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18 June 2025

01:09:53

Matt Hocking

OVERVIEW:

Curly Steve and Matt Hocking discuss the transformative power of creativity in addressing the climate crisis. Matt, founder of LEAP, a B Corp design studio, emphasises the importance of ecological and social responsibility in design. He shares his journey from early creative influences to leading at the Eden Project, where he implemented sustainable practices. Matt highlights the significance of B Corp certification, which he achieved in 2005, and the impact of his work on environmental standards. He also introduces the concept of "enoughism," advocating for balanced activism and practical steps like switching to ethical banks and adopting sustainable practices in daily life.

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00:00What if the most powerful tool we have for tackling the climate crisis isn't technology or policy, but creativity? Today's guest believes
00:12design can do more than decorate. It can dismantle, rebuild, and reimagine the systems we live
00:19by. Victor Packenac was a pioneering designer, author, and educator throughout the 20th century. He said, "Design, if it's to be ecologically
00:31responsible and socially responsive, must be revolutionary and radical." Hi, I'm Curly Steve and we're searching for a greener room.
00:51Today I'm joined by Matt Hawking, founder of Leap, a design studio built on purpose and action. Matt brings a life's work of planet centered
01:02creativity from leading with BCorp values to mentoring the next wave of change makers. His approach is rooted in curiosity, challenge, and doing the
01:14work, not just talking about it. Hi, Matt. Welcome to the show. Good morning, and thank you for inviting me in and uh helping me navigate Cornwall via bus.
01:25That's uh that's great that you came on the bus. We'll talk about that later, but uh first of all, I'd like to go back uh just rewind a little and tell me
01:32where when did you first find creativity and how did it come into your life? Well, it's a good question. Um and it's also I guess like what is
01:41our perception of creativity but for me in its simplest terms was was with my father and with nature living in penic dad was although sort of a mix between a
01:52a bouncer and a scientist quite an interesting mix he was a bouncer and he was also a scientist um yeah he nature was always a big part of us and nature's
02:03natural creativity you know and um and then lots of drawing ing doodling and just yeah art was always thing that was a thing in school that's the thing I
02:14went after school into college that's the thing that my job came you know being a creative I didn't do graphic design and illustration but I ended up
02:21doing creative art directing other creatives so I would say really from the you know my first conscious awareness um and I would do these elaborate
02:33creative things in the garden I would do elaborate creative things with paper and card indoors and silver foil, you name it. There was making playing. I didn't
02:42have things like action men or anything like that. It was either n natural creatures, rocks, crystals, um paper cards.
02:52So, yeah. And so, so would you suggest that uh creativity has always come from nature and nature's always come from creativity? Is it it's always been
03:00naturally aligned? Yeah. I think, you know, the the ultimate creative and is is nature. We're inspired by everything around us,
03:10you know, whether it's the stars to the plants to the Fibonacci spiral that's used in, you know, um you know like sunfl well is natural part of
03:18sunflowers, the golden arm, you know, to then when humans are creating something like the seed at Eden project which is inspired by the Fibonacci by Sepia
03:26Randall Page. Um, so these it's all around us all the signs if we can feel and hear it. And actually, Curly, they they say there's like a point where
03:37you're either a creative or you're an accountant or that but ultimately I don't believe that that's the case. Accountancy is just another form of
03:47creativity. Absolutely. You know, it's the way our minds work at super speed to do that. It's a creative pathway. And so it's only for me the school system at
03:56times well now at all times this kind of unfortunately hundred-year-old archaic system that needs a bit of a reboot. are not going to get on a, you know, a sofa,
04:05but it's more like that we are then funneled into, oh, you're creative or you're sporty, you're this, but ultimately it's creative. And then we
04:13get to a stage later on where only some people say, oh, I'm creative. Like, and then other people, yeah, I can't draw, I can't do this. Doesn't mean they're not
04:21creative, not expressive. Absolutely. I totally agree. and and and we'll get on to um whether you think people are creative uh whether you think everybody
04:30can be creative later on, but um tell me your your journey from because obviously so you've you've been creative since you were this big. So tell me about your
04:40journey from this big to maybe to Eden. Yeah. So I'll try and keep this as brief as I can. Um so yeah, my journey to to get to Eden.
04:53So school was great and I drew and I did graffiti and I things like that good stuff and naughty stuff. Um and and then I knew my parents are very kind of cool
05:06with me kind of thing. There was never like a big push you must do this must do that. And I guess later on a really good example of not having pressure on me. Um
05:15I did good at school. Um but where I excelled was in the art and the technical drawing space. And strangely although I could have just gone on to
05:24six form and had the easy pathway and you know geography was my big love but um I love geography tectonic plates and colder and things like that love a bit
05:33of old myth and and stuff but history wasn't for me and I think academically I had enough so I just put myself into the creative arena and that meant going down
05:41to Falmouth at the time university of Fmouth had an outpost at Campborn in the block flats there a graphic design and technical drawing I chose the wrong
05:51course technical drawing cuz a few friends were going. Mhm. Turns out that's like drawing precisely car engines and things like that or book
05:58covers. But actually later on in life that served me well because I'm very good at art directing other creatives. So did all that different went to
06:08another art college. So you finished university? I never finished university. Right. left a term before the end after four years um because I
06:18felt well low I didn't get on with the head teacher I didn't agree with his teaching practice which was everyone needs to be his style and I was like but
06:27what about my style um and um I was getting lower grades I had a brilliant bunch of supportive friends I didn't want to leave pride my
06:36parents had backed me to go there I was in Swansea but I left in the end and Actually flipping forwards um six months after working on a bar and a little bit
06:45of travel. I end up going to a job interview. I walked in realized I knew nothing about typography and graphic design and that's what they were about.
06:54And I went into the interview. It was a Friday. I was the last interview the day in talk and I said I'm really sorry. I'm completely wasting your time. I don't
07:02understand all the things you got. And they said, "Look, it's been a long week. You're the last candidate. You're here. You come up from Cormal." I showed him
07:08my folio. I can definitely draw and and sketch and concept. I got the job. Oh, awesome. And I've played that forward ever since. It's slightly different
07:16story, but yeah, when that never judge a book by its cover, be your most authentic self and um and I'll always have a conversation because you never
07:26know where it'll go. But yeah, then after that, that was then like eight years. This is my Tor Bay bit. and uh eight years of being in Tor Bay and
07:34having a base there and these two exachi directors which I didn't even know what Tachis was and things like that at the time um had moved down London West End
07:44work uh West Country Prices was their line and then they craft helped me like reduce my more complex illustrations to graphic and then I started really
07:55understanding typography and the power of kerning and baselines and color palettes and panones. And then after that, you know, various
08:03ups and downs, four redundancies and lots of freelance working with Sky, Lego, uh, Glastonbury, all sorts of things.
08:13And um, and I got disillusioned in it. This had by the age of 29, it was too easy. Okay. So, I was just making things and people were just going, "Yeah." And
08:24paying me money and there was no challenge and um, and it didn't feel like creativity. It just felt like well maybe that's what
08:32everyone wants it to be so effortless but I wanted more of a challenge more meaning more worth and um and and that's where then I got a call randomly from my
08:41dad going oh there's this Eden project in Cornwall it's three miles from where we used to live there we go so I didn't do any interview preparation I um uh
08:52didn't really research Eden I just thought I'm a graphic designer I'll go partly for my dad didn't think I'd get a job and went down and went into a port
09:02cabin because when Eden was more port cabin than anything and then they had the main site but for the next three years I was in port cabin city as it was
09:10called and so yeah went down there they kind of looked me up and down had one of my toughest interviews so one of the reasons I went for the interview as well
09:18Cody was because I had been head-hunted for a while and I didn't know what it was to have an interview and I like to experiment a lot what am I like in these
09:28scenarios now like eight years older sort of thing and yeah um I didn't think they like me and I was a bit cocky and they were like you
09:38know why are you here and um I was just like cuz I was dressed quite corporately and I said well I've been in the corporate world telecom sky Lego but
09:47imagine you know my uh create my you know creative world and my corporate world meeting your environmental world any designer worth their soul will rise
