Ann Daniels
Leaders are being asked to make high-stakes calls with incomplete information, on ground that keeps shifting under them. The instinct is to wait for more data, but the cost of delay is often higher than the cost of being wrong. What teams need is a practiced way to decide, move and keep people together when the map no longer matches the terrain.
Ann Daniels is a record-breaking polar explorer who helps leaders make sharper decisions and hold teams together in conditions where the information is incomplete and the stakes are real.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Ann Daniels
- She holds a Guinness World Record that has not been repeated: first women’s team, with Caroline Hamilton, to ski to both the North and South Poles, a credential that sits behind every claim she makes about decision-making under pressure.
- She led ice operations for all three Catlin Arctic Survey expeditions with Pen Hadow, a rare example of an explorer whose field leadership has been trusted by peer-reviewed science programmes working with NASA and the European Space Agency.
- Her career arc, from NatWest assistant bank manager and mother of triplets to polar team leader, gives her credibility with audiences who are sceptical of exploration narratives delivered by lifelong adventurers.
- She speaks with operational specificity: route-finding on moving ice, calling a team member off the ice with frostbite, swimming open leads in survival suits. Senior audiences recognise these as decisions, not anecdotes.
- She is listed by The Daily Telegraph among the Top 20 Great British Adventurers of all time, which shortens the credibility conversation with boards and external audiences.
Biography highlights
- Guinness World Record holder: first women’s team, with Caroline Hamilton, to ski to both the North and South Poles (1 June 2002).
- Head of ice operations and navigator for all three Catlin Arctic Survey expeditions (2009, 2010, 2011), led by Pen Hadow.
- Arctic scientific collaborations with NASA, the European Space Agency, NOAA and the University of Washington.
- Honorary DUniv, Staffordshire University (2007).
- Castaway on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs (January 2007).
- Named in The Daily Telegraph’s Top 20 Great British Adventurers of all time.
Biography
Route-finding on the Arctic Ocean is decision-making in its purest form. The ice moves under you, the weather closes without warning, and the team’s survival depends on whether the person in front is reading the ground correctly. Ann Daniels has done that job for more than two decades, including three consecutive Catlin Arctic Survey expeditions with Pen Hadow, where she was head of ice operations for scientists working with NASA and the European Space Agency.
She came to it from an unlikely starting point. Daniels was an assistant bank manager at NatWest and a mother of triplets when she was selected, from more than two hundred applicants, for the 1997 McVities Penguin Polar Relay. She had no prior outdoor experience. Five years later, on 1 June 2002, she and Caroline Hamilton became the first women to reach both the North and South Poles as part of all-women teams, a Guinness record that has not been repeated.
The Catlin work reframed her practice. Between 2009 and 2011 she led teams of scientists across hundreds of miles of drifting sea ice to manually measure its thickness, feeding data into the climate record. Later expeditions extended that into collaborations with the European Space Agency, NOAA and the University of Washington. She is the rare field leader whose decisions have been trusted inside a peer-reviewed research programme.
What she offers senior audiences is the texture of that work. She can describe calling a team-mate off the ice with frostbite, swimming an open lead in a survival suit, and choosing a route across fracturing ice when the satellite image is already twelve hours old. The Daily Telegraph has named her among the Top 20 Great British Adventurers of all time; Staffordshire University awarded her an honorary DUniv in 2007.
Key speaking topics
- Decision-making under uncertainty
- Team leadership in extreme environments
- Resilience and recovery after setback
- Women in leadership and exploration
- Climate change and the Arctic
- Career reinvention
Ideal for
- Executive teams running strategic change programmes where the plan will keep adjusting
- Operational and transformation leaders responsible for decisions on partial information
- Leadership development cohorts and senior high-potential groups
- Conferences focused on resilience, climate, or women in leadership
Audience outcomes
- A clearer language for making decisions when the data is incomplete and the cost of waiting is rising
- Specific, transferable lessons on holding a team together when conditions deteriorate
- A harder test for what resilience actually looks like in practice, drawn from named events on the ice
- Renewed confidence that significant career reinvention is possible without a conventional starting point