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The practice

Well Placed is a practice. Unlike a programme with a beginning and an end, it is something you can return to, in different seasons and at different times.

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Personal development often starts with the question:

What do you want to achieve?

 

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We start somewhere else.

Who are you, really?

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We are not asking about your role, your reputation, or even the version of you that performs well. 

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You can leave that behind.

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We are interested in who you are, underneath it all.

The practice moves in three directions

You don't move through this once.

You return to it when clarity is needed.

Reach in
A line to understand

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Seeing where you are before deciding what to do.


Not the story you’ve been telling, but what is actually there.

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This is where most people move too quickly.


They act before they can see clearly.

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The work here is slower.


It asks you to stay with what you find, long enough for something true to emerge.

Reset
A line to change

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Once you can see clearly, something else becomes possible.


You begin to notice what no longer fits.

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Old patterns, inherited expectations.

Ways of working that made sense once but don’t anymore.

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Reset is not about starting over.


It is about reorienting as new information arrives.


Letting go of what no longer holds, and being willing to change course.

Reach out
A line to care

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You don’t come here to stay inside yourself.


You come here to live differently.

In how you decide when the stakes are high.


In how you lead when the pressure is on.


In how you show up for the people who matter.

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This is where the work becomes visible.


Not as performance, but as alignment.

Start with orientation

Magnifying Glass Close-Up

When people find this work

People rarely come here at the beginning.

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They come when something has stopped responding to effort.

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A decision that won’t resolve.

A role that no longer fits.

A question that keeps returning.

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From the outside, everything may still look intact.

From the inside, something has shifted.

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This is where the practice begins.

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Not because something is broken.

Because something is no longer quite right.

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