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You Can’t Be Inclusive If You’ve Already Made Up Your Mind

A colleague shares an idea that contradicts your experience. A new team member approaches work differently. A feedback conversation doesn’t go as expected.

Inclusive leadership asks us to hold space for difference. But that space closes fast if we believe we already know enough, whether that’s about a person, a culture, a situation.

Curiosity interrupts that certainty.

It invites us to slow down and wonder:
🤔 What’s shaping their view?
🤔 What don’t I know yet?
🤔 What could I learn from this?

Neuroscience shows curiosity increases dopamine, lights up the brain’s reward centre, and helps us stay open during ambiguity. That’s not a nice-to-have: it’s essential for diverse, high-performing teams.

But curiosity thrives in the right conditions. People need to feel safe to ask questions. Teams need space to explore without rushing to resolution. Leaders must model curiosity before conclusions.

Ask yourself: When something doesn’t make sense, do I get defensive or do I get interested?

Blogs

Inclusion starts with how we listen

Listening is often treated as a skill. The evidence suggests it is something far more complex, and far more human. A 2026 study by Moin and colleagues, published in Behavioral Sciences, analysed over 200 listening training resources and uncovered a critical insight. High quality listening is not just about what we do, it is shaped by an ongoing tension between our behaviours, our mindset, and our internal reactions....
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Blogs

What 60 years of research tells us about work stress

Clarity at work is often treated as a given. The evidence suggests otherwise. A large scale meta analysis published in the Journal of Applied Psychology synthesised 60 years of research across 515 studies and nearly 800,000 employees to better understand role stress in organisations....
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Blogs

Neuroinclusion and intersectionality in the workplace

Inclusion is rarely experienced through a single identity, yet much of how organisations approach it still assumes exactly that. A 2026 narrative review by Calvard and colleagues, brings this into sharp focus....
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