Open the field of possibilities
| Dear leaders, |
| Happy November! As we gently step into the winter season, I hope this month's note brings you warmth and inspiration. |
| This time, I want to share something very special: a nugget straight from France: La Forêt des Possibles. It's an invitation to pause, reconnect and rediscover how your team can move forward together with purpose. If you're planning your next offsite or simply looking for a fresh way to re-energize your leadership team, this might just be the breath of air you need. |
| Meet Marin, its inspiring founder and discover how La Forêt des Possibles can help your team open new paths, build trust and make change truly happen. |
| And since transformation always starts with people, I'm also sharing one of this month's leadership resources: “Change Management: where to start?”: a practical guide to leading change without losing the human touch. |
| With curiosity, courage and care, |
This month's nugget
| Exclusively reserved for French-speaking leaders this month: it's available in French for now - English version coming soon! |
| What if your CODIR gave a new impetus to the start of the year? |
| I tested a new way of connecting and bringing out vision and purpose. |
| The end of the year is approaching... Have you planned an offsite with your team? (bravo, that's already very good 👏) |
| Now I can hear you: |
| Clear ambitions... but little time to transform them into concrete plans, as the agenda is already full... Tired teams, chaining committees together without always managing to plan ahead. |
| And what if, this year, curious leaders, you dared to do something different? I offer you a simple, pragmatic tool to inspire and structure your roadmap. A framework that allows you to slow down, breathe and, paradoxically, become more efficient afterwards. |
| Why adopt it? |
| To build trust based on vulnerability (the well-kept secret of every successful team)To awaken curiosity and the desire to explore in new ways. To truly open up the field of possibilities. |
| How does it work? |

1 day offsite.
An immersive workshop that blends creativity and pragmatism, using the tree model as a common thread: from me to us, then from us to the whole.
| In this B.A.N.I.* world, we need innovative approaches to transform strategy into concrete action, and get teams on board with meaning and energy. (And the BPI has recognized this too!) |
| 💬 Want to offer your CODIR a real moment to breathe, reflect and build differently? |
| → Reply to this email with “Forest of Possibilities” |
| *B.A.N.I. defines the world we live in since 2020 - a Brittle, Anxious, Non-Linear and Incomprehensible world. |
Leadership nudge
| Change management: where to start? |
| If there's one topic that never gets old in leadership, it's change. We talk about it all the time, yet when it happens - in our teams, our organizations, or even our own lives - it still shakes things up. |
| I've seen many leaders approach change as a plan to roll out. But real change doesn't happen on PowerPoint slides. It happens in people: in their habits, emotions, and daily realities. |
| This month's resource offers a simple, structured approach to leading change without losing the human side. It breaks down where to start: from identifying real impacts, to listening to weak signals, to celebrating small evolutions - even imperfect ones! |
| If you're navigating a transformation (big or small), this one's worth a read. |
| → Read it here in French or English |
| And don't forget to pass the test! |
Note from an inspiring leader
| Meet Marin Maufrais |
| I had heard about Marin Maufrais long before I met him. He's the older brother of my son's best friend. One day, my son came home and told me about what he saw as quite a feat: Marin had resigned from his internship in public affairs. What Marin would later describe to me simply as “shedding light on an inconsistency.” |
| That decision led to a conversation with the CEO at the time; Emmanuel Faber. Audacity? Courage? Conviction? All three, Captain! |
| Audacity? Yes, because he didn't want to leave without saying something. Courage? Yes, because Marin chose not to follow the obvious path (and with his brilliant academic record, he easily could have). Convictions? Absolutely, grounded in strong human values. |

| And that's how we met: around La Forêt des Possibles. I'll let you discover more about him. |
| What happens when we truly dare to open up as a team? Too often, in organizations, we keep a poker face - afraid that showing vulnerability might backfire. But that silence can come at a high cost. Imagine a boat taking on water. If the crew is too afraid to speak up for fear of being blamed, chances are they won't make it. That sinking ship is our collective future. In a world undergoing deep transformation (climate change, resource scarcity, social tensions) our vulnerabilities are systemic. In companies, they show up in fragile value chains, a loss of meaning, burnout and growing difficulty in mobilizing and retaining talent. How can we address the root causes of these vulnerabilities if we don't dare to name them? How can we identify blind spots, solve tensions, or set a clear direction if no one speaks up about what truly matters? Freeing speech takes courage, a safe framework and a culture of trust. But it's also about opening the door to others; discovering that one person's fear can be balanced by another's strength. Our vulnerabilities then become the collective's power. In a society moving through the fog, it's essential to build teams that are aligned, able to face uncertainty and to find new solutions together. Opening up isn't a weakness: it's a bet on resilience, interdependence and the long view. What inspires you in your leadership? I believe in the power of leading by example. If we want to guide an organization toward an ecological, fair and sustainable transformation. How can we hope to bring others along if we don't start with ourselves? A few years ago, I left an elite Parisian world to get involved in Marseille's northern neighborhoods. Choosing a life of popular ecology surprised many around me. But it also helped gather deeply motivated teams around La Forêt des Possibles: people driven by strong values and genuine generosity. I'm naturally persistent when it comes to vision, but I always try to stay pragmatic in how to get there. I'm well aware of all the hard skills I don't personally master and I see my role as revealing them in others. I love involving my teams, helping them grow, take ownership of projects and turn our constraints into creativity. But to inspire others, you also have to nourish yourself. I've experienced the fatigue that comes from overcommitment... What some call activist burnout. My ability to listen and stay calm suffered. I've always been inspired by those who cultivate gratitude, silence and meditation. But slowing down is hard when you're caught in the rush of action! Then, by chance, I had a serious bike accident... and broke my phone. That moment became a turning point. I took a step back, reassessed my digital habits and decided not to reinstall social media. I'd wanted to quit for months, but it's not easy when those tools are designed to keep you hooked. I swapped scrolling for evenings of sports, reading and silence. And guess what? Bit by bit, the energy came back. Sustainable things take time! That period of inner retreat also created more space for spontaneous initiatives within my teams, the kind that bring everyone along naturally. To me, leadership means inspiring by example, engaging through structure and staying clear by reconnecting to yourself. |