09:57to what their c uh their client needs and they said thanks. That was it. Didn't know what the wage was. I walked about 30 steps. So where the foundation
10:06building is, I don't know if you know that at Eden. Yeah. And you could look over the pit there before all the trees. And I looked down and went, "Oh my god,
10:12this is my childhood. This is space and nature, my two big loves, you know, academically not good enough to or my story is of not good enough to be David
10:21Atenburgh or Neil Armstrong." And that was it. And then I got a phone call literally on the edge going, "Uh, job's yours. When can you start?" Amazing. And
10:30I was like, "So, um, what's the wage?" 50% pay cut. I didn't even get the highest brand. So, yeah. And then I was like, "Shit." Oh, then I was like, "Um,
10:39okay. I will forever ruin this moment if I don't step into this. You know, there are plenty of jobs out there." At what stage was Eden at that then? It had just
10:50opened. Oh, okay. So, really and the agency. the incumbent creative agency they were using on retainer wasn't able to cope with the demand of onsite yeah
11:00material production. So I'd be the first graphic designer and actually it's quite a basic role and that's where the any designer worth his salt is because I'd
11:08always played a leadership role in other agencies. I wouldn't say I'm the greatest creative but I've just got a good way of seeing creative potential in
11:16both client and team member. And so I knew I could see the future where I'd always be going, I wish I'd done that. And my eight-year-old self went, "Oh,
11:27space, you know, nature. I'm in and I'll figure out." So I just bought a house in Tori as well, right? So then that was some round trip. Hang on. We're talking
11:36from uh Toi to St. Au. That's what 100 miles. It's a 140 mile round trip. 140 round trip. Okay. Yeah. For So for a year I was doing that. My dad lives in
11:47St. Norto. Um, so I did stay with him. That was quite interesting. I was 30 then, moving back in with my dad. Yeah. But actually what Eden gave me in the
11:55sort of long-winded but rapid fire journey of a guy with no design skills who was creative, learning to be a designer, getting lots of dream clients.
12:04You think Sky and Lego would be pretty cool people to work for. Absolutely. Um, but that wasn't enough for me. We'll talk about enoughism later. Take a 50%
12:14pay cut. the next three years I did the most amazing work I've ever done in my life. It was it was something like a soul like soul meeting soul creative
12:24day. I don't want to get like spiritual but it was like the two things. Oh, this is why I had to do that journey of all the other creative things because once I
12:32was here I knew how to unpick and the current way of producing things and then make it all production more environmental. And were you were you uh
12:42were you given free reign? Yeah, I thought they would tell me how to be, you know, Eden's designer, a creative, you know, and they were just like, "No,
12:49just do it." And then I guess that's that leadership space, isn't it? You just step in. So the client was Eden. As far as I was concerned, that means we
12:55had to use certain papers. So we could design on anything, but actually it needs to be the right papers. Um, so I went and started changing our print
13:04supply chains. Um, and relooking at what how we use paper. And my first comments from printers like it's going to be expensive. is going to be this cuz not
13:11many people were using vegetable based inks and recycled paper. I said, I get it. You know, we will lead the way, but recycled papers, vegetable based inks
13:19will become the way. And I kind of knew that in my heart. It's like a real big knowing like the path that was already there and you're just trusting to follow
13:26it. And beautiful to have that uh that uh backup from from the Eden project. Yeah. And very necessary. Yeah. And also costwise, you know, sustainability
13:35didn't have to be more expensive, which was the kind of conversation. And it didn't need to also be kind of hessen either and jute and those rough. I've
13:44got no problems with them, but actually I like sexy surprise environmentalism through creativity. That's a storytelling moment, you know, like like
13:52why you might buy a chair and and things like that. There's nothing at LEAP, the agency that spawned out of um Eden, that hasn't been considered from where it's
14:00born to where it's been recycled from to um why we've um got it in our supply chain. I I like that. And and does does that is that a chore for you or is that
14:12just something that happens? Cuz that's that's an interesting journey, isn't it? I think for a lot of people, they have to they have to think how can I do this
14:19before they actually do it whereas Yeah. It sounds to you like it's a DNA comes naturally. Yeah. Yeah. It's And again, I don't want it to sound less because I
14:27know it's hard. You know, people get stuck. You know, I get overwhelmed choosing a broadband provider, but I don't get overwhelmed choosing the paper
14:35because I asked the questions like, you know, the paper merchant might sell me the paper that's environmental, but he goes, "So, where's this paper from?"
14:42They're like, "Oh, it's it's the UK." I said, "No, where's the mill that the paper was from?" And actually very few papers are made in the UK, you know, and
14:48there's some wonderful papers that sold to businesses as eco, but they originate in America and that's that's okay, but for me, I would rather support, you
14:58know, more localized trade routes and stuff. And again, all of this came down to this. It's just like um like the Matrix, it's like I can physically feel
15:08and see it. And the connectivity between people, planet, and creativity uh and material is is like just so natural. Yeah. And um and that's what I say. So
15:17whereas before I was kind of disillusioned but earning a good bit of money and a good bit of freedom and and then then I came here and I found a
15:24whole new way and I couldn't ever imagine not working that way. So yeah so so I was at Eden and the design team was growing really rapidly. Uh lovely crew.
15:34We had designer makers. So you know where you see the exhibits those would be made by them and some of my te art team my team. Um, we had this amazing
15:43guy, Ben Luxton, that oversaw all of us. And in the end, there was about 16 of us. We had maintenance people maintaining the exhibits as well. And
15:50you were saying earlier that you um you wor with Chris Hines. Yeah. So Chris, I can't remember what year Chris joined. It was maybe a couple years after me and
15:58he stayed a couple years after I'd left. So I was there from like 2020 before I set up Leap in October 2004.
16:07And we were invited different team members from different sections to go on this sort of um it's like a quite a slightly immersive day with Chris down
16:16at the blue bar at fourth Tower. So food uh drink and then he was teaching us or showing us what it is to think in a triple bottom line way. Okay. Say you
16:27know people plan it. This was new to you then. Was it? It was because um that would have been 2002 then. John Elkington who originally coined the
16:35phase I think coined it of Valans in 1968 or something like that. This is people, profit, planet. Yeah. Yeah. The three Ps as people would call it. Yeah.
16:44Um and what we had to do is I didn't have to do it in a graphic design thing. I was asked to look at transport and logistics. They divided us into sections
16:52that we weren't and how would we do it using our skill set and mindset to do that job that wasn't ours. So mine was to to get flowers to Eden from from
17:06Europe, Amsterdam for the shops and what would be the impact of it and that and and you know I summized by the end of it with our group it's like why are we
17:16getting plants in the shop from abroad right you know why don't we just say that we only sell local yeah and things and you know there's different things
17:25some of the plants they sold and again this isn't a a hit on Eden but you know they had these amazing plants that flowers from like Africa and stuff. So,
17:33it did show you a bit of the world, but did we need to do it is the question. What is enough that for the expectation of Eden? But what what I learned there
17:43is I really love the triple bottom line because I've never been very focused on money. Not because I have lots of money is I've always just had enough. Not, you
17:52know, not enough if something lots of things went wrong at once, but enough that to have a good life in the region that I love, Cornwall. So, all of it, it
18:01was a coming home experience, come to Eden. 8-year-old Matt got to be in space in nature in a a reused quarry in Corwall and suddenly bring all my design
18:13to some of the most amazing projects I've done, working with like Future Harvest and the Peruvian Potato Foundation. And that was more exciting
18:21than the Lego stuff. And when I do talks, I show a picture of Lego and then pictures of all the potatoes and that that are over in Peru where the you know
18:30where potatoes originate from. Yeah. Yeah. And so all these things I bumped into David Atra once came in to work and he's sitting there at reception in Port
18:38Gabin Sea. I'm like it's not David Atenburgh, it's Dave Adra. Wow. Why? Really super nervous. That sort of thing happened. you know Ray Mia was there the
18:49explorer yeah spent time with him and I'd also just before I started Eden I've been up in Tibet and there was a lady coming to do a storytelling workshop
18:58around the oral stories of traditions and we don't have um in the UK many oral traditions Celtic nations do and especially tribal nations and I just
19:08come back from Tibet and she had left Tibet in the exile with the Dalai Lama so we went off on side and she was just asking how was my time in Tibet and how
19:16did it deal and I'd gone to bet when I was 29 and before it was open to tourism properly. So, uh yeah, it was a really I mean Eden was just groundbreaking,
19:25wasn't it? I mean, it still is. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. Must have been a great place to um to to work and be a part of. Yeah.
19:32I mean, I guess if you think of it like a hive or an ecosystem, it was it was just really rich and vibrant. Um yeah, it would take two hours sometimes to
