Mark Ferraz
The arc

Twenty-five years of building. The AI inflection compounds it.

Three completed founder cycles, a senior partnership, a Fortune 500 transformation, a product turn at a software company, and a five-year tenure as CPO of an AI-native platform. The chapters below trace the work, today at the top and the first founder cycle at the bottom. The marker in 2025 is when applied AI fluency began compounding on top of operator credentials that were already founder-grade.

  1. 2025 to present · chapter 11
    Astronomy leadership

    Texas Star Party.

    Led a 300-person amateur astronomy event through operational and financial turnaround.

    The achievement.

    President of the 501(c)(3) that runs the Texas Star Party, a roughly 300-person annual gathering of amateur astronomers at Prude Ranch in the Davis Mountains of West Texas.

    The process.

    Leading an operational and financial turnaround. Volunteer for the organization across multiple decades.

    The role.

    President. Volunteer.

    The outcomes.

    Strongest attendance in six-plus years. Cash positive after a deficit. $200K+ in partner revenue for a single event cycle.

  2. 2025 to present · chapter 10
    The exhibition project

    LittleGuy.

    Built and operate a production memory substrate on personal infrastructure.

    The achievement.

    Built and operate LittleGuy (littleguy.app), a persistent memory substrate for AI human agent collaboration. Exhibition project on personal infrastructure.

    The process.

    Personal time, personal infrastructure, personal hardware. Architecture: Neo4j relationships plus pgvector semantic recall, 26 typed node types, OAuth 2.0 plus PKCE for MCP authentication, four async workers (MEMORY_EXTRACT, CLASSIFY, EDGE_INFER, TEMPORAL_DECAY). Connected to Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, web, and mobile. Running. Working.

    The role.

    Builder, operator, sole infrastructure owner.

    The outcomes.

    A production memory control plane that proves how I think about the next generation of AI infrastructure. An exhibition project, available at littleguy.app.

  3. 2021 to present · chapter 09
    Product leadership at Netwoven

    Govern 365.

    Revived a product. Led the category pivot to VDR. Shipped an AI-native next-generation platform in six months.

    The achievement.

    Lead Govern 365, an AI-native SaaS secure collaboration and governance platform serving Microsoft 365 enterprise customers. Flagship use case is the Virtual Data Room for M&A, capital raising, vendor and IP exchange, and board packs.

    The process.

    Joined Netwoven in 2021 and revived Govern 365 as a product. Built the first React UX, the website, and led the pivot into the VDR category with the CEO. Over five years, established the product as a real revenue line and grew the customer base to 35 enterprise accounts. From late 2025 through April 2026, led the team through a six-month build of the next-generation platform, shipped on April 27, 2026. Architected the agentic primitive layer (dynamic workflow, dynamic UX, dynamic task and notification substrate) and delivered 58% infrastructure cost savings through architectural decisions. Delivered the external “Product at the Speed of AI” webinar on building product through the AI inflection.

    The role.

    CPO, Govern 365.

    The outcomes.

    35 enterprise customers. Next-generation platform shipped. 58% infrastructure cost savings. Public framing: secure collaboration powered by Microsoft 365, secured by Microsoft Purview.

  4. 2018 to 2021 · chapter 08
    Transition into product

    BA Insight.

    Transition from consulting into product. Learned the software-company shape from the inside.

    The achievement.

    Joined BA Insight, an enterprise search company, as Director of Customer Success. The transition from consulting into product.

    The process.

    Learned the operating shape of a software company from the inside: product cycles, seasonality, support models, tooling, and the work of operationalizing and productizing services. Participated in company-level decisions through the acquisition process.

    The role.

    Director of Customer Success.

    The outcomes.

    A working understanding of how a software company is built, sold, supported, and absorbed.

  5. 2017 to 2018 · chapter 07
    Transformation lead

    Southwestern Energy.

    Led enterprise transformation at a Fortune 500 oil and gas company.

    The achievement.

    Led enterprise transformation at Southwestern Energy, a Fortune 500 oil and gas company, through SolutionsMark and EASI. Worked with senior leadership to set strategy, build the operating model, and execute across collaboration, records management, enterprise search, and the modern workplace agenda.

    The process.

    Forward-deployed transformation work at a Fortune 500 client. Engagement led through SolutionsMark and EASI, with authority across the full transformation rather than a single component.

    The role.

    Forward Transformation Engineer.

    The outcomes.

    A live transformation program inside a Fortune 500 operating company.

  6. 2014 to 2017 · chapter 06
    Enterprise Alliance Systems

    EASI.

    Senior Partner and #2. 25% equity in a Microsoft solutions consultancy.

    The achievement.

