Workplace Rewired
People Strategy as a Competitive Advantage
What if your greatest source of innovation, loyalty, and performance isn't a product or process - but your people?
In a world of rapid change, rising expectations, and cultural drift, most organisations are still treating people strategy like an HR afterthought. But the companies that are thriving today - those attracting top talent, outperforming competitors, and building resilient cultures - have realised something different:
People strategy is business strategy.
In Workplace Rewired, veteran hospitality leader and people strategist James Godwin challenges the outdated, box-ticking view of HR and delivers a bold, practical framework for building workplaces that actually work - for humans and for results.
Whether you're scaling a startup, growing a mid-sized team, or leading in a complex, siloed organisation, this book shows you how to:
Build a culture that aligns with strategy - not slogansTurn middle managers into culture shapers and trust buildersCreate listening systems that go beyond surveys and drive real actionDesign a people scorecard that connects performance to engagementEmbed purpose without the fluff or performative PRLead with transparency, autonomy, and accountabilityTurn your organisation into a place people want to stay, grow, and leadWith compelling case studies, powerful tools, and decades of real-world experience, Workplace Rewired is your blueprint for reimagining how work feels, how teams are led, and how strategy is lived every day - not just drafted in the boardroom.
This book is for:
Founders, CEOs, and people leaders building the future of work
HR professionals ready to move from compliance to influence
Team leads and managers tired of micromanagement and mediocrity
Change-makers who believe work can be better - more human, more honest, more high-performing
Because when your people believe in where they work, they don't just show up.
They show up differently.
If you're ready to lead with clarity, courage, and culture - this book is your starting point.