19:40cross the site and as a designer, we're in a lucky place for you. Two hours cuz you were chatting to everybody. Oh, everybody chatted back and it's hugging.
19:48So, lots there lots and lots of hugging. Um, and in the end, I stopped going out a little bit because I wasn't hitting the deadlines and it was very deadline
19:55intensive space. Um, but the beautiful thing about creativity of any sorts, but especially being a designer is you're we're an intersection
20:05between people, planet, education, and future. And so, like when you're on site, everybody interacts with you. You're sort of friends with everyone and
20:17those interactions are really important process. Yeah. And you're neither high or low. You're just right. You're just in the middle. And um so
20:25friends with operations and car park and and friends with catering because they need their menus and then the foundation with the science teams and the education
20:34teams and the leadership teams. So we got to really be part of the whole ecosystem. So, uh, it's interesting you say that because part of my creativity
20:44is, uh, that occasionally I'll go and buy a magazine on something that I have no interest in whatsoever and force myself to sit down and read it from
20:52cover to cover. And without doubt, I can come up with some kind of uh, different way of doing things just just by looking at things from a different uh,
21:00perspective. And that and and totally and and flipping way ahead here. That's why it's always really relevant to me to have an emerging leader, a youth board
21:08member involved in everything we do, right? You know, because that's and the young perspective being acknowledged um as an elder way. So me in one I'm in an
21:18elder space, but then there's going to be other elders above me. We need all the wisdom and all the perspectives and those that are
21:25inheriting the space to those that um you know have been walking in the space for a long time. So, I'm a big big thing for getting alternative perspectives.
21:34Yeah. Brilliant. Brilliant. So, um so we went through Eden. Yeah. I had a lovely time at Eden. And then I fell in love. You fell in love with a girl at Eden?
21:43Oh, you fell in love with a girl at Eden. Okay. And and then she said, this is about 2003 and we left in 2004. She had a son in Wiltshire and for the first
21:54time in my life, I was like, oh, she said, I'm going to go and move back up to Wiltshire. I've been offered a job. I was, you know, love struck puppy and and
22:02she did become the mother of my kids. We're not together anymore, but we still work together at times. I met her, she was still good friends. We work well
22:10together. Okay. Um, so she's like a marketeteer and when we met, she was commissioning our design team to work and her role was so association and she
22:19had a seat there and she was looking at the organic supply chains for Eden and so she wanted to do an organic wheat festival and of course we we designed
22:26the how it looked amazing and we got to know each other. We work really well and actually we have co-parented you know over the years since um up in 2008 but
22:37we've come into various projects. She's brought me into her company she's worked for. I've brought her into some of ours. Um she does a lot around purpose uh life
22:46coaching and things like that. So it was kind of good mix and people still say now wow you two are really good together but as colleagues. As colleagues. Yeah.
22:54and but you know we it was amazing but she went to Wiltshire and um and you know she's part of that inspiration. I I kind of grew up a little bit with her as
23:03well. Even I was still very playful. So by that point I was like a 33 year old playful guy. Now I'm a 53y old 8-year-old. Um but yeah so she went for
23:12this job um with an organic herb company. So I went with her and then the thing was like wow what do you do after Eden? you know, I couldn't imagine a
23:21job. My prerequisite for life has always been to live, work and play by the sea. So went to University of Swansea after being in Cornwall and then got my first
23:31job in Toi. People were like, "Hey, why don't you go to London?" So, well, London clients contact me anyway, you know, and then I could get the train up
23:37to London. Yeah. Yeah. And you know, that's that not I don't need that enough money to be in London and get caught in a rat race. My creative inspiration is
23:45the ocean and and nature and being close to it and um and hence I guess why the work of Leap. But yeah, Cla CLA went up, I followed her and I was like, "Oh, what
23:56what am I going to do? All right, I'll create my own my own thing. Um based on everything I had learned at Eden. Um, so I would create a graphic design
24:06business, which would really be just Matt Hawking, but I wanted it to have a name because I like the cool names, you know, like um Underworld, the the music
24:14producers, they had a design agency, their agencies. Theirs was um uh Tomato. Um I'm a big fan of um Lemon Jelly as well, and they're both designers as
24:25well. And so they got the design agency, and then they've got their music side. Mhm. I haven't got the music side. Sorry to disappoint you, but I just wanted a
24:33word and then I was thinking about two things. I was I was leaping away from this amazing safe haven in Cornwall going to Wiltshire with no sea. Um and
24:43um thankfully lots of nature and and it was a leap. So there's a leap of faith. Mh. Um there was also I was very good at leaprog.
24:52So So and that that playful mischief thing as well. So um there's always play and again you know I think one of the big things about creativity climate and
25:03planet and futures is we need to have some serious play around it. Play is so important like and I think as as you mature it becomes less and less uh
25:14prevalent but actually we all love to play and it's such an important part of our lives. Yeah. Yeah. And actually 100% with you there and
25:23um also one of the things for me Curly is like creativity is playful and so to do so that's where I came up with the idea of what leap would be and that's
25:35you know still metamorphosising I'm still learning I'm you know 20 years on I'm no I'm not I'm not a perfect leader I haven't got it I'm learning every day
25:42I'm experimenting iterating fading is anyone a perfect leader yeah we wouldn't be I don't even like being a leader um or managing um but imperfectly perfect.
25:53Yeah, I do use that a lot. But I mean, I like the line, you know, it's from a a film, but if you build it, they will come. And I was told that I couldn't I
26:02was going to do Leap and we would produce the planet would be our client and it would be graphic design always with the planet, the environment in
26:09mind. And people go, "What does that mean?" I said, "Well, you know, this 2004, it's like if I'm doing a website, it's going to be powered by renewable
26:17energy. If I'm um if I'm buying I'm using my laptop where I am will be powered by renewable energy. If it's on paper, it will be recycled. It will be
26:25these inks and and everything in between I'd work out. And also I'd learned quite a lot seeing other agencies interact with Eden and stuff we had done what it
26:34what worked and what didn't in in a tourism based environment that lots of people were touching. So the maintenance team had to mend things quite a lot. So
26:42I had all this experience of materials that worked and didn't and I took the best of it like the fine wine. M as well as having the house wine and um and then
26:51that that's really where it went. So I created Leap. Somebody said, "Oh, does that mean life, environment, art, and passion?" I said, "No, but I like it, so
26:58I use it." It does work. And and then I didn't have any clients, but I just said, you know, this is what I do. And then I went out and offered my skills to
27:08a couple of charities and just said, "Look, I've got no clients." Small charities. One was a homeless charity called the Hope Project in Exa was the
27:14first commission. Mhm. So I did that for for for nothing in return for a testimonial. They really loved it, you know, and again because relationship
27:23they liked me and got a bit more work. They started talking about me and then um the recycle for Cornwall campaign was required 18 months to up the level of
27:33recycling in the region. And uh Leap I won it because of my creative but more because of my sustainability. And they said nobody was able to answer like you
27:45did about materials and how things are connected and um and then it just started to flow from there. It just is just snowballs. I'm up in Wiltshire now
27:53and just like when I was in Tori having to travel to Eden for a year the next two years most of my clients were in Cormal. So I was up and down so I was
28:01burning carbon just to service them. Yeah. um um had two daughters up there and then decided to come back and that's so Leap was born and
28:09and I call it like a bat signal moment that people just started to find out about us. I think there was only two or three businesses doing anything like us
28:18and there was Futera and Thomas Matthews and um actually Sophie Thomas and both Ed who founded Futera and St. Thomas Matthews have become friends um and
28:29Thomas Matthews actually unfortunately just decided to call it a day and she was been going since like 1999 so even before us. So yeah so that was that was
28:37leap and then it was just working out. So I knew that I had to use this energy and I knew I needed to use these these use these papers and then magic just
28:45started to happen. You know who should I use for energy? Now the two main suppliers are eotricity and good energy. Good energy were in chipam. I'm in
28:52devises said let's go with good energy. Solve is an SEO and web design agency that builds highquality sustainable websites and strategies to help
29:02businesses grow online. They're also BC Corp, meaning they're a business for good, making a positive impact while driving real results. As a special offer
29:13for our listeners, Solve is offering a free website audit and consultation. Just mention searching for a greener room to claim
29:23yours. So, like I said, we signed up to Good Energy. We thought they they felt really right about the way um they used energy, and there's a lot of great
