• As A CEO, I Don't Want To Let Anyone Down - Pete Maiden
    Jun 13 2025

    Pete Maiden is the founder and CEO of CHEXS, a Hertfordshire-based charity that’s been making a quiet but powerful impact since 2011.

    His career began in the Royal Navy, where he developed the kind of discipline and leadership skills that would later shape his approach to community work. After leaving the military, Pete turned his attention to supporting young people and families, driven by a belief that small, consistent changes can lead to meaningful transformation.

    Through CHEXS, he’s helped hundreds of young people each year—particularly those aged 8 to 16—through a unique GROWTH programme that blends coaching, outdoor learning, and personal development. Alongside that, he’s built a robust family support service, offering everything from parenting workshops to one-to-one sessions tailored to each family’s needs.

    Pete is more than a charity leader—he’s a recognised champion of social mobility and was awarded the Broxbourne Civic Award for his outstanding service to the community.

    The work he does is really inspiring and so is his story, from humble beginnings, his adventures in the Navy, learning how to live with significant dyslexia, to founding and running CHEXS. It is full of twists and turns including some pretty frightening health issues! It made for a fascinating conversation, which I loved and I hope you do too.

    To find out more about CHEXS, go to www.chexs.co.uk



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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • When Something Goes Wrong, Own Up To It - Nicolas Trindade
    Apr 25 2025

    Nicolas Trindade is a Senior Portfolio Manager at AXA Investment Managers, responsible for managing global and sterling credit portfolios running into hundreds of millions of pounds.

    If you're thinking "this is going to be a dry episode" - think again! It was a very rich (no pun intended) conversation, talking about:

    - Nic's immigrant background (his Portuguese parents were immigrants to France and Nic is a Frenchman living in London) and the values that come with that
    - his love for acting and improvisation and how those skills have served him in the business world
    - how to build trust and long-lasting relationships
    - what great leadership looks like
    - his role as a father of two young children,
    - and so much more!

    Nic's story is a wonderful advert for the value of immigration and for good, old-fashioned values. I'm really grateful that Nic came to talk to me despite suffering with back pain and I hope you get as much from the episode as I did!


    You can learn more about Nic here - https://www.axa-im.co.uk/research-and-insights/experts/nicolas-trindade

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    53 mins
  • Look Inside Yourself To Find Your Unique Gifts - David Brown
    Apr 4 2025

    David Brown is a life coach, a former Antarctic research scientist, and a martial arts instructor. David is also founder of the Institute of Sovereign Leadership.

    This is one of my favourite conversations to date. I loved David's thoughtful and articulate responses to my questions about his work around sovereign leadership, his journey as a leader, how he's overcome setbacks in life (including the death of his brother), and of course what his 'edge' is and how he's leaning into that.

    Watching the episode back and re-living our conversation was an absolute pleasure and I urge you to spend an hour or so in David's company.

    Read more about David here https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-brown-institute-of-sovereign-leadership/

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • A Really Good Novel Helps To Heal People - Amanda Craig
    Mar 21 2025

    Amanda Craig is a British novelist, short-story writer and critic. Born in South Africa in 1959, she grew up in Italy, where her parents worked for the UN, and was educated at Bedales School and Clare College Cambridge.

    After a brief time in advertising and PR, she became a journalist for newspapers such as The Sunday Times, the Observer, The Daily Telegraph and the Independent, winning both the Young Journalist of the Year and the Catherine Pakenham Award. She still reviews children’s books for The New Statesman, and literary fiction for The Observer, but is now a full-time novelist.

    Her seventh novel, Hearts And Minds, was long-listed for the Bailey’s Prize for Women’s Fiction, and her eighth, The Lie of the Land, was a Radio 4 Book At Bedtime, a YOU Magazine Book Club choice and picked by six national newspapers as a Book of the Year in 2018. Her latest novel, The Three Graces, was published on 8th June 2023 by Abacus. Described as My Brilliant Friend meets A Room With a View, The Three Graces has just been optioned for TV serialisation by Alison Owen at Momentum Pictures after a three-way auction.

