Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
Speakers who challenge assumptions, shift cultures, and make the case for genuinely inclusive organisations
Most organisations treat culture as a values poster and inclusion as a compliance line. The work of designing how people actually experience the company, from onboarding to exit, sits unowned between HR, leadership and operations. When the experience breaks, engagement collapses, attrition rises, and the gap between stated values and lived reality becomes the company’s most expensive credibility problem.
Healthcare systems, employer health plans, and public health institutions keep designing for populations they do not include in the room. The result is wasted spend, poor outcomes for the communities that need the service most, and a widening gap between what leaders say about equity and what their operations actually deliver. Closing that gap takes an operator who can move between boardroom strategy, clinical reality, and the lived experience of the patients being served.
Working parents are now a majority of the corporate workforce, but most policies, benefits and culture programmes were not designed around them. The result is quiet attrition of women in their thirties, AAPI and South Asian talent who feel culturally invisible, and a wellbeing gap that retention metrics miss. The companies that close it understand that parents are not an edge case to accommodate; they are the operating reality.
Most enterprises have bought into generative AI in principle and stalled in practice. Pilots multiply, demos impress, but very few make the jump to operating on proprietary data inside real workflows. The hard question for boards is no longer whether to adopt AI, but how to make it useful at scale without losing control of accessibility, governance and the workforce alongside it.
Most early-stage ventures fail not for lack of product but for lack of access: to networks, to capital, to the unwritten knowledge that decides who gets a meeting. The same gap shows up inside large organisations, where good ideas die because the originator does not know how to build the relationships that move them. Treating that gap as a soft skill keeps it permanent.
Building a marketplace from zero is a different discipline from running marketing inside a mature business. Leaders who have only operated inside the enterprise tend to under-invest in supply-side acquisition and over-invest in demand-side spend. The question is how to apply enterprise marketing rigour to early-stage growth without losing the founder economics that make scale-up possible.
Most founders pitch the upside. Few have the discipline to talk honestly about the years between traction and exit, when capital tightens, partnerships stall, and the operating model has to be rebuilt mid-flight. Boards backing entrepreneurial leaders, and corporates trying to learn from them, need someone who has lived the full arc, not just the launch.
Most companies treat under-served audiences as a marketing afterthought. The commercial reality is the opposite: an audience nobody else is serious about can be the most defensible position a business ever holds. The question for leaders is how to identify that audience, build a product the audience trusts, and turn niche-first conviction into platform-scale economics.
Most diversity programmes have stopped producing measurable change. Budgets stay flat or fall, while the political cost of running them rises. Leaders need someone who can rebuild equity as an operating practice inside talent processes, products, and AI tooling, not as a campaign that lives on the side.
Wellbeing and inclusion programmes routinely reach the employees who already feel welcome, and miss the ones who do not. Standard mindfulness, yoga, and DEI content is built around a default audience, which leaves large parts of the workforce treating these initiatives as performative. The cost is not abstract. Engagement, retention, and trust in the employer all drop in the populations the programmes claim to serve.
Most growth capital still flows through the same networks it always has, leaving credible founders outside those networks structurally underfunded. Senior teams know the talent exists. The harder question is how to source it, back it, and build the surrounding infrastructure that turns a fundable founder into a scaled company.
Capital, talent and opportunity still concentrate around the same networks, while the workforce, the customer base and the founder pool look nothing like that. Most diversity work has not changed who actually gets funded, hired or promoted. Organisations need people who can build the communities and pipelines that move resources, not run another sentiment programme.