We Are PoWEr Podcast

How Ngozi Weller & Wayne Bennett Are Changing Manchester Forever

powered by Simone Roche MBE and Northern PoWEr Women

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0:00 | 28:02

The brilliant Ngozi Weller and Wayne Bennett join the We Are PoWEr Podcast – bringing honesty, courage, and vision to a powerful conversation about racial equity, authentic leadership, and creating real change in Manchester and beyond.

Their partnership began on a train journey – a chance meeting that sparked a movement. Wayne, a visionary entrepreneur, and Ngozi, a fearless strategist and advocate, combined their complementary strengths to co-found The Racial Equity Group (REG) within Pro Manchester. What started as a shared conversation has evolved into RegConnect – a groundbreaking event that’s redefining how inclusion, business, and opportunity intersect.

Driven by the sobering reality that while Manchester’s ethnic minority population exceeds 18%, representation in leadership sits at just 5%, Ngozi and Wayne are confronting inequity head-on. Their work is about turning awareness into action – bringing corporate leaders and underrepresented professionals into the same room to connect, collaborate, and create lasting impact.

In this episode:

  • How a train journey sparked a movement for racial equity in Manchester
  • Building the Racial Equity Group and RegConnect: collaboration over confrontation
  • The reality of representation: 18% of the population, 5% of leadership
  • Why courage, not comfort, drives meaningful inclusion
  • Turning diversity into business impact – and the data that proves it
  • How authenticity builds movements that last
  • The legacy Wayne and Ngozi are creating for the next generation

Find out more about We Are PoWEr here.  💫

Introductions and Podcast Welcome

Speaker 1

Hello , hello and welcome to the we Are Power podcast . If this is your first time here , the we Are Power podcast is the podcast for you , your career and your life . We release an episode every single Monday with listeners in over 60 countries worldwide , where you'll hear personal life stories , top-notch industry advice and key leadership insight from amazing role models . As we Are Power is the umbrella brand to Northern Power Women Awards , which celebrates hundreds of female role models and advocates every year . This is where you can hear stories from all of our awards alumni and stay up to date with everything . Mpw Awards and we Are Power . Welcome to the we Are Power podcast . I have got a Never imitated , never replicated , singularly wonderful , everybody's wonder girl . Welcome to the we Are Power podcast . I have got a two for one special this week . Bog off , indeed , indeed . I thought you were being rude then . We've only just started . It would be unusual for me .

Speaker 1

Ngoziwala and Wayne Bennett . Welcome , welcome , welcome to the podcast . It's great . This is what we have to do , isn't it ? To try and get . How often do we try and catch up ? I ?

Speaker 2

know this is . I was under the false pretense that there would be cocktails , dinner and stuff . Oh okay , hold on a sec , bring out no cocktails cue the cue the aperitifs no . No .

Speaker 1

Well , it's worth it . Just for you , simone , it is . You're just saying that .

Speaker 3

I think she's just lined up a nice meal for the next time , aren't you ? Yeah , I like it . I'd like that .

Speaker 1

We've always talked about , you know , a late night version . You should , but now we're thinking of a culinary version , because because it's all about breaking bread and having great conversations across the table . For sure , there we go . Deal . We've just made a deal . Every podcast recently I think we've created , we are power oaky , we are power . Playlists you know .

Speaker 2

So today we are power poke bowls because it's the only thing I can think of with a P and it's not right . That's pretty good though .

Speaker 1

So Wayne Bennett , founder , made for tech global , and garci weller , workplace inclusion specialist and so much more . Speaker award-winning . How , garci , would you explain wayne in three words ? Um spoiler alert , wayne , that's coming your way in a minute .

Speaker 2

I do it in two , or can I do it in five ?

Speaker 1

Well , one of them . You can hyphenate them . I want to do it with five .

Speaker 2

I normally describe him in two as Mr Manchester , but I want to describe him fully . Mr Manchester with a heart , that's who Wayne is to me . Manchester with a heart , that's who Wayne is to me . There actually , to be fair , this guy is the male version of me as far as I can see . There you go . My husband describes him as my work husband . Yeah , he is like the male version of me and I've not met many people like that who I so readily identify with in both the light and shade and all of it . But I describe him as my brother from another mother .

Speaker 1

I don't know how many words you just had there . Yeah , because he can't , but it's okay .

Speaker 2

Anybody who knows Wayne knows you can't distill him down to three words .

Speaker 1

Words but equally , wayne is relieved because he's given him more thinking time .

Speaker 2

Can you do it in three words wayne ?

