Maritime

Judgement Built Across Sea and Shore

My maritime life began at sea, where responsibility is immediate and mistakes are rarely abstract.

Ships teach a particular kind of discipline. They teach timing, preparation, technical judgement, patience, teamwork, and respect for consequence. Those lessons shaped not only my professional career, but also the way I look at decisions, risk, and responsibility.

From the Engine Room to Advisory Thinking

My early years at sea gave me a practical foundation in shipboard operations, engineering systems, machinery, maintenance, safety, and the realities of life onboard.

Later, my journey moved ashore into ship management, vessel inspections, drydockings, repairs, planned maintenance, business development, ship finance-related matters, vessel valuation, ship sale and purchase, and chartering-related advisory.

Across these different roles, one lesson became increasingly clear: in maritime business, decisions made too quickly can become expensive very slowly.

Clarity Before Commitment

This is the principle that now guides my maritime advisory work.

Before a vessel is purchased, financed, valued, chartered, repaired, or repositioned, there is often a brief window where clear judgement can prevent avoidable mistakes.

That window is where independent review matters.

It is not always about saying yes. Sometimes the most valuable advice is to slow down, ask better questions, identify missing information, or recognise when a deal should not be pursued.

Areas of Maritime Experience

My maritime experience spans several areas, including:

  • Ship management and technical operations
  • Vessel inspections and condition assessment
  • Drydocking, repairs, and maintenance planning
  • Commercial and operational review
  • Desktop vessel valuation
  • Ship sale and purchase support
  • Chartering feasibility and commercial sense-checking
  • Owner, buyer, broker, and stakeholder communication
  • Pre-deal sanity checks and advisory review

Red Dot Marine

My professional maritime advisory work is now carried through Red Dot Marine.

Red Dot Marine is built around a simple advisory-first approach:

Clarity Before Commitment.

The focus is on helping owners, buyers, financiers, brokers, and business counterparts review maritime decisions with greater discipline before moving into execution.

This includes desktop vessel valuation, pre-deal sanity checks, chartering feasibility review, and selective ship broking support where the mandate, authority chain, and commercial basis are clear.

For maritime advisory enquiries, please visit:

www.reddotmarine.com

Or write to:

advisory@reddotmarine.com