29:31energy providers in in the UK. There were two very dominant ones at at that time breaking the the the idea of what energy was and I just really liked good
29:40energy and they were based in Chippenham not far from where we were in devis. Yeah. Somebody from customer service had seen that we were an agency and um
29:50must have told you know Juliet Davenport who's the you know the CEO founder and the next thing we're over there amazing and Cla's seven months pregnant and
29:59there's me. We're wearing combats. We're not dressed up. there's a lot of people in suits and we just talked about our values and and materiality, you know,
30:09because it things weren't so digital then and there was still a lot of paper being used and again, you know, both of them have a role and both of them have
30:17significant environmental impact and we were just doing it in the best way for the clients and with like reporting on it. And so we're telling them about all
30:25this and they just said, "Yeah, we want to work with you." Much the same as that Eden moment. hadn't got very far and um yeah and then that contract was you know
30:33reality it was a h 100,000 so we're going from quite small things to to this big thing and this was many years ago so this was 200 this was in the year yeah
30:45so that would have been set up in 2004 and that was 2005 so so that was considerably more than what it's worth today then um well again we kept leap's
30:55ecosystem small when you're by self there's it always feels like there's more money as soon as you have team and and process and stuff then you know so
31:04we actually at the peak of when I was just working by myself the probably only now 20 years on earns between 100 and 200,000 more than those early days of me
31:15but it was a significant step up for me in that and also it times well because Cla's own job which had gone to Wilshire for um they didn't have the money to pay
31:26her so They're waiting on a house sale to pay for her role. That didn't go through. She's 7 months pregnant and doesn't feel like you know it wasn't.
31:34Yeah, maybe. Yeah, it was 7 months there. So, just before there when it had gone through so she didn't feel in integrity and authentic to go and get a
31:41job. So, suddenly I was in like digital creative hunter gatherer mode and the work came you know. Amazing. So, so um Leap is a BC Corp company. Yeah. So, we
31:53would Yeah. So um let's start by just just exploring BC Corp for for a moment. What what is BCorp? Yeah. Well, just before I go into what is BCorp, I think
32:03it's what what wasn't there before Bor. So So creating leap as an environmentally planet centered um you know design and impact agency. A lot of
32:13people would question what does that mean? Because they weren't used to the language sustainability. People still really don't get the word and stuff like
32:20that. Yeah. And um that's why I say graphic design with a plan in mind and then on there then I said look if we do this it will be this way if we do it
32:28that way you'll know the footprint of it. Um is it going to be anymore? And I said between it zero and 12%. Then we started to get more challenge and so we
32:38started to win environmental awards and then we did ISA 14,0001 after BSA triple 5 and you'll know some of these. Well tell us what that is just uh well
32:47they're environmental standards. Yeah. Okay. um for having an environmental management system, an EMS. So, this is us as a small business, a chaotic
32:55creative that doesn't like Excel spreadsheets, having to fill out a Excel spreadsheet. Feel I had to prove that this was possible, that creatives could
33:06do this and not just do the creative work for the planet, but also do the the backstory and the data to support the impacts for transparency. Well, for and
33:16for my own there's I think there's about it's about truth, trust and and love I think and just I get caught up into it. So the one thing about this creative
33:26journey within the for on a planet centered approach curly is everything became sticky whereas before history and all things by
33:35geography didn't stick in my mind and suddenly I knew about all these papers and I knew all these stats you know 80% of environmental impact is decided at
33:42the design stage 70% of the world's papers go through the hands of a creative in one way or the other this is all because you've got an
33:49intrinsic interest in it and an empathy for the planet I think as well there's something about that care and care and love and reciprocity for our origin
33:58space, you know, spaceship earth as Buckminister Fuller would call it. And um going back to the things, so we had all these we started winning loads of
34:05awards like 30 plus environmental awards. Then people said, "Oh, you're yeah, you're environmental, but yeah, what I don't see any creative awards, so
34:13felt we didn't have to prove that so much, but went for the creative awards." At this time, we're scaling up with the clients. I've moved back to Cornwall. um
34:20two children Claire 2006 now investors in people but we knew we you know now a team of approaching 10 I think very quick and
34:33um it was still too hard to explain what we did it wasn't an easy conversation unless you knew the ones who already knew the bat signal as I call it they
34:41understood it they trusted you so bedroom and steps hotel and scarlet hotel they were just like we want a creative that fits into our circular
34:48supply chain Actually language like that was already being used way before secularity was being used and you will fit in just like our fish munger will
34:56fit in m your design they do fish sustainably ISA 1401 very complex didn't really make much difference to us um we held it till
35:102015 and at the same time I'd come across BCorp and BCorp in its simplest forms is for for-profit businesses is uh using their business as a force for
35:21good. And it original line was people using business as a force for good rather than business as a force for good because it was people in business. And
35:30in the early days it was more like you got you know fair trade mark um for product and then bought for for business. Now that's changed a lot and
35:40we measure our businesses you know on like well five pillars but now that's all about to change because we got some fantastic new standards coming in and
35:48LEAP was the first and it's American it came out of America so there weren't many in the UK I've been watching it since about 2008 just out of interest
35:56strangely not curious enough to go hey can we do this over here anyway it came to Britain in 2015 I had all the data from ISO 1401 had all the data from
36:06investors of people so I had people on planet had the way we produce work. We had the world's only at the time carbon calculator for paper and print. We' had
36:15that created by a science team. And so we had all these tools and all these measures. And Bor came in and for the next year I I I went through the all by
36:24myself. People say it's rigorous and it takes time. I did it by myself on a much more archaic version than the very easy platforms they have now.
36:33and I did it and I got a phone call because there wasn't many Borps in the world and they said, "Look, you're um you're 23 points above what you need to
36:42to become a BC 80 points. Why have you not pressed a button?" Oh, I just want everything to be perfect. You know, I want every answer to be perfect. It's
36:50not even about the score but my own duty is so I was overthinking and actually the way I teach um use of the VCore business impact assessment how I help
36:59solve and things like that was just actually it's not perfect it's about a process the journey is never ending it's not the destination about moving forward
37:08yeah and doing what you can you don't have to do all it's not about the highest points and things I I get a bit frustrated with this kind of chase the
37:15points for sure um thankfully that's all gone now for the new standards Um but it's nice to gamify it. So yeah, I I pressed the button after Kate Hill
37:25um who's very high level in the BE call movement and she was heading up UK and um yeah, it was a really fun moment. She goes, "Yeah, just just press it." And I
37:35was like, and then she said, "And a new assessment's coming in." Because at that time, every two years a new version of the BIA came in. I hate tests. It's one
37:42of the reasons I did design and creativity. No more tests. and I pressed it and a month later we scored first creative agency well first BC Corp in
37:51Cornwall and the first creative agency in Europe to have that standard and then things exploded but also for me the biggest thing on
38:00that was all this stuff to prove what we were just like when I became this planet centered designer Matt from his bedroom in those those first couple years people
38:12understood it and borps like to buy from each other invest in work with support. So suddenly I'm in this whole new community um the only creative and I
38:23didn't look at it as a a sales channel or funnel but people seem to like me and work seems to came and the work got bigger and we got a reputation of being
38:31a nice place and um yeah that's that's where we are and that's I guess my life's work and that's why I wanted to grow the be community here and not be
38:39the the lone nut. Um I wanted some other people to dance with me and um and now we've got you know approaching a hundred businesses in Cornwall and Cornwall is
38:48one of the the most BC Corp areas in the country. Yeah. Second largest cluster outside of London. Um London's the capital city for the most BC corps on
38:58the planet and the UK is the fastest growing um BCore marketplace. Brilliant. But the reason that is is because we've actually whatever we may think of our
39:07governments and and things we've got good laws and we have a NHS we've got a health provider we have pensions state pensions many countries don't you know
39:16America South America don't have these things so we're very lucky that UK businesses score on average much higher on the first drafts or two drafts of
39:28going through the impact assessment than um than other businesses. Amazing. Well, you should be uh well, I'm sure you are extremely proud of yourself for for the
