my name is tk spandhla.

i do not believe anything is impossible or any concept is bad.
it simply didn't receive enough persistence, imagination, and open-mindedness.

recent accolades

Patent Inventor (First Universal AI Fashion Sizing/Fitting + Social Intelligence System)
USPTO

2024 Gold Winner - Website of the Year (SMB)
UK Chamber of Commerce

Featured Podcast - Unpacking Mushie Store Design
Instant (Shopify)

University of Maryland - 30 Under 30
Inaugural Class

Website Design - Grand Winner
2020 NYX Macrom Awards

2019 Inc. 5000 - Most Successful US Companies
Hawke Media

Lead Web Designer - 2018 Supreme Court Case - Janus v. AFSCME
AFSCME (Nation's Largest Public Labor Union)

100 Most Influential Think Tanks - Worldwide (UPENN)
Atlantic Council - Assistant Director, Digital Communications

a conversation with younger, me. Takudzwa.

q: first and foremost, what are your thoughts on ai?
a: I think it's the greatest tool of our generation - but It really comes down to how you approach it mentally.

It's had a direct impact on me from a cybersecurity standpoint, it aggregates other's work, and it can build an over-reliance on things coming easy.

so it's a balancing act. but similar to cigarettes and social media's impact on our world - regulation is necassary.

q: what's something you fell in love with that you didn't expect?
a: Being a middle linebacker.

taught me to never play timid. brian dawkins is my favorite athlete of all time. if you practice facing your fears, you'll eventually sprint towards it and realize we overexagerrate most of life.

and tennis. Shoutout Tiafoe and JTCC.

q: what does minimalism actually mean to you?

a: You're not trying to impress them with how much you know — you're trying to make something feel effortless to experience. my process involves throwing everything at the wall, seeing what sticks, and then scaling back.

q: what's something you learned about the world that you wish was different?
a: We rush.

ourselves, our careers, our happiness, and our capacity to remember that we're human.

None of us know what we're doing, and I think there's real beauty in that. we create predetermined benchmarks (ie: at 35, I will xyz) But life is really cool when you treat it like you're writing your autobiography. do your best to love what you read on your deathbed.

(that was stark but it really is what it is).

q: you grew up in zimbabwe and built a career in the U.S. — what did that transition teach you?
a:Resourcefulness is a mindset & never take opportunity for granted. i saw my parents move across the world, have full-time jobs,and then full university course loads in the evening. they never once made it feel as if I didn't have

taught me to work with what's available, which led me to a library with seven dollars and a vision instead of waiting for permission. My happiest days were playing soccer with a plastic bag ball in Zimbabwe.

q: what was the biggest risk you've taken
a: spent 2-3 years learning what i do now at shaw library with $7 in my bank account. booking a 1-way ticket to LA.

q: any regrets?
a: yes. i became hard on myself as i got older.


q: what does a great brief look like to you?
a:Someone who knows what they want to feel, not necessarily what they want it to look like. The best clients come in with a vision and trust — the rest is my job. The hardest projects are the ones where fear gets in the way of the dream. My job is to remove that fear and build something they're proud to show the world.


i love:
- visionaries
- dreams with intentionality
- making people happy (because happy is cool).
- my philadelphia eagles
- the university of maryland terps