Operations Director, Consultancy, MEA
My parents were a big influence on me. My dad was a contractor, so I spent a lot of my weekends on site, sitting by the cement mixer, playing in the sand. After my A levels, I ended up working in a quantity surveying office. I didn’t even know what quantity surveyors did when I applied for the job, but I loved it and decided to pursue quantity surveying at university.
Following graduation, I started a career in project management. I worked mostly in the retail sector, travelling all over Europe and developing my programme management expertise on a range of interesting and challenging schemes. It was when I was acting as a consultant on the London 2012 Olympics that I met Mace.
Consistently breaking five million manhours a month and making sure that everyone goes home safely every day. Expo 2020 is an incredible project at an incredible scale. I’m so proud of the work that the team has put in to embed such high standards of health, safety and wellbeing.
In 2018, Mace took almost 50 candidates through the APM [Association for Project Management] programme, which sets the benchmark for project management in the UK. To have this many people gain the professional qualification was a real indication of our commitment to ensuring consistent service excellence for our clients. The course was on top of the day job, so a group of colleagues and I ran a night school and weekend boot camps to get the candidates through their exams. I’m so proud of them. They say it’s made a massive difference to the way they do their jobs.
In my role, I need to be tenacious. It allows me to manage the wider team effectively and challenge them at our regular project reviews. Tenacity also ensures that I can be accountable and respond to the challenges placed on me by my clients and senior Mace colleagues. This feeds into the need to be able to work to a deadline; we have daily reports that our client-side colleagues must receive on time, in order to be able to do their jobs effectively.
My home in the UK is a 1920s two-bedroom timber beach hut on the River Thames, with moorings at the end of my garden.
Either running a tea shop as I love baking (and eating cake), or I would have liked to be a writer.