39:36work that you've done there and the the um where you're at with with everything, not just not just BC Corp, obviously, but um with the whole thing. Um which
39:45leads me on to design for change. Yes. Tell me about design for change. Well, design for change just cap encapsulating that the work was all around change, but
39:56also still not just changing for the sake of changing. And it came from the the Gandhi line, be the change you want to see in the world. Which I found since
40:03found, I think Chris Hines actually told me this uh that that's a paraphrase of a bigger speech that Gandandy did. So he never actually said it. Okay. Um you
40:11have to ask Chris about that. Um he's such a wise elder. And um so what that was a that that mantra that line I was doing design and I was in the art of
40:23change. And also the other side of things with creatives is we're this playful individuals or businesses that come in in quite a nice way to deal with
40:34some pretty sticky stuff. So what else can we use design to change? Well, we can talk about people. We can talk about the environmentalism of the business. So
40:43you with soul when I first met L on a a bus journey to Liverpool and we're talking about what he did. because I, you know, I didn't know there was green
40:51hosting and I didn't know about BC Corp, but then look, green hosting and BC. Now, it's just that awareness and so I'm not there to have a a unique selling
41:00point because I don't believe the planet and life is a unique selling point. We did get told, "Oh, you got a really awesome unique selling point, this
41:06environmental thing." No, I need everybody to do this. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um and and so design for change was just our quickest way of saying it. And you
41:14know, again, it's a call sign. So those that respond to it respond to it. Others they don't see it. Yeah. But what we did in Sorl is we were on a roundabout in
41:23Sorl and I had the whole all the windows which are Yeah. about a bit longer than this room and there was a big glass windows floor to ceiling and we'd get
41:32people just staring at our team. So I thought I'd get some contravision which is a a form of window graphic. It's not that environmental. That's where you can
41:40see in one way and not the other. Right. Okay. And then I created this woodland scene that had dinosaurs and businessmen and astronauts and animals and all
41:50things. And it was my representation of what's been where we are and what could be, right? So um anything from extinction to the going to the stars and
42:01where we dream to what it is to be in business. And then it just said, you know, be the change you want to see in the world. Designed for change. And that
42:08covered this whole thing. And we got so many people over the year goes, "You inspired me so much with your that thing. I remember seeing it. I don't
42:14know who it was." And we got clients that way. Other people said, "It just made my day hopeful when I saw it." Excellent. And I love and and and and
42:22moving on with inspiration there. We talked earlier about um and you've just said about Chris Hines being a a wise elder. Yeah. Um and you were talking
42:32about how you were inspired by the youth, your elders. Tell me a little bit about that. So um although I might be a child inside
42:43me, it's a child that's had you know experiences and growing up and so who's got set perspectives based on those experiences. So um at COP 26 I um was
42:55lucky enough to go there. I cycled COP 26 with a bunch of other climate cyclists of 540 miles over sort of seven days. Excellent. And uh and when I was
43:03up there, one of the things that again BC Corp, which I'm you know I've been involved in I was part of the original 18 BC Corp ambassadors to grow the UK
43:10movement. I've spoken for it. I've been at their events and out there they did this initi uh initiative called boardroom 2030 and what do our what does
43:20the future of our boardrooms look like at at 2030 and who needs to be at the table and what do we need to be thinking about now? And so and a lot of that was
43:29bringing in other stakeholders. you know, something that's very big for the BCore movement. It's not about your shareholders, it's stakeholders,
43:35everybody, your community, your you know, workers, your customers, you you name it. Anyone you come into contact with. Yeah. Yeah. And um and so I
43:44watched this sort of lovely um role play with uh young what I call emerging leaders, youth board members, the existing board members, body shop
43:54modeled it and um I was like, "Oh yeah, I like that. That's really good." Again, I you can go my my my my you know neurodyiverse mind was like oh grasp
44:04that what if we did that at scale and then you know and in Eden back at my home place now you know after leaving in 2004 I told them idea could I do an
44:13onmass boardroom 2030 um we sold out an event in the gallery to 100 businesses without them know the agenda then then they got a surprise
44:22when they came in we'd got loads of youth scientists um poets artists activists and we gathered them and on all the
44:31tables there were two of them and young people and we just let it pollinate from there and then we modeled we got good energy which has a good future board as
44:39well. So that board ranges from like uh 12 to 18. So that would already existed with our our client good energy. They came down and showed their role in
44:48guiding um against the board the main board. So how they work and even now from that one day which is I think 2021 I had a company say the other day, oh
44:58Matt, could you help us do some brand work? I was like, yeah. He goes, um I'm working with this guy Jack. And I was like, Jack, I know Jack. He goes, yeah,
45:05I was sitting on his table at your boardroom 2030. I was so inspired by him. I started a new company. He's me and him are u co-owners. Amazing. And
45:13how cool is that? Wow. That is incredible. Yeah. And for myself, you know, run another event called Goodfest. And again, being conscious, I could talk
45:19a million miles and lots of different things and trying to stay focused to you and the the and your audience. But again, you know, when I set things up, I
45:29couldn't create a company that isn't got environmentalism at the heart of it. Environmental action through the way it interacts with the world. And the same
45:37with Goodfest. Once we had Goodfest, of course, it's got all that environmental, you know, we don't produce merch. We're really conscious of, you know, our
45:44carbon footprint of all the things. Um, but it was really important to have a youth board member. And so I had been um in conversation with a lady uh Amelia
45:54Cruz who's now a friend since and she was at our board in 2030. She was 19 then, she's 25 now. She just stepped down from our board at Goodfest and
46:03she's been on our board for the last three years. Amazing. and we've talked and worked and shared and yeah and it's been brilliant and I feel so much richer
46:11for it. So one of my I call it my green rider if I'm um asked to do a talk or um be on a panel or something that I'll always have at least one emerging leader
46:21young person on the panel. Awesome. Yeah. So that's really important because it's again if we're looking at life it's just another form of creativity and we
46:28if we need to have difficult uncomfortable conversations and really do the work that now and future generations need we've got to have all
46:36of us at the table. Do you do you believe everyone can be creative? Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Because every moment from the moment we wake up and think
46:46what am I going to do today is a creative thought. There's a billion synapses from I have no idea how many there are. um but lost going off and
46:54that speed how this is set up today the shirt you're wearing my shirt is a creative expression we're just told that creativity is a role is only done by a
47:05few but I believe that a chef is a creative the road planner city planner who's working out the road my god that's a bit of creativity absolutely you know
47:15lots of logic but it's a creative expression of how to move transport around the region and things like that and I'm really interested ed in the the
47:22the possibility of of a no one, which I I don't want to say that. That's a horrible thing to say, but you'll understand when I explain. Um, a no one
47:33could come up with a solution or can come up with a solution. And um, someone who's not directly a creative can come up with the solution. So I'm I'm
47:44interested in that idea that um that any first of all anyone can be creative and secondly someone out there could come up with the solution. Yes. Yeah. I think
47:57there's a couple of little areas to that. So there is the belief in our creativity and I think is it like Picassle of Vango said that
48:08um like everything is imitation or plagiarism because nature's already done it. Yeah, for sure. You know, there's there's that. Um there's our
48:16self-limiting beliefs around I can draw, I can't, but yet we might go into an art gallery and see a Jackson Pollock or something like that or a Rothco and go,
48:29I could my my four-year-old could have painted that, you know, and then why are they getting 50 million for that and the things, you know, and this is all thing
48:35because we've all got these different viewpoints of what it is to be creative and how we see the world. Some love natural beauty of the world. Others like
48:42the natural beauty of the city. I had a friend who uh got told when she was 12 by a school teacher that her painting was terrible
48:53and she should never do any painting again. Great. She didn't pick up a paintbrush after that until she was in her mid4s.
49:03Since then, she's been selling her artwork for incredible amounts of money. Yeah. and she's absolutely fantastic. But that creation was between the age of
49:1512 and the age of mid-4s. Yeah. She she shelved it because some someone decided to tell her that she couldn't thinking they were probably funny or they were
49:27you know you know just their magician was manipulating. You know everything comes when it's supposed to. So, you know, like ideas in the trade thing,
