HRD Connect's Editorial Advisory Board
- 9 Min Read
To strengthen our HR community even further we have created an editorial advisory board made up of some of the most informed and insightful minds in HR.
- Author: Emily Sexton-Brown
- Date published: Sep 20, 2018
- Categories
We are delighted to launch our HRD Connect Editorial Advisory Board. It’s important to keep our HR community as informed as possible and with the help of our dedicated editorial advisory board we can do so, our board will be providing their expert opinion across all areas of HR and leadership.
With their industry-leading insights and advice, HRD Connect will continue to grow in resource, intelligence, and trustworthy information sources, continuing to enlighten and report across the world of global HR. Meet our Editorial Advisory Board below:
Editorial Advisory Board
Dave Ulrich
Ranked as the #1 management guru by Business Week, profiled by Fast Company as one of the world’s top 10 creative people in business, a top 5 coach in Forbes, and recognized on Thinkers50 (Hall of Fame) as one of the world’s leading business thinkers, Dave Ulrich has a passion for ideas with impact. In his writing, teaching, and consulting, he continually seeks new ideas that tackle some of the world’s thorniest and longest standing challenges. He has spoken to large audiences in 88 countries; performed workshops for over half of the Fortune 200; and coached successful business leaders. He is the co-founder of the RBL Group a consulting firm that increases business results through leadership, organisation, and human resources. He gives back to the profession and others, having worked as Editor of Human Resource Management for 10 years, being a Trustee and advisor to universities and other professional groups, and serving on the Herman Miller board for 15 years. He is known for continually learning, turning complex ideas into simple solutions, and creating real value to those he works with.
To read Dave Ulrich’s recent articles on HRD Connect, click here. To read our exclusive interview with Dave Ulrich, click here.
Andrew Lawson
Andrew Lawson is the Head of Human Resources at Shakespeare’s Globe in London. A world-famous Arts and Education Charity that first opened in 1997 and consists of two theatres, an education department, exhibition and tour, library and archive and retail department welcoming 1.5 million visitors per year. The Globe is part-way through an organisational transformation and change of artistic leadership. The HR function plays a significant role both in re-inventing itself as a department but also delivering a people strategy that enables strategic change and cultural transformation. Andrew is a Senior HR leader with significant experience within branded and unbranded retail, hospitality and not for profit businesses, including start-ups, multi-site and large-scale. Previous employers include ASDA stores, Pret-A-Manager, Coffee Republic, Drake and Morgan, the Jamie Oliver Food Foundation, Hearst Magazines, Gordon Ramsay Restaurants and The Fat Duck. The consistent theme within Andrew’s varied career have been design and implementation of learning and development, resourcing and talent programmes, structural and culture change and re-organisation and H.R.I.S implementation.
Read our exclusive interview with Andrew Lawson here.
Kim Atherton

Perry Timms

Becky Thoseby
Becky Thoseby is the Group Head of Wellbeing at the Department for Transport (DfT). Her aim is to bring a culture of wellbeing to the Department, where wellbeing is a thread running through everything the Department does. Becky has brought a person-centred approach to wellbeing at DfT, which enables them to target the causes of poor wellbeing, rather than focusing on the symptoms. Becky believes that each person is their own best expert and has the right to define what wellbeing means to them, and the role of the organisation is to enable colleagues to achieve their desired future state. Becky’s professional background is in HR and she has previously held roles as a business partner and in employee relations. She practices as a wellbeing coach both privately and as part of her role, and runs mindfulness sessions in the workplace for team building and on a drop-in basis. Regarding her own wellbeing, her ethos is very much based in evolutionary physiology, motivated by the desire to maintain a healthy body into later life, and to move with grace and control.
Read our exclusive interview with Becky Thoseby here.
David Roberts

To read David’s recent articles on HRD Connect, click here.
Penny de Valk
Penny de Valk works with women leaders at all levels who want to amplify the impact they make – with integrity. With over 20 years international experience as a CEO of high growth businesses, and working in the leadership development space for much of that time, she knows what it takes. Penny has chosen to specialise in accelerating women to become successful leaders, where thriving as a high impact leader is the outcome, not settling for exhausted, resentful survival. And where there are no victims. She provides mentoring, training and coaching to help women build the powerful professional lives they want. She is a qualified coach and expert commentator featuring regularly in the likes of The Times and the Huffington Post. As well, Penny is an inspiring conference speaker on topics ranging from developing women’s leadership to navigating work and life.
To read Penny de Valk’s recent article HRD Connect, click here.
Suki Sandhu

Read our exclusive interview with Suki Sandhu here.
Pete Lowe

To read Pete Lowe’s recent articles on HRD Connect, click here.
Dee Jas
Dee has worked across a range of sectors for some of the biggest brands we know and love including the BBC, Transport for London, Santander and Net-A-Porter. Most recently, he was the Senior Director, People & Culture at Girl Effect helping it shape its purpose and identity when it became independent from Nike Foundation to supporting its scale up during a rapid period of growth, marrying media, digital and development sector expertise. He was also a member of the HR Sub-Committee for Amnesty UK, supporting their evolution to eradicate human rights abuses. His passion for culture, creating behaviour change and anthropology have shaped his view of what a world-class People & Culture function looks like in an increasingly connected world. Outside of work, Dee loves to travel and be creative (anything from writing to life drawing!). His drink of choice is always a gin martini – with a twist!
Read our exclusive interview with Dee Jas here.