    My conversation with Amanda ranged far and wide, and among many topics, we talked about growing up in Italy, the state of the publishing industry, her advice for aspiring writers, the immense struggles she had in the early years of her career while raising children, and of course her writing (including a sneak preview about what she's working on at the moment).

    Amanda is such an articulate and thoughtful guest and I loved listening to her talk - I hope you do too!

    If you want to know more about Amanda - https://www.amandacraig.com and @amandapcraig on X

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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • Breaking Barriers - Euphemia Annor Rwigema
    Mar 7 2025

    Sometimes you meet someone in life who has such an extraordinary journey that you want to have them share it with you.

    Euphemia began life in a small village in Ghana and now leads the legal team for Kraft Heinz’s Northern Europe business, managing legal operations for a $1.2 billion revenue region.

    Her journey is characterised by courage, resilience and positivity and I'm thrilled to be able to share it here.

    Among other things, we talked about overcoming the challenges of being separated from her mother at the age of 13, being a black woman in a majority white male environment and balancing the demands of a high-profile role with raising two young daughters (both born during Covid to boot)

    This is one of my favourite conversations so far and I hope you get as much out of it as I did!

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    59 mins
  • It's Become Increasingly Difficult To Separate The Political From The Personal - Conor Gearty KC
    Feb 21 2025

    Conor Gearty KC is a founder member of Matrix Chambers. His practice as a barrister is primarily in human rights law and in public law, together with work in the field of corporate social responsibility.

    Apart from his work as a barrister, Conor is Professor of Human Rights Law at the London School of Economics (LSE) where he has been Director of its Centre for the Study of Human Rights and LSE’s Institute of Public Affairs. Gearty is also a published author, with the acclaimed book on human rights law, On Fantasy Island (Oxford University Press) and Homeland Insecurity. The Rise and Rise of Global Anti-terrorism Law, which was published in 2024.

    This was a shorter conversation that many, but no less engrossing for it! It's always a thrill for me when sitting down with someone so intelligent and articulate. His life story, which took Conor from Ireland to the heart of the English establishment, is absolutely fascinating - as are his musings on his own vulnerabilities (or lack of them).

    As my editor said to me: "the clarity and precision of his mind is exhilarating." I hope you think so too!

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    39 mins
  • Is University Really The Key To A Good Life? - Madeleine Holt
    Feb 7 2025

    Madeleine Holt is a filmmaker, entrepreneur and campaigner in education. Formerly culture correspondent on BBC Newsnight, she makes films about innovative, community-minded comprehensive schools through her enterprise, Schools on Screen. She runs the pioneering Meet the Parents project in North London, encouraging all families to support their local, non-selective secondary schools. In 2019 she won the Fred and Anne Jarvis Award for education campaigning, subsequently won by Marcus Rashford.

    In this conversation, Madeleine and I talk about her career as a BBC journalist, her transition from journalism to education activism, what innovation in education can look like, the drawbacks of the current English education system and whether university really is the key to a successful career and life.

    If you've got school age kids (and even if you haven't!), this is a must-watch.

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    57 mins
  • The Satisfaction Is In The Challenge - Professor Mark Peters
    Jan 24 2025

    Professor Mark Peters is Consultant Paediatric Intensivist at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH), Professor of Paediatric Intensive Care at UCL Great Ormond St Institute of Child Health, and lead author in a landmark NHS study, which has found that reducing oxygen levels for critically ill children on mechanical ventilators in intensive care could save tens of young lives each year.

    Mark and I talked about the state of the NHS (of course!), what his version of leadership looks like, especially in the context of an emergency situation, the necessity of struggle in the context of leading a fulfilled life, and the Oxy-PICU study (including its genesis half way up Mount Everest).

    It was a real eye-opener for me and I hope it is for you too!

    ______

    To learn more about the Oxy-PICU trials:

    https://m.soundcloud.com/openpediatrics/less-is-more-oxygenation-targets-in-critically-ill-children-by-m-peters-openpediatrics

    https://www.thelancet.com/article/S0140-6736(23)01968-2/fulltext

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    50 mins