49:37ideas that didn't work in the 90s could be right now. They might come too soon. It's a brilliant book. Um, I know you asked about books saying I've got a few
49:45books in my bag. Um, but it's a very simple book. I'm like somebody that likes to read something very quickly. So, it's a few pictures and says it's
49:52called the path of the doer by David Hyatt um who's the founder of the do lectures and high denim, right? And um in it is all about in a reality and the
50:02way I read it and hear it in my mind is it's about taking action that a good idea 99% of us will have the same idea. So that may be again these
50:14are my words now a global consciousness an idea comes into the world somehow and lots of us get it at the same time but only 1% actually are the actioners and
50:24then those 1% might not have all the tools and individuals to manifest the idea into something that works. So like me, I'm a really good ideator. I could,
50:34you know, my mind's always exploding with new ideas, but I need what I call a transformer and operator, people that can bring it to reality. So when I'm
50:44doing, so I'm a good director of work and I'm a pretty good creative, but there's better people. So I know my limitations. So I'm quite easy to step
50:51aside, but be part of the whole because I'd rather see the best work that's most fitting for client and planet um than just doing something for my own ego. So,
51:00so again, if I need illustration or video work or something else, I lean into others that can help me be more brilliant. So, so how can we um how can
51:10we create a better future? How can we create a better future? Well, I guess there's a few tangents, you know, there again. So, one, we need to do the work
51:20on ourselves. So, creatively, I use the word creative, we have to do the work on our inner self.
51:29be happy internally and our own ecosystem and that will manifest that it will work on our external we love ourselves and understand our creativity,
51:41love and selfworth which is a work in progress. Um and um I'm no, you know, Buddha or anything like that. I've not not hit that sort of max point. It's
51:52going to be my life's work is just being the best version of myself for sure. So I think there's a in the hurly burly of the day and the speed and just life
52:00because not not everyone has the luxury as well. Some people you know work get food sleep work you know don't get that time but what if we could have a society
52:09where we could all work on oursel and then that made us care or naturally care for everything around us. And if we were able to embrace our creativity so that
52:20we could have a voice um within our communities to go actually what about looking at this way or that or what do we really need and we removed our I'm
52:30going to take this from John John O'Brien's but we left our status and our ego at the door and looked at the the bigger picture. The other side of the
52:38better world is you know any action is better than no action and sure you know and we could all and I hear when I do a lot
52:48of talks so many people overwhelmed like what more walk yeah I'm just trying to do I'm recycling and I'm I'm not I'm not driving and I'm I'm not this and it's
52:56not enough and you can feel the overwhelm and go look it's not just on you. If you do the bit that is enough for you. Yeah. And it becomes a habit or
53:05you feel you've ticked it off then you can move in. You don't have to do it all at once. Like the thing people do these mad silly diet things like, "Right, I'm
53:12going to stop drinking food and I'm going to stop sugar and then you just get this overwhelm. It's impossible." You know,
53:19your mind's going, "I need the sugar and there's no food and life's boring suddenly, you know." And it's the same for the environment. What can we what
53:26can we change? What is your design for change? What is um your your the change that works for you? It could be little things like just getting the bus like I
53:37did today. Yes, it takes longer, but actually I'm in quite a peaceful state. I on the bus and and you quite enjoyed it, didn't you? I'm Yes, the child in me
53:45and the experimentation, but I couldn't chat on the bus. Um, it was a bit rattly, so I I I it wasn't the place to have phone calls. Yeah. Um I've learned
53:54over the last few years um so leap when I set LEAP up as well as the how we use you know energy and paper and how we care about people on planet was also
54:04like where do we bank and I made the decision straight away which is easy when you're starting up a business that I'd only use ethical banks. Yeah for
54:11sure whereas my I'm still with my bank that I was a student with you know and um that that's not so ethical. Um, but everything Leak does from the heart is
54:22as good as it can be. So, I just want to um finish up by talking about something that that intrigues me. Enoughism. Yeah. Tell me about enoughism. Within the
54:34Enoughism, it's kind of like the triple bottom line again, but now it's kind of my own play on words and stuff. And um it was just looking at what it is to be
54:41an activist and that we can all be an activist. You know, just doing a a good deed a day, you know, is an activist. And then what what more can you do? But
54:48then what is enough in that activism? Um so then there's reactivism which I kind of look at is you you realize that you do need to do something but it's quite
54:58quite late and it's going to be expensive for you to suddenly change adapt scrabble around. So you know you haven't done the planning but maybe you
55:06have the resource and other people won't. And then the inactivist. Now if anybody's watched the film Don't Look Up and things it's a little bit like that.
55:12And it's like an inactivist. You don't believe that there's anything that's a problem. And um so you just think this is this is life and there is there is
55:22either no way because you don't believe what's happening or you can't comprehend it. And so that inactivist is you know that's the end kind of thing. Yeah. You
55:32know in a suicide or anything like that. It's just that don't look up moment. It's like oh it's too late now. Yeah. Excellent. So let's all be activists in
55:40a way and but while knowing what our enoughism is. That's insightful and let's let's all be activists and if we can't be activists let's be reactivi
55:51activists and let's not be inactivist. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And if you want to save yourself some money take action now. Yeah. You know that's the whole
55:58thing is like take the action now. Um grow a couple of you know fruit tree. I suppose this is evidence stuff so I won't go into that. So yes. Well, let's
56:06that that um sort of moves us nicely into the next section. So, what we're going to do now, Matt, and I I'm going to we're going to give you a minute to
56:15talk about each thing, which be interesting cuz uh I wonder if we just say one word for each, but Alex over there has got the uh the
56:23bell and you're going to have one minute to discuss each uh each of your top tips. And the first one there that you're going to discuss is switch your
56:32bank to one that does not fund fossil fuels or deforestation. Yes. Yeah. And actually this is the biggest and simplest activism thing you can do is is
56:44know where your bank is from and what they're doing. Now we've all got banks. It's now a lot easier to move a bank. Um so Leap's always had its money in the
56:54right places. You know Co-op, Troy Doss, and now Stling Freeze as well. We use those three banks. Harder for business, but personally, where is your money?
57:02Where is your pension? And that's these key things. There's a website called bank.gg green and that's it. Just put bank.green. You go in, put in your bank,
57:10it will tell you what your bank is uh funding, and you can make a decision whether you would like your money to be elsewhere, which would mean making
57:17changing bank accounts. Even if nothing else, information is beautiful. So, check it out. I'm not going to say any more than that, but it will tell you the
57:25top 10 polluters. Excellent. Excellent. And that's uh you know, you've got some banks fueling fossil fuels, you've got some banks fueling war, you've got some
57:34banks fueling all sorts. Most banks do all of those as much as one. Same as our pensions. And so that's the quickest and biggest activist they can do. Okay.
57:42Number two, you do not have to do everything. Do one thing well, make it your new normal, then build from there. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So with that do one
57:52thing well, it comes from a bit of experience and this overwhelm. Am I enough? But actually, rather than being overwhelmed and getting stuck, what
58:01could I do? And it could be just, hey, I'm switching my uh washing machine. I'm only going to wash things at 20° or on cold and you just kind of adapt. And so
58:11it's kind of like nudge theory. What's that thing I can do? I don't like composting, so I don't have a home composter. I do throw everything out the
58:18garden. So it's again it's just going what can I do that supports my local community supports me and then what more can I do? So it's finding what is your
58:26action again and what is enough for you to do. Excellent. You know do it well like a habit build upon it. Excellent. And that was was that exactly a minute
58:36Alex this you're you're good at this. Well I'm getting into the enoughism now and I'm scared of Alex now he's got a bell. I can see he's
58:46turning into a man of authority. He's going to like stamp on us. He's eager, isn't he? Yeah, absolutely. you environmental people. That's not
58:52recorded, is it? So, um, number three, believe in better. The media often tells us otherwise, but imagination builds futures.
59:04Yeah. So in that is if we only see a world that is limited that is what the media portray which is war death control uh dispondency it's like you know I
59:20never watch East Enders but that's what I clearly like Eastend it's all doom and gloom there's always a problem so what if you're just around good people and in
59:27good community that's never going to be perfect but surround yourself with that and um it's about imagination and you know Van Go says as long as we can see
59:36the stars we can dream I think was the line and so that's that's what this is about is keep imagining better don't catastrophize you know get that
