Kate Cook
Wellbeing budgets have grown, but the productivity dividend has not followed. Most corporate wellness programmes treat nutrition, sleep and energy as personal lifestyle topics, when they are operational variables that determine whether senior people make good decisions at 4pm on a Thursday. The gap organisations face is translating wellbeing rhetoric into habits that hold under pressure.
Kate Cook is a nutritionist and corporate wellbeing speaker who helps organisations turn workforce health into a measurable input to performance and engagement.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Kate Cook
- Twenty-five years running a Harley Street nutrition practice gives her a clinical evidence base that most wellbeing speakers do not have. Audiences hear from a practitioner, not a motivational presenter.
- A defined corporate proposition built around three named talks (Sugar Bites Back, Genes Load the Gun, Lifestyle Pulls the Trigger, Vibrant Energy) rather than a single generalist wellness keynote.
- Author of The Corporate Wellness Bible, a workplace-specific text that frames nutrition and energy as organisational concerns, not personal lifestyle advice.
- Track record with demanding employers, including Bank of England, JP Morgan, Shell, Accenture and GE Healthcare, where the audience is sceptical and time-poor.
- TEDx speaker for Fidelity International, with a media presence in The Sunday Express, Marie Claire and Red that gives her communication credibility outside the wellness echo chamber.
Biography highlights
- Founder of The Nutrition Coach, Harley Street, since 2000.
- Trained at the Institute for Optimum Nutrition; Master’s in the Anthropology of Food; undergraduate degree from Royal Holloway, University of London.
- Author of The Corporate Wellness Bible, Get Healthy for Good and Be Incredibly Healthy (with Sally Brown).
- TEDx speaker for Fidelity International on workplace wellness.
- Corporate clients include Bank of England, JP Morgan, EDF Energy, Accenture, Shell, GE Healthcare and Pret a Manger.
- Columnist for The Sunday Express and Marie Claire; television appearances, including The Truth of Beauty.
Biography
Corporate wellbeing is one of the easier line items to fund and one of the harder ones to measure. Programmes proliferate, engagement stays patchy, and the link between workforce health and commercial output remains anecdotal. Kate Cook has spent twenty-five years working on that gap from the practitioner side.
She founded The Nutrition Coach on Harley Street in 2000 and has since worked with more than 7,000 individual clients alongside an international corporate practice. The mix matters. Clinical work with senior professionals informs the corporate sessions; the corporate sessions stress-test what actually changes behaviour at scale inside a working week.
Her writing reflects the same orientation. The Corporate Wellness Bible treats workplace nutrition, energy and stress as organisational concerns rather than personal projects. Get Healthy for Good and Be Incredibly Healthy, co-authored with Sally Brown, sit alongside columns for The Sunday Express and Marie Claire and a TEDx talk delivered for Fidelity International.
The audience she is built for is an employer trying to make wellbeing operational. Clients have included Bank of England, JP Morgan, Shell, EDF Energy, Accenture and GE Healthcare, organisations where the standard for an external voice is high and the tolerance for generic wellness messaging is low.
Key speaking topics
- Workplace wellbeing and productivity
- Nutrition and sustained energy at work
- Sugar, stress and behavioural change
- Lifestyle, genetics and long-term health
- Corporate wellness strategy and programme design
- Mental and physical health in high-pressure roles
Ideal for
- CHROs, heads of wellbeing and culture leads are designing or refreshing corporate wellness programmes.
- Senior leadership offsites where energy, focus and resilience are part of the agenda.
- Employee conferences in high-intensity sectors such as financial services, professional services and energy.
- Health and wellbeing weeks where the brief calls for clinical credibility alongside accessible delivery.
Audience outcomes
- A working understanding of how nutrition, sleep and stress interact to shape daily performance.
- Practical changes audiences can make the same week, drawn from clinical practice rather than wellness trend cycles.
- A clearer organisational case for why wellbeing investment should be measured against engagement and productivity, not participation.
- Specific tools for managing energy through long days, travel and high-cognitive-load periods.
- Confidence to challenge the sugar, caffeine and convenience defaults built into corporate working life.
Talks
A clinical look at sugar’s effect on energy, mood, focus and long-term health, and what that means for the working day.
Key takeaways:
- How sugar consumption shapes afternoon energy and decision quality at work.
- The wider health and ethical implications of sugar in the modern food supply.
- Practical substitutions that hold up under workplace conditions.
A session on how lifestyle choices, not genetics, determine most long-term health outcomes, and how that translates into workforce performance.
Key takeaways:
- Why lifestyle, not heredity, is the dominant variable in most chronic conditions.
- The link between individual health choices and organisational productivity.
- Habits leaders can adopt and model that compound over years.
A practical session on sustaining energy through nutrition, hydration and recovery across a demanding working life.
Key takeaways:
- How to structure meals and breaks for sustained cognitive performance.
- The hidden energy costs of common workplace defaults.
- Recovery practices that work for travellers and shift-pattern roles.