Truth is not found. It's the version you haven't broken yet.
| Joined Capco | 2021 |
| Role | Senior Consultant |
| Professional Skills | Technology Consulting |
| Interests |
Journaling, Reading, Strength Training |
I'm Foto, born and raised in Bangkok, Thailand. Throughout most of my life, I've been drawn to creative pursuits—the design and aesthetics behind everything.
I'm a mechanical engineer by training, which, looking back, taught me less about machines than about how to think: break a system into its parts, understand the forces actually acting on it, and design for what's real rather than what's convenient.
After graduation, my interests refused to stay in one place, so I followed my curiosity wherever it led.
What kept me grounded through it all was technology. Hardware, software, or anything in between—I was drawn to the tools that actually move humanity forward, the ones that take hard problems and make them tractable. That curiosity eventually carried me from mechanical systems into technology consulting.
Technology consulting was the right shape for how I think—but Capco is where it truly fit.
What drew me in was the focus. Capco doesn't try to be everything to everyone; it goes deep into the domains it serves, which meant the problems waiting for me weren't generic. They were the hard, specific ones: real-time data architecture, legacy systems that had to keep running while everything modernized around them, and the kind of engineering where a wrong assumption has real consequences. For someone whose curiosity ranges widely, there's something grounding about a place that takes its craft seriously enough to master it.
Over my time at Capco, I've taken on increasingly complex challenges—deeper architecture problems, larger systems, and higher stakes—and I've rarely had to ask for them.
The opportunities have always been there, backed by leaders and teammates who trusted me with difficult challenges, sometimes before I felt fully ready. That trust has done more for my growth than any course ever could. Being given something slightly beyond your reach—and being expected to rise to it—is how you truly grow, both as a professional and as a person.
I'm a mechanical engineer by training, which, looking back, taught me less about machines than about how to think: break a system into its parts, understand the forces actually acting on it, and design for what's real rather than what's convenient.
After graduation, my interests refused to stay in one place, so I followed my curiosity wherever it led.
What kept me grounded through it all was technology. Hardware, software, or anything in between—I was drawn to the tools that actually move humanity forward, the ones that take hard problems and make them tractable. That curiosity eventually carried me from mechanical systems into technology consulting.
Technology consulting was the right shape for how I think—but Capco is where it truly fit.
What drew me in was the focus. Capco doesn't try to be everything to everyone; it goes deep into the domains it serves, which meant the problems waiting for me weren't generic. They were the hard, specific ones: real-time data architecture, legacy systems that had to keep running while everything modernized around them, and the kind of engineering where a wrong assumption has real consequences. For someone whose curiosity ranges widely, there's something grounding about a place that takes its craft seriously enough to master it.
Over my time at Capco, I've taken on increasingly complex challenges—deeper architecture problems, larger systems, and higher stakes—and I've rarely had to ask for them.
The opportunities have always been there, backed by leaders and teammates who trusted me with difficult challenges, sometimes before I felt fully ready. That trust has done more for my growth than any course ever could. Being given something slightly beyond your reach—and being expected to rise to it—is how you truly grow, both as a professional and as a person.