About this blog
I've spent the last decade at the intersection of technology and public sector. I left to think more clearly. This is what happened next.
For months I've been both worrying about AI and excited about it and desperate not to miss the opportunity it could give me. Which is why I needed to write — to share, find a network, and speak to others about it who are frankly, not AI.
The dream is to make likeminded friends. The worst case scenario is that I continue to learn while I write. I'll do the late night prompts, ask the dumb questions, and share everything here in plain English — because that's the only language I actually understand any of this in.
I've spent the last decade at the intersection of technology and public sector — working with vendors, system integrators, and government bodies trying to figure out how technology actually lands in the real world.
I left to think more clearly.
Inside a large institution, your AI lens is the institution's AI lens. The products, the programmes, the approved narratives. I wanted a wider view. And I wanted to build something with it.
I'm particularly interested in what all of this means for women. The AI transition, the career question, the increasingly complicated business of building a life while trying to stay ahead of the most significant technological shift of our generation. It doesn't get talked about honestly enough.
I'm based in St Ives, Cambridgeshire. Solo parent to two small boys. You can find me on LinkedIn.
Coming soon
Back soon with more.