For the builders of the future of work

Your expertise,
made visible.

Foundations and scaffolding for what you're building next. The problem isn't what you know. It's that the world can't see it clearly yet.

The case for Slow Creators

The content treadmill wasn't built to help you.

The creator economy runs on variable reinforcement — the same mechanism that makes slot machines addictive. Post something. Chase the reaction. Post again. It keeps you producing. It doesn't help you build something that lasts.

Most people who've left corporate didn't leave to become content creators. They left for autonomy, to do meaningful work — and building a personal brand, as it's usually described, feels like the opposite of that.

It's not about posting less. It's about intention — depth over virality, craftsmanship over content farming.

— Slow principles in action

Read the full philosophy on Substack

The Four Pillars

01

Intentional

Start with the question, not the format. Every piece serves a purpose.

02

Considered

Good work takes the time it takes. Optimise for impact, not volume.

03

Authentic

Your origin story earns the authority for everything else you say.

04

Durable

Assets, not posts. Content that compounds rather than decays in 48 hours.

Who this is for

Building what I needed myself.

I'm Cal. I built this doing what I do naturally — having honest conversations with interesting people, and noticing that real expertise and performed expertise rarely look the same online. Designing Value is what I built to close that gap. For myself first. Now for others.

Still in corporate

The work is shifting around you and you know it. Quietly building a presence before you leave, telling yourself you'll sort your brand positioning once you've made the move.

Recently left

Billing some work. Not sure how to describe what you do. Website is out of date or doesn't exist yet.

Building a practice

Getting traction. Ready to look the part. Just not sure where to start with the brand.

Established, but invisible

Billing well but not beyond your immediate network. You know you're leaving pipeline on the table.

The Slow Interview

A conversation. A brief. A starting point.

Not a podcast. Not a panel. A single, unhurried conversation — and a content brief delivered to you afterwards that finds the ideas in your thinking worth building from.

01 —
45–60 minutes No script. The prep is mine — your job is to show up and think out loud.
02 —
A content brief, delivered to you Pull quotes, post angles, your best moments timestamped, and my editorial read of what your thinking revealed.
03 —
A piece published in Designing Value Your conversation becomes a long-form piece. Cross-post rights are yours. The byline is always shared.
04 —
A follow-up, seven weeks later A personal note asking how the brief is working — and what the next step looks like if you want one.
Apply for an interview
Your conversation, distilled
Alex Thornton
Former MD · now executive coach & fractional COO
08:42

"The moment I stopped pretending to be the person they hired and started being the person I'd become — that's when the interesting work began."

The sentence that earns the authority for every piece of thought leadership that follows.

52
Min recorded
3
Post angles
4
Key moments

↓ See a full example brief below

Work with me

Where you go from here is up to you.

The interview is the starting point. Everything else follows at your pace.

The starting point

Free

By application or invitation · selected by Cal


The Slow Interview

A conversation and a brief. Most people find it changes how they think about their own story.

  • 45–60 min recorded conversation
  • Editorial content brief
  • 3 publishable post angles
  • Timestamped quotable moments
  • Published piece in Designing Value
  • Personal follow-up at seven weeks
Express interest

When you're ready to scale

From £350/mo

Minimum 3 months · capped capacity


Content Engine

A monthly session, a brief, and branded content ready to publish on your own channels.

  • Monthly recorded session
  • Session brief and post angles
  • Branded assets ready to publish
  • LinkedIn content and long-form piece
  • Video clips with captions
  • Access to your content portal
Let's talk

Not ready for any of the above?

The Designing Value publication on Substack is free for advocates of slow creation. Essays on the transition, the future of work, and building a practice on your own terms.

Read on Substack

See it in action

What the brief looks like

Every guest receives this after their conversation. A real example — shared with permission.

Your conversation, distilled

Luigi Ambrosio
Head of Operations · Vallist at Finlaison House, London
54
Minutes recorded
3
Publishable angles
3
Quotable moments

What follows is drawn from our 54-minute conversation on 12 February. These are the ideas that stayed with me — and the angles worth developing on your own platform.

