June 17, 2025 All Articles

Meet the Speaker: Ngozi Weller, Founder, Aurora, Inc

Ngozi Weller is a certified workplace inclusion specialist, ICF- and EMCC-accredited coach who partners with organisations to build inclusive, psychologically safe cultures. As co-founder of Aurora, she leads strategic consultancy work that embeds employee wellbeing and leadership accountability into the heart of organisational culture. Her approach blends commercial insight with lived experience of burnout, ADHD, and racial marginalisation, helping clients create sustainable systems of care, equity, and resilience across teams. Ngozi also co-hosts the award-winning podcast The Wellbeing Rebellion.

We are delighted that Ngozi will be speaking in both London and Manchester during our UK Summit. We caught up with her to find out how she’s feeling in the runup to the event.

I’m doing well, thank you! Life is full, as always—running a business, managing projects, and parenting 2 neurodivergent kids (one of whom is in the throes of GCSEs) keeps things interesting—but I’m fuelled by purpose, and that helps keep me going.

The biggest challenge is getting senior leaders to go beyond box-ticking and invest meaningfully in culture change. Many still see wellbeing as a cost centre rather than a strategic enabler. In the Northwest, there’s progress, but there’s also hesitation—especially in how mental health intersects with race, gender, and neurodiversity.

The most effective strategies centre around psychological safety and inclusive leadership. At Aurora, we’ve been piloting leadership development sessions that combine mental health literacy with lived experience and cultural intelligence. Externally, I’ve seen a rise in grassroots-led wellbeing networks—especially those focused on racial equity and neurodiversity—which are helping to hold organisations accountable from within.

Because I’ve seen just how damaging it can be when we ignore or dismiss it. Just like many people working in this space, I suffered from stage 3 burnout, depression, and suicidal ideation before anyone even noticed that there was something seriously wrong- and that included me. That experience drives me to create workplaces where others don’t have to break to be seen. This is more than business—it’s a mission.

AI is helping us streamline tasks, especially in research and content development. But we’re also cautious—it’s not emotionally intelligent, and it doesn’t understand nuance, culture, or trauma. At Aurora, we use AI as a support tool, not a decision-maker. The human element remains central to all our interventions. That is critical because increasingly we’re seeing people try to devolve wellbeing support responsibility to AI. Whilst the tech is very helpful, you still have to ensure that it is working well. Anyone who has used Chat or similar knows that it gets things wrong sometimes – when you’re dealing with people’s welfare, you can’t afford to make careless mistakes.

Yes—there’s growing resistance to equity conversations, especially around race. “Anti-woke” backlash is real. We’ve had to reframe our messaging and equip our clients with the language and confidence to continue doing the right thing, even when it’s unpopular. We’re teaching courage and strategy in equal measure.

Leaders should prioritise:

  • Creating psychologically safe spaces.
  • Addressing race equity and systemic bias at the leadership level.
  • Supporting neurodiverse employees beyond legal compliance.
  • Measuring the long-term impact of wellbeing, not just short-term engagement.

It’s increasing—slowly. HR leaders are getting better at linking wellbeing to retention, performance, and culture. But until wellbeing KPIs are tied to board-level performance and shareholder value, the investment won’t match the need. We must treat wellbeing as a business-critical issue, not a ‘nice-to-have.’

Aurora is pioneering intersectional wellbeing—addressing mental health through the lenses of race, gender, and neurodiversity. We’ve delivered bespoke programmes for law firms, retailers, and universities, focusing on practical change. Our podcast, The Wellbeing Rebellion, challenges the status quo and elevates unheard voices in this space.

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