This page is inspired by Derek Sivers‘s project, now.now.now.com. It’s absolutely fascinating to be part of it and to see others contributing to it. Updated: Feb 2026.
WHERE I AM
Canberra, Australia. It’s a beautiful city, one that I have come to love.
continuing to provide support through coaching, consulting, mentoring and programs to help business owners and senior professionals reframe how they view visibility. It’s not self-promotion, it’s strategic positioning
facilitating career development courses all delivered online
finalising my second book about building visibility and influence and hoping to get it off to publishers this year
offering pro-bono support in brand positioning and career transition assistance for senior professionals as part of my volunteer work at Project Placed
WHAT I'M WORKING ON - SPORT
poomsae in Taekwondo
calisthenics
learning the splits
dead hang
WHAT I'M WATCHING
Taekwondo kick drills, calisthenics workouts. stretches to improve splits.
Running a Weekly Visibility Challenge, open to anyone around to world, who knows they need to show up but unsure how to start
GRATEFUL FOR
Good health, positive energy, family, and the opportunities bubbling up around me.
WHAT I LEAVE YOU WITH
“When I first started, I was quite new and fresh in putting myself out there. I wasn’t sure how to bring my voice into social media, or even fully clear why I wanted it—I just knew I wanted something but didn’t know how to attain it….I felt supported, held, and encouraged—like someone was walking alongside me, not pulling from ahead.”
This quote was feedback I received from a client recently and it describes a place many find themselves in, even if they can’t quite name it. It’s that feeling of wanting something more, without being fully clear on what it is or how to get there. Knowing change is calling yet feeling the pull of what’s familiar. We may even wonder: ‘What’s on the other side of this? Could it really be different? And can I actually do it?’
In my work, I support entrepreneurs, corporate professionals and those exploring side gigs, and often during moments when their identity, visibility or direction is shifting. A big part of that work is helping them reframe how they see themselves, so others can see them more clearly too. Most of us would like to think we’re open to change. But the real openness shows up in action. That takes courage and reframing. Asking different questions. Staying with what’s uncomfortable just that little longer. Holding on to hope when there’s no proof yet. That’s often when something new begins to take shape: a clearer idea, a more aligned approach, a way forward that fits you. It also takes time and can feel fuzzy at first.
I don’t take it lightly when someone trusts me to walk alongside them in that space. Alignment, support and direction aren’t things I assume; they are things I work to earn and sustain. And if any of this feels familiar, it might be worth paying attention to what that’s pointing you toward.
Give yourself permission to explore, you don’t need to figure it all out immediately.
This quote was feedback I received from a client recently and it describes a place many find themselves in, even if they can’t quite name it. It’s that feeling of wanting something more, without being fully clear on what it is or how to get there. Knowing change is calling yet feeling the pull of what’s familiar. We may even wonder: ‘What’s on the other side of this? Could it really be different? And can I actually do it?’
In my work, I support entrepreneurs, corporate professionals and those exploring side gigs, and often during moments when their identity, visibility or direction is shifting. A big part of that work is helping them reframe how they see themselves, so others can see them more clearly too. Most of us would like to think we’re open to change. But the real openness shows up in action. That takes courage and reframing. Asking different questions. Staying with what’s uncomfortable just that little longer. Holding on to hope when there’s no proof yet. That’s often when something new begins to take shape: a clearer idea, a more aligned approach, a way forward that fits you. It also takes time and can feel fuzzy at first.
I don’t take it lightly when someone trusts me to walk alongside them in that space. Alignment, support and direction aren’t things I assume; they are things I work to earn and sustain. And if any of this feels familiar, it might be worth paying attention to what that’s pointing you toward.