The moment that defined the conversation

Everything is curved — just for this sense of embracing. We live in an industrial design where everything is square, so we pushed the old-fashioned way, go round. There is a metaphor for hugging people, surrounding people.

— Luigi Ambrosio

Themes in this conversation

Hospitality-led workplace Integrated wellbeing Servant leadership People movement Community Authenticity
01 —

The dancer who redesigned the modern office

A background in professional dance and a master's in people movement isn't the obvious path to running a premium co-working space. But Luigi argues it's exactly the right one — and the data on Vallist's member retention is starting to prove it.

LinkedInSubstack
02 —

Checkbox wellness vs. integrated wellbeing

A quarterly yoga class isn't a wellbeing programme. Luigi makes the case for what genuine, embedded wellbeing looks like — and why most operators are still just performing it.

LinkedInHR Publications
03 —

Why "community" has become the most hollow word in co-working

Everybody talks about it, almost nobody builds it. Luigi's argument — drawn from hospitality, dance, and a basement in New York — is that genuine community starts with how you treat the person who cleans the floor.

LinkedInPodcastsInstagram
12:07

"Once they onboard, there will be a one-to-one with whoever will take care of the company. Because some companies, yes, they really care about wellbeing, and some companies they don't care. And that's the truth."

The commercial reality beneath the philosophy. Luigi isn't selling wellness to believers — he's building a system that works even for companies that don't yet know they need it.

14:24

"I'll probably describe this as the difference between checkbox wellness and integrated wellness."

A framing Luigi immediately endorsed — clean and ownable as a LinkedIn post or article introduction.

29:34

"I was in a basement with rats and cockroaches, working 17 hours to learn a little bit of the language — crying at the sink saying, what am I doing with my life for this dream? If as a leader I forget that, what kind of leader am I?"

The origin story. The moment that earns the authority for everything else he says. Handle with care, but don't leave it unused.

From Cal

Luigi's conversation sits at an unusual intersection: professional dance, masters-level anthropology, hotel management, and now the premium flex workspace market. What's striking isn't the breadth — it's the coherence. Every role has been an expression of the same belief: that how people feel in a space is the product, not a feature of it.

Start with the personal origin story. It earns the authority for everything else he says.

— Cal Ingram, Designing Value
Available on request
01 —Full transcript, lightly cleaned
02 —Video clips, export-ready
03 —This brief, as a PDF
04 —Luigi's quotes included in a forthcoming Designing Value piece on premium amenities and member retention

At a glance

54
Minutes recorded
3
Publishable angles
3
Quotable moments

Your name. Your thinking. Your angles. Delivered within a week of your conversation.

Apply for an interview

Apply

Express your interest

I'm selective — not every application becomes an interview. That's about curation, not exclusivity.

I read every submission personally. You'll hear back within a week.

FAQ

A few things worth knowing

No. The best conversations happen with people who think carefully rather than perform fluently. I do the preparation — you just show up and think out loud. The brief is written, so the recording doesn't need to be broadcast-quality to produce something genuinely useful.
The brief stands on its own — there's no obligation. Within a few weeks I'll generally send a personal note asking how it's working. If the timing is right for a Brand Sprint or the Content Engine, we can talk then. There's no funnel, just a conversation.
A copywriter needs your brief. An agency needs your strategy. I work upstream of both — finding the thread in your thinking, naming the idea you've been circling for years, and building the infrastructure so that everything that follows is coherent. The difference is editorial intelligence, not execution alone.
Your brief, your transcript, your angles, your clips — they're yours. The Designing Value piece publishes under a shared byline with full cross-post rights for you. Website and brand assets from a paid Sprint are yours outright. No licensing, no strings.
Where I write about the transition — future of work, building a practice on your own terms, intentional lifestyle design, and the slow creation approach to content. Free to read. A paid tier for people who want the full guest briefs and a closer conversation. No hard sell, ever.

Ready?

Your expertise and insights
have genuine value.
Time to show the world on your terms.

Apply for a Slow Interview. The brief alone may change how you think about your own story.

Apply for an interview