amy green

The Future of Work/Life

Success that sustains. Performance that lasts. People who are well.

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A reflective exploration of modern success and its hidden costs.

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Speaking

Signature keynotes to inspire and motivate, workshops and facilitation to develop insights and action that imapct how we live and work.

Strategic Advisory

Co-design the future of work/ life with us. Unplug from inherited systems and rebuild what actually works. Bespoke advisory for your workpalce.

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Bring Amy into your next retreat or intensive to facilitate, present, and help your people rethink success and performance.

Living well and working well aren't separate goals.

You don't have to sacrifice who you are to achieve something great.

Meet amy - Futurist.Speaker.author

From wellbeing consultant to cultural strategist

After years building frameworks, programs and a reputation in workplace wellbeing, Amy realised the issue most people and organisations were facing was never just overworking or feeling burnout on a Friday afternoon, it was what they had plugged into. The pace, the pressure, the inherited definitions of success that nobody consciously chose, and the layer of wellbeing as an additional task.

Amy is bringing the next chapter of work/life. It is a methodology, a movement and a realignment for workplaces and people, built on one organising principle: the future of work/life isn't a balancing act, it's designing how they intentionally go together.

Keynote speaker

strategic advisor

Author

podcast host

cultural commentator

This is not another wellness program.

This is not about coping better.

This is about questioning what you plugged into in the first place.

It's time to unplug, rebuild, re-enter.

past organisers & attendees

What People Say

You were very engaging, beautifully spoken and relatable to the audience and have provided much needed insight into the importance of wellbeing in schools. Your knowledge in this space clearly shows.

Aida, Lecturer
Department of Education

Working with Amy was a great opportunity for our team. Her insights into wellbeing sparked meaningful discussions and are a positive advancement for our workplace culture. I especially appreciated how Amy emphasised the importance of personal responsibility in managing one's own wellbeing.

Sophie, Learning Commuity Leader
Sacred Heart Primary School

Through our work with Amy, we have a common understanding of staff wellbeing which is articulated through our newly created school wellbeing statement. It supports our school culture of compassion, stewardship, excellence and service.

Michelle, Leadership Team
Galilee Catholic Primary School
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Podcast??

Professional transitioning roles in modern workplace environment

The Retention Conversation Is Missing Half the Story

April 06, 20264 min read

We keep asking the same question.

Why are people leaving?

It sounds logical. Sensible. Responsible, even. But the moment we frame the issue this way, we assume something has gone wrong. We assume departure equals dissatisfaction.

And that is not always true.

When I reflect on my own career across education and leadership, I moved workplaces roughly every three years. I did not leave because I was unhappy. I left to relocate. To challenge myself. To pursue leadership opportunities. To grow.

Sometimes people are not escaping something broken. They are moving towards something bigger.

The Retention Conversation Is Too Narrow

The retention conversation is largely built around fixing what is broken. Toxic culture. Poor leadership. Burnout. Workload. And yes, sometimes these are very real.

But sometimes nothing is broken.

Sometimes someone has outgrown their current season. Sometimes life shifts. Sometimes ambition evolves. Sometimes opportunity knocks.

If we treat every resignation as a failure, we risk misunderstanding the very nature of modern work.

The real issue may not be retention alone. It may be how we design workplaces in a world where movement is normal.


We Need Better Data

Before we build solutions, we need to understand the problem properly.

Most organisations track that someone left. Fewer capture why in any meaningful depth.

Exit data is often binary. Stayed or left. Contract ended or resigned.

What we rarely capture is the texture.

  • Was it a toxic environment?

  • A relocation?

  • A promotion elsewhere?

  • A desire for a sea change?

  • A life stage shift, such as having children or caring for ageing parents?

  • A deliberate pivot into a new career?

Without this nuance, organisations risk investing heavily in wellbeing and retention programs that may not address the actual drivers of movement.

This is where structured insight becomes critical. Through approaches such as Beneath the Surface, which focuses on authentic staff voice and deeper qualitative data, workplaces can understand root causes rather than surface patterns.

Retention strategies without insight are guesses. And guesses are expensive.

Leadership team analysing workplace data and feedback

The Generational Shift We Cannot Ignore

There is something else happening beneath the surface of the retention conversation.

It is generational.

Previous generations often approached work as a long-term commitment. One employer. One profession. A lifetime of loyalty. Retirement as the reward.

That model is fading.

Many people entering the workforce today want flexibility, meaning, and mobility. They want to live now, not defer their lives until later. A two- or three-year chapter in one organisation is not seen as instability. It is seen as growth.

This is not disloyalty.

It is agency.

Yet many organisations are still measuring success using an outdated benchmark of long-term tenure, as though longevity alone defines commitment.

It does not.

Multigenerational workforce collaborating in modern office

What Modern Workplaces Actually Need to Get Good At

If workforce movement is not a crisis but a reality, the question shifts.

It is no longer: How do we keep people longer?
It becomes: How do we design systems that are not fragile when people leave?

This is where work design matters.

Workplaces that will thrive in the next decade will be exceptional at:

  • Onboarding – so new staff contribute quickly and confidently

  • Knowledge transfer – so institutional wisdom does not walk out the door

  • Role clarity and design – so positions evolve without destabilising the system

  • Culture – so when someone leaves, they leave as an advocate

This is the essence of sustainable workplace design. Through programs such as Staff Wellbeing by Design and longer-term partnerships like Thriving Schools, organisations can embed clarity, consistency and capability so that wellbeing is not dependent on any one individual.

Because here is the uncomfortable truth.

If one person leaving breaks your system, the system was fragile to begin with.


So What Does This Mean for Leaders?

It means retention is one metric, not the mission.

The deeper question is:

What kind of workplace are you designing, and for whom?

Are you building an organisation that depends on individual heroics, or one anchored in strong systems?
Are you reacting to turnover, or proactively designing for sustainability?
Are you measuring loyalty, or cultivating advocacy?

Movement will continue. Careers will evolve. Seasons will change.

The leaders who thrive will not be those who cling to retention as the sole marker of success. They will be the ones who design workplaces strong enough to handle growth, transition and renewal.


Work is changing. The workforce has changed.

The conversation needs to change with it.

If this perspective resonates, you may also find value in listening to The Work of Wellbeing podcast, where we explore the intersection of leadership, systems and sustainable performance in more depth.

And if you are ready to rethink how your workplace is designed, explore how we can support you through Speaking and Workshops, Bespoke Consulting, or a long-term partnership model that strengthens both performance and people.

Retention is only one chapter.
Design is the bigger story.


Ready to Prioritise Wellbeing in Your Workplace?
At The Wellness Strategy, we help schools, businesses, and organisations create impactful and sustainable wellbeing strategies that foster thriving, productive environments.

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staff retentionmodern workplace designworkforce trendsemployee retention strategyleadership and retentionknowledge transfer systemsstaff wellbeing strategyorganisational design
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