Insights from Fiji!

Davidson’s Performer Series: sharing and learning from each other

As part of our ongoing commitment to use the art of storytelling to share and inspire, we have developed the Davidson Performer Series.

In this series, we will share remarkable stories about key members across the Davidson team. 

To kick start the series, we have formulated a Fiji incentive trip video, which features employee's talking about their thoughts on working for Davidson.  We hope to attract great talent into the business by sharing some of our culture externally.


 

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A man in a suit and tie is shaking hands with another man.
by Marketing Davidson 28 May 2025
Davidson Technology Consulting is proud to welcome Rohan Morrison and Maciek Kiernikowski, who join us as key leaders in our Financial Services team.
A group of people are sitting around a table with laptops.
by Paula Price 11 May 2025
When asking someone how they are, my pet hate is a response of 'flat out' or 'busy'. Most of us have a great deal to do. We live in a world where we are all busy. Every. Single. Day.
A man in a blue polo shirt is standing on a soccer field.
by Paula Price 27 April 2025
Senior executives are constantly navigating complex decisions, inspiring teams, driving results, and carrying the weight of corporate leadership. We are conditioned to lead — to solve, to direct, to deliver. But in this relentless drive to lead, we often forget the power of simply following. Over the years, one of the most transformative experiences in my professional development didn’t come from a boardroom, a leadership program, or a keynote at a summit. It came from volunteering. And more specifically, from being the manager of a number of high-performance rugby teams. At first glance, the role seemed simple: logistics, admin, support. Not exactly the stuff of strategic leadership. But there, on the sidelines, filling water bottles, washing jerseys, preparing paper work, and coordinating team meals, I rediscovered a truth that too many senior professionals lose touch with — the power of service, and the dignity of the roles that go unnoticed. These menial, often thankless tasks, were crucial to the team’s success. And in doing them, I was reminded of how often in our organisations we overlook the people who create the conditions for performance — the unsung operators, coordinators, assistants, and enablers. This experience fundamentally shifted the way I lead. I no longer see these roles as peripheral. I see them as the bedrock of any high-performing culture.  More importantly, stepping out of a leadership identity — even temporarily — gave me the space to remember who I am without the title. Not the CEO, not the CFO, not the strategist or the fixer — just a person in service of something greater than themselves. That humility is grounding. It makes you more empathetic, more observant, and more connected. And paradoxically, it makes you a better leader when you return to your day job.