Our purpose is to facilitate experiences to ensure everyone feels
SEEN,
HEARD,
and BELONGS
at work.
Read Our Harvard Business Review Feature
Julie Kratz has been speaking, consulting, and training organizations on culture, talent retention, and leadership for over a decade.
Next Pivot Point teaches actionable approaches to leadership that go beyond statements and performative tactics. We meet you and your team wherever you are on your learning journey to walk side by side with you through real change. Your leaders will leave our work together with commitments and practical ideas they can actually use to make a lasting impact.
We Want You: An Allyship Guide for People with Power
It’s full of practical, research-backed ways leaders can show up as allies—at the individual, team, and organizational level— even during these polarizing and uncertain times. This necessary book helps leaders turn their fear into fuel and reframe power, model psychological safety and storytelling as an ally, while building inclusive policies and proactive talent pipelines.
We Want You: An Allyship Guide for People with Power
It’s full of practical, research-backed ways leaders can show up as allies—at the individual, team, and organizational level— even during these polarizinng and uncertain times. This necessary book helps leaders turn their fear into fuel and reframe power, model psychological safety and storytelling as an ally, while building inclusive policies and proactive talent pipelines.
Who We Work With
“Next Pivot Point is thoughtful, intentional, and supportive of our company, our global employees, and the commitment we have to workplace culture.”
– Tripadvisor
Explore Our Latest Articles
Inclusive leaders have a growth mindset
Inclusive leaders know diversity is about progress over perfection. They practice the growth mindset and listen to learn from others different from themselves.
How do you know if your workplace has psychological safety?
Psychological safety is important for diversity and inclusion to thrive in the workplace. Psychological safety means to be able to freely express yourself without the fear of retaliation. People that are of different racial identities, genders, or of diverse backgrounds report feeling less psychologically safe at work.
We are a product of our lived experiences
Challenge your brain go beyond just YOUR lived experiences by understanding and uncovering your potential biases.
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