Seeds
I was interviewed by Azoora Ali for her new โCare beyond profitsโ podcast recently - this is a portion of that interview. For the full episode listen on her show: Spotify: Video: In this episode, discover how to: โข Overcome the fear of the unknown with courage โข Embrace mindset shifts to unlock growth and success โข Build resilience while navigating challenges and change โข Find purpose-driven direction in your career and personal life โข Align values, community, and even faith with authentic leadership This conversation is perfect for anyone...
info_outlineSeeds
I learned a lot in this conversation with Alison Mau about her life and journey and what has led to the setting up of Tika. Curiousity guided the questions and we talk about a lot of things starting with her childhood, growing up in Melbourne, experiences at primary school that shaped her and led to a resilient attitude, the special bond she feels with horses and why that is so, becoming a journalist back in the analogue days before lots of computers or dictaphons, and her presenting on TV and how she ended up in New Zealand. Then we focus in on the setting up of Tika which is a...
info_outlineSeeds
This is a book review of Cues by Vanessa Van Edwards - I suggest you get a copy (link below). For the written review visit over here and that also has links to her TedX talk and several podcast appearances talking about the principles in the book: Link to the book: If this is of use why not share it with someone or post it with your thoughts on the topic? More here
info_outlineSeeds
In this short 5 minute episode share some reflections on the topic of saying no - what do you think? When is it important to do this? More content is at
info_outlineSeeds
I really enjoyed my conversation with Susanne Ritzenhoff about her life and Toi Ora and the work they do โ check out the links we mentioned in the conversation: Toi Ora link: Gallery with art for sale: The Circle: Careers with Impact Book: Interview with Neil Ieremia: Shakespeare Festival link: Contact Us : Annie Dillard quote: โOne of the things I know about writing is this: spend it all, shoot it, play it, lose it, all, right away, every time. Do not hoard what seems good for a later place in the book or for another book; give it, give...
info_outlineSeeds
Here is a short summary of sessions held at the reent two day Institute of Directors Leadership Conference. The full article can be accessed here with a lot more summaries of other sessions as well! Why not join the next one in Wellington in September 2026? Info is at the IOD site here For more content visit
info_outlineSeeds
Julie Woods went blind as an adult and in this episode we hear about her journey and what that was like and how she embraces life fully today. I was really inspired by this conversation and hearing how she has overcome challenges to really live life. I guarantee you will come away inspired by this conversation. Her website is here One million names in braille initiative is here CCS Disability Action page: Blind Low Vision site Tom Cooney interview mentioned More info
info_outlineSeeds
Audio of panel discussion just held at the Zero Waste Summit on 8 September 2025 discussing Tools for Transformation: System Change for a Zero Waste Future. More on the Zero Waste Network is here and worth signing up for their newsletter Panelists: Sue Coutts, Moderator from Zero Waste Network Steven Moe, Parry Field Lawyers Limited Dr Saeid Baroutian, University of Auckland James Griffin, Sustainable Business Network Description of the session: Panel Discussion: Tools for Transformation - System Change for a Zero Waste Future Achieving zero waste requires more than good...
info_outlineSeeds
Mark Laurence and I had a great discussion on AI and the future and A.icehouse, a new initiative for SMEs that he is working on with Icehouse, to learn more about the future of AI and what it might mean for companies and directors and business owners as well as charities and other organisations. Have a look at these links to find out more. A.icehouse website: Ten Past Tomorrow site: Icehouse: For more episodes visit More on A.icehouse: "You donโt need to master every new app, platform or update. You need practical and pragmatic AI knowledge that...
info_outlineSeeds
This is the audio of a talk I gave the other day to about 100 lawyers on principles and habits for life - it comes from content in the recent book: The Circle: Careers with Impact which is a download here If it is of help, why not forward it on to someone else? More content is at
info_outlineI saw a LinkedIn post from Arron Judson on the topic of different people having different skill sets and the framing of 'Explorers' and 'Optimisers'. This is the short conversation we had where he explained more on this.
To find out more the site for Eidotic which is here (but check back later as being built still): Coming Soon EIDOTIC
This is the LinkedIn post here that sparked this conversation.
I look at this photo from when I held a senior executive role and realise now I was wearing a costume.
Back then, joining the leadership team felt like the summit. It was the next step in my career, a position of influence, where I thought I could drive change.
But hereโs what I discovered: executive teams are often structured to reduce risk, enforce process, and deliver stability.
Meanwhile, my brain was wired for the opposite, to spot opportunities, challenge assumptions, and build unconventional relationships.
At first, my approach was welcomed, the โfresh thinkingโ honeymoon phase. But soon enough, the instinct to control the chaos kicked in. And we didnโt know how to talk about it.
The result? I got shut down. Like the disruptive kid being sent out of the classroom.
They thought I was moving too fast.
I thought they were slowing everything down.
They were wired to protect the business.
I was wired to reimagine it.
Even though Iโd followed the โsuccessfulโ path, I felt disconnected. Frustrated. Alone.
Then I met Brooke and Andy, and they introduced me to the ๐ง๐ต๐ฒ๐ผ๐ฟ๐ ๐ผ๐ณ ๐๐ผ๐บ๐ฝ๐น๐ฒ๐บ๐ฒ๐ป๐๐ฎ๐ฟ๐ ๐๐ผ๐ด๐ป๐ถ๐๐ถ๐ผ๐ป - a framework that changed everything.
The core idea is simple: humans are wired as either ๐๐ ๐ฝ๐น๐ผ๐ฟ๐ฒ๐ฟ๐ (curious, creative, future-oriented) or ๐ข๐ฝ๐๐ถ๐บ๐ถ๐๐ฒ๐ฟ๐ (structured, process-driven, risk-aware). And to truly make progress, we donโt need everyone to be the same, we need to complement each other.
I realised Iโd spent most of my career as an Explorer in an Optimiser costume, performing well enough to pass, but never really thriving.
Suddenly, my entire career made sense, especially why Iโve always been drawn to the chaos and opportunity of early stage startups.
I looked back at the ventures Iโd built and I could see where weโd succeeded, and where weโd stalled. The missing link? The people. Or more specifically the alignment of people to the right phase of the venture.
Thatโs what led to the creation of Eidotic - a framework for understanding how people naturally think, and how to align that thinking with the needs of a growing business.
We believe 90% of startups donโt have to fail.
But if we keep mismatching people and timing, they will.
Since launching Eidotic, Iโve had so many conversations with people who say, โI thought it was just me.โ