A Chartered Accountant from New Zealand ends up advising global investors on Italy’s value proposition, and somehow that’s only the start. We sit down with Aster Thackeray to trace the real career mechanics behind a “non-linear” path: why her Chartered Accountancy qualification travelled further than a law degree, how London changed her access to international business, and what foreign direct investment (FDI) looks like when you’re the person translating finance, tax incentives, and opportunity into plain language for decision-makers.
We also get honest about culture and identity. Aster shares how being mixed shaped her early questions of belonging, then became a strength in a global city where cultural awareness is a serious professional skill. From working styles in New Zealand and Ireland to the hierarchy and nuance she encountered with Italian colleagues, she explains what she learned the hard way and why The Culture Map is a must-read for cross-cultural communication, leadership, and “reading the room” without guesswork.
Then the conversation turns local, and surprisingly moving: how a simple Greenwich coffee meet-up during Covid grew into a community of around 2,000 parents, a free village fair, and a sold-out International Women’s Day family morning tea. We talk social impact, social enterprise structure, and the line that sticks: people want a village, but they don’t always want to be a villager. If you care about community building, networking, time management, and building a meaningful career without perfectionism, you’ll take plenty from this one.
If this sparked something for you, please subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave us a review. What part of Aster’s story feels most relevant to your own path?