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Want More Impact as a Leader? Take Back Control.

If you’re tasked with driving inclusion, as a leader, sponsor, or advocate, but feel like your hands are tied, you’re not imagining it.

You may be facing a deficit in autonomy.

In Simplifying Inclusive Leadership, we explore autonomy as a pillar of professional wellbeing. Without it, motivation drains and so does your ability to lead inclusively.

Autonomy is about more than micromanagement. It’s about whether you have the freedom to challenge, influence, and create. And whether you feel trusted to lead change in meaningful ways.

💥 Inclusive leadership is not passive. It requires:

Discretionary power to push back against bias.

Permission to innovate in how systems are designed.

The ability to advocate even when it’s unpopular.

But when leaders are stifled, by rigid hierarchies, resistant cultures, or vague mandates, they lose the sense of agency required to lead with integrity. For example:

“I brought in a fairness check for our promotions process, but it didn’t matter. The same biases played out. I had no influence, and they knew I was the EDI sponsor. It was performative.”

This is a textbook case of low autonomy and it’s why inclusive leaders must advocate for clarity, scope, and freedom to act.

💡 In the book, we offer questions to help leaders explore and expand their autonomy:

Where do you need more decision-making power?

What small steps can you take to increase your influence?

How can you build trust with stakeholders while retaining your freedom?

Systemic change doesn’t happen by accident. It requires empowered, well-supported leaders with clear authority and internal alignment.

That’s the kind of inclusive leadership we’re helping you build.

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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Blogs

Rethinking meetings as spaces for inclusion

A 2026 review by Rogelberg and colleagues, synthesises thirty years of research on meeting science and offers a compelling insight. Meetings are not simply operational necessities, they are one of the most influential, and often overlooked, mechanisms through which inclusion is experienced at work....
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Blogs

Not all expertise is what it seems

A recent paper by Mergen and colleagues (2026), published in Organization, introduces a powerful and timely concept: toxic experts. These are individuals who, despite appearing credible, use their perceived expertise to promote misleading or harmful claims, often for personal or commercial gain....
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