Daniel's keynote on embodied leadership

This past weekend, MOVE founder Daniel Ludevig gave an interactive keynote lecture at the London Natural Leaders-Now conference. A total first, Daniel opened his presentation with a swing lindy-hop performance with his dance partner Claire Chen. He then went on to give a 45 minute masterclass lecture on the topic of embodiment and presence in leadership. He explained his definition of leadership as not just having the capacity to see the whole but also to care for it. His experiential talk invited the mixed audience of leaders, grassroots activists, business people, established change agents and simply curious participants to stand up and move throughout the auditorium where the conference was held. They experimented and felt into the exploration of presence and intelligence within movement and our bodies and engaged with new possibilities for understanding leadership. For a longer length clip click here

Newspapers interview Daniel and MOVE's story

Newspapers interview Daniel and MOVE's story

MOVE founder was interviewed by two separate publications. In an article which appeared in the German newspaper, Deutsche Welle, the background story behind the creation and history of MOVE Leadership is explored by writer Michael Scaturro and includes details about the evolution of the company’s methodology. It also addresses the reasons that using embodied and alternative learning tools and practices is more important now than ever before. Hendrik Backerra, one of MOVE’s associates, is also quoted in the article when he speaks about some of the great problems in today’s business world and the incredible solutions offered by his collaborative work with MOVE. 

In an interview from the Hungarian coaching magazine Magyar Coachszemle Daniel is interviewed by Csetneki Csaba about the development, philosophy, challenges and future work of MOVE Leadership. The article looks into the opportunities and challenges behind consulting companies using alternative and creative learning strategies and methods.