59:45imagination going and we maybe could walk into a a better world just by believing more and believing in ourselves and others absolutely um just
59:55I know it's going to be but if you've seen the film Creator um it shows an alternative version of AI if AI was good doom and gloom sells
01:00:03papers. Yeah. Just like we Yeah, exactly. Good news doesn't sell. So number four, gratitude matters. Absolutely. Your uh to yourself, to
01:00:13others, and to this life. Yes. So gratitude, I didn't realize I had a gratitude practice. Um until I started talking to people. So
01:00:24from the age of about 23, 24, I just used to say thanks for what I've got. Usually the C. Yeah. Yeah. The sea, if a relationship had gone wrong, the sea
01:00:34would be my healer and stuff. I'd spend time watching the way sunlight and the art of just being grateful is an energy of frequency in
01:00:42itself and um and reciprocity, giving back for something you've been given as well. And so I really big believer in that. And then as I learned words like
01:00:50gratitude and reciprocity, that made oh that makes sense. Again, I'm giving back for being on this planet in my way. I'm giving back to young men at the moment
01:01:01for my journey as an older man. Yeah. You know, so brilliant. Um, do something not nothing. Yeah. However small, care for your patch, think global, think
01:01:12hyper local. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, it's um Yeah. So, with with that line, it's it's more like uh act local, think global. So just by doing our bit here,
01:01:24the world is big and overwhelming and there's lots of brilliant stuff out there. But can we affect it or not? Yes, as we rise in our careers and our
01:01:33creative pathways and and and responsibilities, we could be a world leader, but what can we do in community? You know, so my good friend John Brown,
01:01:42you know, he wanted to take action action with your vote. He joined the local Chamber of Commerce and he's now CEO of Chamber of Commerce. He's now
01:01:49running it, right? Yeah. And um he's also um on his local town council in Meagisy. He's taking action with his vote and with his word and that's where
01:01:57he feels he can make the most change. So what can we do each of us? And that's the the the the butterfly effect, isn't it? That that when a butterfly, you
01:02:06know, flicks its wings over there, it changes what's happening over there. Yeah. Everything is interacting and um Yeah. And we're at a really, you know,
01:02:15amazing yet devastating time. Yeah. But I I remain in the imagination if and I'm you know very lucky of where we are. Yeah. Um but yeah and and John you know
01:02:25says vote vote with your vote you know absolutely as I say vote with your pound. Yeah. So moving on we're going to um we're going to look at your bits of
01:02:33evidence now. Um and the first one which you've already touched upon is the uh the www.bank. Green. Green. Yeah. If nothing
01:02:44else it's a playful thing. Whatever you do, information is beautiful and awareness and I do it at talks where we've got everyone on their mobile
01:02:51phones and afterwards everyone's talking like oh my god you know so and I don't know if I've got a pension in there as well is that a separate one or so it's
01:02:58the pension like changing your pension so you know two pounds of every10 goes to deforestation and fossil fuel in a normal pension and a pension
01:03:09the right pension is 21 times more powerful than switching your energy provider becoming vegetarian and stopping buying or driving an electric
01:03:16car. So that one thing we all got agency to do so much in this case that is the vote with our pound but we're taking action. So tell me about the better
01:03:27business act. Again something was born out of the bore movement in the UK. Um because of the legal structures and and government policy um we as BC corps we
01:03:38changed our article associations to go from shareholder primacy to stakeholder primacy everyone and people planet and profit not just profit. So we've all
01:03:47changed our articles um to do that and it's section 172 I think it is. But what if we could get anyone to have a business in the UK to be able to change
01:03:58and so for the better business act you can go along to it. I think it's elite le look after the website and you can sign that you believe that's the law
01:04:06that needs to change and this is again that power of law is so important if done right. So get on there about 3,000 businesses you know become a better
01:04:15business. I like it. I like it. You don't have to be a be either to do it. Okay. You just anyone can say I agree that this is the way business should be.
01:04:23Excellent. So the next one I've got here is the sustainable creative charter. Yes. So, uh, one of my many hats is Goodfest
01:04:33CIC. So, a community interest company, take no money from it, founded in 2019, creative conversations, um, by the beach. And each year we try and rather
01:04:43just be a talk like there's many events at talk, we always try and get something tangible out. So this the better business ch the the creative char
01:04:52sustainable creative charter sorry about my words there um was co-created by 150 participants at goodfest at one session including people from Patagonia and
01:05:02things and we all colesed like what are the things we need to do to change so and we say creative charter but again goes back to all us being creative so
01:05:11it's like be bold share um be human challenge it's really simple anyone can sign up to it and pledge to do it. But rather than pledge, actually take some
01:05:21action. Go, actually, how do I be bold? Well, I'm going to share more about the thing I do that's different in the way I do the work.
01:05:28I love it. I love it. And then the last one on there was actually um uh Goodfest. So, tell us a bit about Goodfest.
01:05:37Goodfest where the sustainable creative charter came from and many other outputs is is really how can we pollinate better conversations where people don't feel
01:05:48alone and they might be you know I'm very lucky I'm in the be community so a very willing community but not everybody has that or has a business you know that
01:05:56could go through it so we convened really this session these sessions once a year and a few online things where 150 people gather Um and we will bring in
01:06:08inspirational speakers. However, it's not really the speakers, it's all of the audience and the conversations between the conversations. So our speakers
01:06:16become our participants. They stay they become part of the rich tapestry of conversations and so much impact and change has come from there as well as
01:06:23nurturing. I've experienced talks, you know, about eco anxiety from a young person which I couldn't believe that they were so close to ending ending
01:06:32their life. Yeah. But because they found community, they stayed in that world. And that that immediately that was the end of it. She texted me afterwards. She
01:06:42goes, "I hope you know you're one of the people that kept me in this world." I didn't. But that's what inspired me to go on to Bander Brothers to learn to be
01:06:49better at um listening rather than talking. Yeah. That's why we've got two ears and one mouth, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, Matt, it's
01:06:58uh just before we go on to the last question, just tell us how we can contact you, how we can keep in touch. Yeah, so um contact for me is I'm Matt.
01:07:08Hawking on Instagram. That's kind of my main play things. I'm rubbish at um doing regular posts. Um agencies, you know, ww.ap eap.eco Eco Eco first
01:07:21organization in the world to get a creative agency get a domain where you have to pledge sorry to do an advertising slot. You have to pledge.
01:07:29You can't have that domain without pledging to help the planet. Um and then yeah like LinkedIn uh email find me you'll find me under Matt Hawking.
01:07:38There's me and a footballer called Matt Hawking. There you go. And you're not a footballer? Not at all. I'm no good with football. Um yeah. So Matt, tell me one
01:07:47thing that we can all do today to make a better tomorrow. Help us find a greener room. I think I'd just have to say just believe that you can. No matter what
01:07:58what it is, it's doing that something. So don't worry about size or small or comparison. Just do there's something really good
01:08:06about being kind to you and kind to others. um the bank obviously it's more than one but you know switching your bank or even
01:08:14just understanding yeah what your bank does and I've got a couple books are probably a bit too too late but you know a good book from a friend Mark Shayer
01:08:24who's been part of goodfest is you can't make money on a dead planet really useful wouldn't you wouldn't have found me talking about money once something
01:08:31old which is incredible is that you know operating manual for spaceship earth how do we look after the planet and operate it so the future generations find a
01:08:42habitable space. So read a little bit, do what you can um and look at your money because all of us can be a positive, you know, force for good in
01:08:51the world. Matt, you're an absolute legend. Thank you so much for coming in today and having a chat and uh I think we'll have to do another episode uh
01:09:00because I know you've got lots to say. Um we'll have to bring you in again uh some of another time. I think I might what my partner has to put up with.
01:09:11Matt, thank you very much. Hey, thank you for having me and fellow shirt brother. Um and um yeah, keep doing what you do as well. Um you've got such a
01:09:20lovely energy and again just for me to have the conversations and the the memories. Sometimes you forget the speed you move at. That's why I got you a
01:09:27little gift. Um Oh, very kind in there, which is about pausing. Thank you very much. And what is that? Thank you. All right. Thank you. That's it for this
01:09:36episode of Searching for a Green Room. We'd love to hear your thoughts. Let us know what you think, who you'd like to hear from, any topics you want us to
01:09:45cover. Drop us a comment. Don't forget to like and subscribe so you never miss an episode. See you next time.

