About Jessica Huie MBE
For over twenty years, Jessica has worked at the intersection of visibility, voice, and impact, supporting individuals, organisations, and movements to be seen with clarity and integrity. Her work has included collaborations with globally recognised figures such as Samuel L. Jackson, Kelly Rowland, Simon Cowell, Hilary Devey, Meghan Markle, alongside founders, entrepreneurs, and leaders operating at scale.
She continues to work privately with high-profile and established leaders, while also holding spaces designed for wider collective engagement - grounded in the belief that the deeper work of visibility is not reserved for the already visible, but belongs to us all.
Jessica’s professional path spans entrepreneurship, publishing, social impact, and advisory work. She has delivered talks, workshops, and storytelling activations with organisations including Bloomberg, EY, Google, Grant Thornton, Credit Suisse, Soho House, and the Higher Education Women of Colour Network, creating environments where diverse voices are not only encouraged, but genuinely heard.
In 2014, she was awarded an MBE by King Charles for her contribution to entrepreneurship and diversity. She is the author of the acclaimed book PURPOSE, co-founder of the Diverse Wisdom initiative with Hay House, a long-standing co-host of the PRECIOUS Awards, and the Curator of TEDxRichmond.
Yet Transformational Visibility was not born from professional success alone.
Jessica’s deeper work with visibility has required her to walk the terrain herself - to discern the subtle but crucial difference between expression arising from inner truth and visibility driven by the hunger for external validation. To confront the ways we can contort ourselves to be wanted, approved of, or chosen. To live what this work is not, so she could come to know what it truly is.
Today, Transformational Visibility is the container through which this lived understanding is shared more widely - a space where expression is birthed from the inside out, and where being seen becomes an act of service to the whole.