Start something at work. Without permission.
“Those who do not move do not notice their chains.”
— Rosa Luxemburg
If you never do something you weren’t told to do, you don’t have any freedom.
For people inside large organizations who are tired of seeing problems, having ideas, and doing nothing with them.
You will leave with one small, real action you can take this week.
What you don’t need. And what you do.
What you need is a starting point small enough to act on — and real enough to matter.
A short session. Four concrete moves.
Spot a real problem you could act on.
Make it small enough to start.
Turn it into a concrete first move.
Leave with one sentence: “This week, I will try…”
You work inside something large. And you feel stuck.
You are capable. You care. You notice what is broken. You have ideas.
But you keep telling yourself…
I do not have the authority.
It will never get approved.
It is too political.
It is too big.
I do not know where to start.
Two ideas. One practical move.
Why smart people stall before they begin.
Why the problem is often not effort — it’s the size of the first step.
How to find something broken, make it smaller, and act without permission.
Most people don’t need more advice.
They need a way to begin. This session is not theory, and not a framework. It’s an hour spent getting one real thing pointed at a real first step.
At the end of 60 minutes, you will have…
One problem worth acting on.
One small test you can run.
One first step, written in plain language.
A clearer sense of how to move from thinking to acting.
Tim Hampton. A career inside complex systems.
Tim has spent his career working inside complex systems — the kind where change rarely starts with permission, and almost never starts with a plan.
This session draws on what he’s learned watching capable people wait, and the small, specific things that get them moving again.
A live hour. Less than the cost of lunch.
Save your spot. Start with something smaller.
If you’re tired of waiting for the perfect opening, this is the hour to trade it for something real.
Save my spot on Eventbrite →