
Alec Mingione
Founder & Engineer
I’m Alec Mingione. I live in Phoenix Arizona, where I create the future in technology.
I’ve loved making things; being creative for as long as I can remember, and wrote my first program when I was 8 years old, just two weeks after my mom brought home the brand new Emachine 2000 that I taught myself to type on.
The only thing I loved more than computers as a kid was cars, art, and taking things apart. At 13 I began building computers for the time trying to create the biggest and baddest gaming PC. My first build was an ASUS with 4GBs of DDR2 RAM. A caveman now a days!
That curiosity turned into a career. I started as an automation programmer at Honeywell, writing the scripts that kept industrial systems humming. From there I moved into web engineering—cutting my teeth as a junior developer, then joining Charles Schwab as a Software Engineer where I shipped production code for one of the largest brokerages in the world. Every role deepened the same instinct I had as a kid: figure out how the machine works, then make it work better.
At NewGen Business Solutions I stepped into a Senior Lead role and the work shifted from writing features to designing the systems they lived in. I owned architecture decisions, set technical direction for the team, and mentored engineers through complex builds. It was the first time I realized the hardest problems weren't in the code—they were in the gap between what the business needed and what the technology could deliver.
That realization led me to pursue an MBA, which I completed in February 2026—pitching to real investors, stress-testing business models, and learning to speak the language of growth alongside the language of code. Today I'm the founder of MiPi and Co-Founder of Kingdom Kode, and I serve as an on-demand CTO for teams that need someone who can whiteboard architecture in the morning and present unit economics in the afternoon. If you're looking for someone who bridges the boardroom and the codebase, that's exactly the gap I was built to close.