    Senior Partner and second-in-command at EASI, a Microsoft solutions consultancy. Held 25% equity. Led firm operations and delivery across enterprise search, SharePoint, and Dynamics CRM engagements for clients ranging from a few thousand to tens of thousands of users.

    The process.

    Operating leadership across people, delivery, and client relationships. The closest experience to running a partner-shaped business before walking away amicably during a difficult personal period.

    The role.

    Senior Partner, VP of Operations. 25% equity.

    The outcomes.

    Three years of operating leadership inside a partnership structure. Walked away clean.

  7. 2012 to 2014 · chapter 05
    Practice leadership

    iSphere Innovation Partners.

    Built and grew a delivery practice.

    The achievement.

    Led the Collaboration practice at iSphere, a Houston-based consultancy.

    The process.

    Grew a small delivery team. Contributed to business development. Engagements focused on SharePoint and enterprise collaboration platforms.

    The role.

    Practice Director, Collaboration.

    The outcomes.

    A working practice with delivery capability and a pipeline.

  8. 2010 to 2012 · chapter 04
    Third founder cycle

    Quantic Gaming.

    Founded a global esports brand from zero. 70+ staff and 120+ content producers in two years.

    The achievement.

    Founded Quantic Gaming from zero in 2010, in an industry that did not yet have institutional structure. Built it into a global esports brand with 70+ staff and volunteers and 120+ content producers across competitive teams in StarCraft, League of Legends, Call of Duty, Counter-Strike, Dota, Team Fortress 2, and Battlefield 3. Built media production capability alongside the competitive operation.

    The process.

    Raised angel capital. Negotiated sponsorships. Recruited and managed players, content creators, and operational staff. Set organizational direction and led the company through every stage of the early esports market. Two years of compounded learning about building an organization in a market that did not exist yet.

    The role.

    Founder and CEO.

    The outcomes.

    A global brand from nothing. Wound the company down in 2012 when the funding environment for esports could not yet sustain the model. Roster and operational pieces continued under separate ownership and became part of what is now Cloud9.

  9. 2005 to 2012 · chapter 03
    Second founder cycle

    SolutionsMark.

    Founded a consultancy. Grew it to a dozen employees and several million in revenue over seven years.

    The achievement.

    Founded SolutionsMark in 2005 as a Microsoft ecosystem consultancy. Grew the business to a dozen employees and several million dollars in annual revenue over seven years, delivering enterprise architecture and platform engagements to Fortune 500 customers.

    The process.

    Recruited and led the team. Sold the work. Delivered the work. The most significant engagement was a five-year SharePoint architecture and platform program at Chevron, leading the design, development, and delivery of the Global SharePoint Service: a uniform collaboration, workspace, and personal site platform serving 100,000+ users across three geo-distributed datacenters (Houston, Singapore, London), with a team spanning four companies and three continents. At the time, the largest SharePoint implementation in production. A subsequent program at Chevron delivered OneSearch, a global enterprise search service on SharePoint 2010 FAST.

    The role.

    Founder and Principal.

    The outcomes.

    Seven years of profitable operation. Multi-million-dollar annual revenue at peak. Co-authored two Microsoft Press books during this period. Closed in 2012.

  10. 2001 to 2006 · chapter 02
    Early career

    Hein + Associates.

    Junior developer to team lead. Five years in ERP and enterprise application development.

    The achievement.

    Built the foundation. Progressed from junior to senior developer to team lead across ERP, .NET, Dynamics, and enterprise application development for mid-market and enterprise clients.

    The process.

    Five years of repetition under load. Got fast at shipping. Got fast at debugging. Learned what makes a system maintainable and what makes one die. Built the muscle memory that everything else sits on top of.

    The role.

    Developer, senior developer, team lead.

    The outcomes.

    A working engineer with the range to graduate into architecture and the discipline to graduate into leadership.

  11. Late 1999 to early 2001 · chapter 01
    First founder cycle

    MindZipper Networks.

    Founded a hosting, colocation, and web development company at 20. Grew to a team of 15 with a few hundred customers.

    The achievement.

    Founded MindZipper Networks, Inc. at age 20. Built a hosting, colocation, and web development company from zero. Grew the team to fifteen, secured three thousand square feet of datacenter space, and served a few hundred customers across hosting and custom web development.

    The process.

    A speedrun through the late dot-com window. Raised capital, hired engineers, signed leases, sold services, built infrastructure, and operated the company as CEO. Two and a half years of compressed company-building experience that taught the operating muscles I have used ever since.

    The role.

    Founder and CEO.

    The outcomes.

    The company was acquired in early 2001. The buyer assumed the lease, the equipment, the customer base, and the operating obligations as the dot-com window closed. A clean exit at the moment the market did not permit further runway. The cycle was complete: founded, built, operated, and transitioned.