I work with organizations navigating change, growth, and complexity—building the systems, structures, and cultures where people and performance genuinely thrive together.
My approach is grounded in Life-Life Harmony—a framework I developed for redesigning how work is structured and experienced, moving beyond balance toward something more integrated and durable—for businesses and teams.
A systems designer at heart and an entrepreneur by instinct—I've built teams, companies, and creative ventures with one consistent thread: making other people's work better, more purposeful, and more human, in a way that elevates contribution, cultivates authentic culture, and increases organizational revenue and profit.
My executive leadership has been grounded in genuine commitment to the organizations, people, and missions I've joined. See below and view LinkedIn for more.
As one of three partners, I led operations, people, and business strategy across a nine-year arc of transformation—building the infrastructure, brand, culture, and operating systems that allowed AREA 17 to grow from a respected boutique into a globally distributed agency.
More + Close −Purpose was built around a belief: that movements need infrastructure just as much as they need urgency. I came in early to help build the team, the creative model, and the organizational conditions that made both rapid-response campaigning and long-term institution-building possible at the same time.
More + Close −Supporting the direction and operations for a global membership of founders and leaders in digital agencies—connecting on business strategy, organizational health, and the future of creative work.
Supporting a veteran, boutique talent consultancy as they grow and stay at the leading edge of people operations and organizational best practice as the future of work continues to evolve.
I partner with organizations, startups, and individuals navigating transition, accelerated growth, or strategic redesign—as a hands-on advisor and active practitioner. Think: a fractional Chief Operations Officer, People Officer, or Innovation Officer at an organization's fingertips. If the leadership opportunity and ambition are deeply aligned, I'm open to full-time roles as well.
Grounded in the Life-Life Harmony framework, this is where I write, speak, and think in public about the future of work—why it needs to change, what that change looks like in practice, and how organizations can get there. I'm actively looking for the right rooms, stages, and pages to be part of.
I'm always glad to hear from people doing interesting work—whether that's a potential engagement, a conversation about the future of work, an invitation to speak or write, or just a good idea worth sharing.
hello@wirth.worksI've always struggled with the phrase work-life balance. Something has always felt off: we spend one-third of our lives working—if work isn't part of life, what is it? For most of my career I didn't have better language for it, just a growing sense that the way we talk about, experience, and design work is inadequate. And then reality made the truth a bit louder. Leading a global team through the pandemic, the line between life and work didn't blur—it effectively dissolved. When I became a parent of two soon after, the interconnectedness of it all became undeniable. That's when the words Life-Life Harmony found me.
Life-Life Harmony is a framework—and a commitment—for building organizations around how humans actually function, behave, and dream. Not utopian. Practical, operational, and built to last. Organizations that get this right don't just become better places to work. They perform better, retain more, and build something that lasts.
Read on Substack →We exist in a rare moment where thinking in terms of the long-accepted "work-life balance" paradigm no longer reflects—or supports—today's world of work.
Post-pandemic realities, geopolitical instability, accelerating climate and social pressures, and the rapid advance of AI have fundamentally reshaped how we live, work, and relate. Organizational systems designed for a simpler era are breaking under the weight of complexity.
Organizations are operating under mounting pressure: economic volatility, global competition, technological acceleration, and rising expectations for speed, transparency, and accountability. At the same time, people are no longer willing to organize their lives around work alone. They expect meaning, flexibility, autonomy, and humanity—not as perks, but as baseline conditions.
AI is reshaping not just how work gets done, but what human contribution means. Plural careers, caregiving responsibilities, community commitments—the social reality layered onto all of this is more complex than any system we've built to manage it.
That's always been my craft—designing the environments, structures, and systems that help people do their best work while living their best lives. Not in a fluffy, utopian way, but in a deeply practical, operational way. The rails matter. The rhythms matter. Intention with follow-through matters.
This is not a moment for incremental fixes. It is an opportunity to redesign the role of work as part of life before this window of possibility closes.
Life-Life Harmony helps leaders redesign people-systems for sustained performance and human flourishing. At its core, it's a body of practical beliefs where business performance and human sustainability are not competing priorities—but interdependent design outcomes.
This begins with a simple but often ignored truth: we are still designing work around a "single-life assumption"—one role, one employer, one identity—despite the fact that people are already managing multiple roles, identities, and responsibilities, both in and out of the workplace.
Most of our systems are built as an opposition, as if work must be protected from the human, rather than designed for the human.
For people, it offers real support for lived experience—not in theory, but through the systems they interact with every day. People bring their full lives to work, and those lives deserve clarity, dignity, and sustainable support.
For organizations, it creates conditions where people and performance reinforce one another. Study after study shows that when people feel supported, connected, and purpose-driven, performance rises, innovation flourishes, and retention increases.
Life-Life Harmony is not simply a values stance, but a strategic business imperative.
Five essential conditions that shape how people experience work—and how organizations perform over time. Most organizations approach these in isolation. Life-Life Harmony designs them as an integrated system, because weakness in one destabilizes the whole.
Treating communication as a core operating system—not an individual skill—with shared language, decision-making frameworks, and feedback loops that clarify expectations, reduce friction, and build trust at every level of the organization.
A shift from offering benefits to designing legitimate care—systems that reduce burnout, support mental and physical health, and account for the full realities of people's lives, including caregiving, health, and the unexpected.
Aligning organizational purpose with individual growth—designing systems where people can see, feel, and measure their impact on something larger than themselves, with real autonomy and evolving mastery built into the work itself.
Shifting from control to connection—designing physical, digital, and cultural environments that support shared context, authentic belonging, and the kind of voluntary participation that can't be mandated but can absolutely be cultivated.
Shifting from pay as a transaction to compensation as a reciprocal and transparent value system—aligning pay, benefits, and recognition with market realities and real human needs, regardless of whose life they reflect and how governments contribute to them.
When people feel genuinely supported—not managed—they stay, grow, and bring others with them. Retention stops being a metric and starts being a signal.
Values stop living in handbooks and start showing up in how decisions get made, how feedback moves, how people treat each other under pressure.
When the systems are well-designed, people don't have to fight the organization to do their jobs. Energy goes toward the work instead of around it.
Clarity, trust, and shared purpose make better work possible—and sustainable. People don't need to be pushed harder. They need cleaner conditions to do what they're capable of.
Organizations that design for the whole person don't sacrifice margin to do it—they grow it. Reduced attrition, higher engagement, stronger output, and better client relationships are all measurable returns. Taking care of people is the business strategy.
Life-Life Harmony isn't a finished product—it's a framework I'm actively developing through research, real-world application, and genuine exchange with people who care about these questions. Some posts are structured and researched. Some are loose, inquisitive, and very simply me. All of it is rooted in the belief that when work and society honor the whole person, everything gets better.
If this resonates, I'd love to have you along.
Whether you want to invite me to speak, have me on a podcast, collaborate on something, make an introduction, or just to say hello—I'd love to hear from you.
hello@wirth.works