Portrait of Kendall Loh

Technical strategy, applied AI, and product architecture

Hi, I'm

Kendall Loh

Technical strategy, applied AI, product architecture, and engineering leadership.

I work across technical strategy, applied AI, product architecture, and platform leadership, translating complex systems into product decisions and durable execution in high-stakes environments. Currently at Moderna.

I work at the intersection of software, applied AI, and technical strategy. My focus is on turning complex systems into clear product, platform, and organizational decisions.

My background spans causal inference, network biology, applied ML, software engineering, product architecture, and engineering leadership, with experience operating in high-stakes environments where technical depth has to translate into execution.

Get in touch

If you’re hiring for technical strategy, applied AI, product architecture, or engineering leadership, I’d be glad to connect.

A more linear story beneath the surface work.

The throughline has been the same: moving from scientific depth into product, platform, and technical strategy roles where computation has to become execution.

Current

Moderna · 2023–Present

Sequence engineering, codon optimization, platform strategy, and team leadership.

Today the work sits at the intersection of algorithms, platform planning, and execution across high-stakes therapeutic and product contexts.

Build

Aitia · 2019–2023

Software engineering, product architecture, and pharma strategy.

The role expanded from implementation into product and systems design, then into partner-facing strategy where models, products, and business context had to align.

Bridge

Yale research work

An early link between quantitative analysis and real-world decisions.

Policy-oriented research sharpened the habit that still matters most: translating technical insight into work that can actually guide action.

Foundations

Binghamton and Columbia

Biochemistry, statistics, causal inference, and computational methods.

The early years built the analytical base: biological systems first, then the quantitative tooling that made modeling and decision-making feel native.