Red Brick Thinking is like decluttering for your mind and your business. It’s the reminder we all need: you don’t need to do more to grow; you need to do less, better. This book helped me see that clarity doesn’t come from adding more to your plate — it comes from knowing what to let go of. Game changer. —Olivia Carr, founder and CEO, Shhh Silk This book will speak to anyone who’s been caught in the rhythm of doing too much, for too long. It invites us to ask better questions and to choose what really matters. —Maree McPherson OAM, author of Worthy and Cutting through the Grass Ceiling, leadership development specialist and confidante to CEOs, helping them think Red Brick Thinking is the missing manual for modern work — practical, evidence-based and deeply human. It’s a must for anyone serious about sustainable talent and culture. It’s more than a book — it’s a movement. It empowers leaders to lead with intention, not inertia, and to design cultures that thrive on less, not more. —Melissa Gee Kee, Chief Talent, Development, and People Analytics Officer at Unilever This book cuts through the noise and dares you to do the brave thing — let go. A minimalist manifesto with maximum impact for anyone ready to lighten up and lead with more purpose, power and presence. —Dr. Margie Warrell, bestselling author of The Courage Gap and You’ve Got This! Red Brick Thinking makes a compelling case for rejecting accumulated habits and tasks to free up your time and energy for what matters most. Subtraction is powerful — not just as a business tactic, but as a personal act of agency, allowing us to consciously design our lives to better align with what we value most. I loved it. —Kate Christie, global bestselling author of The Life List: Master Every Moment and Live an Audacious Life This book is insightful, thoughtful, and made me challenge myself and my current work process. Strategic subtraction — my new best friend. Red Brick Thinking educated me on how humans are hardwired to do the opposite, and showed me that going against this natural instinct can actually lead to more productivity. Genius. —Steve Menzies, former Australian Representative Rugby League Player and finance broker