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About Me

For more than two decades I have been helping people and organisations think differently about leadership, contribution and what it means to flourish at work.

As the founder of Flourishing Introverts, much of my work centres on challenging extraversion bias; the often invisible set of assumptions that can lead us to overvalue visibility, speed and self-promotion whilst overlooking other equally valuable ways of contributing.

The reason I care so deeply about this is simple. I’ve spent years watching capable people underestimate themselves because they believed success required them to become someone else.

I’ve also spent years watching organisations overlook talent they were actively trying to attract, develop and retain. Neither outcome is inevitable.

Throughout my career, whether working in leadership development, organisational change, coaching or facilitation, I have been fascinated by the gap between how organisations say they value people and what their systems, cultures and everyday behaviours actually reward.

What do organisations want?
Most organisations genuinely want people to thrive. Few would consciously exclude quieter voices. Yet many continue to operate in ways that favour those who think aloud, process externally and are comfortable making themselves visible. Nobody intends this. That doesn’t stop it happening.

The Founding Story

Over time I came to realise that many of the struggles introverts experience at work are not simply personal challenges to overcome. They are often perfectly understandable responses to environments that have mistaken one style of contribution for the standard against which all others should be measured.

That insight shaped Flourishing Introverts. And yes, the word flourishing matters. It speaks to growth without pretending that growth requires us to become somebody different. It acknowledges development whilst leaving room for authenticity. It allows us to build on our strengths rather than treating our natural preferences as obstacles to overcome.

That philosophy underpins everything I do.

Who I work with?

I work with introverts who want to flourish without feeling they must constantly adapt themselves to fit someone else's idea of success. I work with leaders who want a deeper understanding of personality, communication and performance. And I work with organisations that recognise inclusion is incomplete if personality differences are ignored.

What is my role?

My role is not to persuade introverts to become more extraverted, nor to convince extraverts to become less so. It is to help all of us question assumptions that have gone unchallenged for far too long.

Because when we broaden our understanding of confidence, leadership and contribution, we don’t simply create better outcomes for introverts.

We create better workplaces for everyone.

Testimonials

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