The Chat

The Guest: Matt Hocking
Founder of Leap | Designer | Creative Director | BCorp Advocate | Environmental Changemaker


The Chat

Planet Centred Creativity
Matt opens with a reframe of creativity. For him, nature is the original designer. From Fibonacci spirals to childhood days crafting with rocks and foil, creativity has always been an instinctive part of life, shaped by his dad and his Cornish surroundings.

From Graffiti to Eden
Matt’s journey spans graffiti, technical drawing, art college, and agencies like Sky and Lego. But it was the Eden Project that brought alignment. Despite never finishing university, his raw creative skill got him through the door. He called it soul work.

Redesigning Systems from the Inside
At Eden, he changed supply chains, adopted vegetable inks, sourced local paper. Not for show. For impact. “Sexy surprise environmentalism,” he says. Sustainable design that doesn’t shout, but shifts things.

LEAP: Design with the Planet as the Client
Leap was born from a real leap of faith, moving to Wiltshire, starting over, becoming a dad. He set out to prove that design can serve both people and planet, and built a studio that considered every choice from energy to ink.

BCorp and the Power of Standards
To show his work was serious, he pursued ISO14001, Investors in People, and BCorp. Leap became the first creative agency in Europe to certify. But he is clear, it is not about badges. It is about honesty and community.

Youth Leadership and Triple Bottom Line Thinking
Matt champions emerging leaders. From Boardroom 2030 to Goodfest, he insists on hearing from young voices. Triple bottom line thinking — people, planet, and profit — underpins everything he does.

Design for Change
Design, for Matt, is not about aesthetics. It is about shifting culture. He wants design to help reimagine systems, not decorate them. Goodfest and the Sustainable Creative Charter are both examples of that.


Matt’s Top Achievable Tips

  1. Switch your bank to one that does not fund fossil fuels or deforestation. Use bank.green to check.

  2. You do not have to do everything. Do one thing well. Make it your new normal, then build from there.

  3. Believe in better. The media may tell us otherwise, but imagination shapes futures.

  4. Practise gratitude — to yourself, others, and this life. Gratitude fuels action.

  5. Do something, not nothing. Think hyper local while holding a global perspective.


Matt’s Evidence

  • bank.green shows where your bank puts your money

  • Switching your pension is 21 times more powerful than lifestyle swaps like changing diet or energy provider

  • The Better Business Act calls for legal reform so businesses must consider people and planet

  • The Sustainable Creative Charter sets bold intentions for creative work with integrity

  • Goodfest brings together people for environmental action, community building, and serious creative collaboration


What One Thing Can We Do Today to Make a Better Tomorrow?
“Believe that you can. Whatever your size, role, or resources, there is always something meaningful to do. And if you do nothing else, check your bank. Your money has power.”


Contact Details
Website: www.leap.eco
Instagram: @matthocking
LinkedIn: Matt Hocking
Also findable via Matt Hocking Leap BCorp

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