open. Suddenly she had a front-row seat to how an organization actually functions: the systems, the sequencing, the invisible scaffolding that keeps everything standing. Most project managers don’t trace their origin story to a music program. Julie does and she wouldn’t have it any other way.
What followed was a career built around one consistent obsession: bringing order to complexity. Event planning, operations, team coordination, business management — different contexts, same core question. How do you make the people, processes, and tools work together so seamlessly that nobody notices the seams? That question eventually led her to FieldWrk, where she’s spent nearly four years doing exactly that.
Day-to-day, Julie’s job is to make sure the right people know the right things at the right moments, and that projects don’t just move forward, but move forward well. If a project feels like it’s effortless, that’s not luck. That’s her, and her team of project managers, working quietly in the background.
Julie currently lives in Nashville with her husband (and high school sweetheart) Alex, and their dog Cooper. She’s a reader, a traveler, a gardener, and a maker of things: pottery, cards, DIY, coloring books; she’ll try anything once. Her ideal morning involves the front porch and nowhere to be. And if you bring up monday.com or Law & Order: SVU, clear your schedule. She has thoughts.
