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Leadership & Manager EnablementManagers who can actually own the conversation
Accountability for absence and reintegration usually lands on line managers — who were rarely equipped for it. I build the capability and the frameworks that let managers handle these moments with confidence instead of avoidance.

Capability before accountability
It's unfair, and ineffective, to hold managers accountable for something they were never trained to do. I focus on equipping managers first — the skills, the confidence and the clear expectations — so that accountability frameworks land as support rather than blame. When managers can lead these conversations well, outcomes improve across the board.
- Manager training — practical skills for absence, wellbeing and return-to-work
- Reintegration coaching — one-to-one support through live, complex cases
- Difficult conversations — handling sensitive moments with care and clarity
- Accountability frameworks — clear, fair expectations of who owns what
What this involves in practice
Manager training
I train managers in the practical capabilities they actually use: spotting early signs, opening a wellbeing conversation, managing absence fairly and consistently, and supporting a return to work. The training is grounded in real scenarios rather than theory, so managers leave with words they can use and confidence they didn't have before.
Reintegration coaching
Some cases are complex enough that training isn't sufficient — the manager needs support through the live situation. I coach managers one-to-one through real reintegration cases: how to structure the return, how to balance support with the needs of the team, and how to keep the plan on track when it gets difficult. It's capability-building exactly where it counts.
Difficult conversations
The conversations managers most want to avoid — about performance, health, capability or return-to-work — are the ones that matter most. I help managers prepare for and hold these conversations with honesty and care: how to open them, stay on track, listen properly, and reach a clear outcome without damaging the relationship.
Accountability frameworks
Accountability only works when expectations are explicit and fair. I define who owns what across the absence and reintegration journey — manager, HR, occupational health — so nothing falls through the gaps and no one is blamed for something outside their control. Clear frameworks turn vague pressure into ownership people can actually meet.
Outcomes you can expect
managers who address issues early instead of avoiding them
absence and reintegration handled the same way across teams
accountability that managers can actually meet
Avoided conversations are the most expensive ones
When managers duck the early conversation, small issues become long-term cases. Building the skill and confidence to engage early is one of the highest-return investments an organisation can make.