Speaker 3

yeah , make it good , wayne uh , one of only a few people that has allowed me to be my full self

Ngozi and Wayne's First Meeting

Speaker 3

and and continue to evolve in a safe safe . There is no area or subject that I don't feel safe talking with about , and to me , that allows me to be more powerful , but also know that I've got someone who's got my back , as the same way I've got my back , I think that's the yeah .

Speaker 1

Yeah , my safe space . There's the three words , Wayne , just put it out there you're talking to two ADHDers .

Speaker 3

Two ADHDers , I mean , come on no , but that's amazing , isn't it ?

Speaker 1

and how long have you two been playing out ?

Speaker 2

no , it does feel like a lot longer , but actually it's only been a year , hasn't it ? It feels like we've known each other . Like I said , he's like the male me , so I feel like I've known him for years , but it's only been literally a year in September yeah , and what was it that got you in step ?

Speaker 1

I always think there's those sliding door moments and there's always those . Often you do it and you go oh , we could have done or we should have , and we can all be , would have , could have shoulders , but what made you get those shoes on ?

Speaker 2

I . Are you talking about our working relationship ? I'll tell you what it was from my perspective , because we met , because we have a mutual friend , martina , who Witta yes , you know her . We met at the MSD UK London event and I knew Martina . She was the only person in the room that I knew . So I did my thing and I just went over to her , shuffled over , hello . She was talking to her friend .

Speaker 2

I didn't know if it was her boyfriend work colleague , I didn't know and it turned out to be Wayne and he was just immediately warm and welcoming , as I like to think I can be , and I thought , okay , he seems like a nice guy . But it wasn't until we were on the train back up to Manchester together and he just did the thing that I do , that I find is so rare , which is you go deep really fast , so much so that we were having this really intense conversation about our backgrounds and our ADHD and his suspected ADHD and all this stuff . Martina left . She was like I'm sorry , I'm just going to , I just need to get on with it .

Speaker 3

We're having too much fun .

Speaker 2

Yeah , this is really lovely , but I'm going to go down the quiet path . I've got a real job to do . Do you know what I mean ? And from there I discovered that Wayne is a brilliant generator of ideas and I'm a fabulous executor of ideas and together we can make stuff happen . So he won me over instantly from actually , it was when he started talking about all the stuff that even I'm a bit like you were very zen . You were very chilled and telling me about how you have learned to overcome your uh , this executive dysfunction , challenges , through sheer force of will , of meditation and and good practice and all of that . And I thought that's unusual for a guy who comes from the ends of Manchester , that's unusual for a black man to be talking about . I'm intrigued and he has demonstrated that Wayne is exactly who he says . He is on the tin and I like people like that , because you don't have to second guess . You could just take them for who they say they are . So for me it was magic on first meeting .

Speaker 1

And did you know straight away what it is that you wanted to accomplish and achieve ? No , did you .

Speaker 2

You went away .

Speaker 1

You kind of get off the train and you're kind of going back and you're thinking something here and it's the next day you go . I think it's that .

Speaker 3

I can say , everything that's happened today , and even where we are , was something I imagined , and Ngozi was , to me , the cherry on the cake that made it happen . She was able to take what was in my head and make it into a plan . I was like , oh , oh , my God . But it wasn't just that . It was the understanding of what the bigger goal we could achieve with . And you know I'm around surrounded by amazing women . I think you know I grew up with six sisters , so I've just had a recent revelation . Where is it six sisters when we've all got kind of multiple personalities ? It could be like 18 really , but I was comfortable with it and to me it was like I was with one of my sisters . It was like it was family instantly and that freedom to just express and be checked . If I'm going off that , that's what you're amazing .

Speaker 2

I will , I will check and you do the same for me . You do , in fact , fact . But I think , in terms of the broader mission that we have about making Manchester truly equitable racially , to make it a truly inclusive city in every aspect , so not just socially but economically and in the workforce , and et cetera , et cetera , that it kind of came about organically . I was already of a mindset that I was going to do this work through Pro Manchester and that work had started before I'd met him , but until then , until I started talking to Wayne about it , I didn't have the support I needed so talk to me about the it talk to me about the it , because there'll be many

Speaker 1

people listening , watching that know you , but many across our 60 countries and followers that do not . What is the it .

Building a Powerful Partnership

Speaker 2

Let me tell you the genesis of the it . So Wayne has lived in Manchester all his life . I moved to Manchester in 2005 . When I moved and I was living in a really great place called Sale , which is in Trafford lovely , lovely locale I was used to being in spaces that are predominantly white and I have that same understanding as many people from down south , which is there aren't that many black people up north , so I didn't have any issue with it .

Speaker 2

I was used to being one of only a handful in any space . That's how I'd grown up in this country . Because of going to a private school , going to the university , I went to working in the oil and gas sector . There was only me on my graduate course of 60 people my graduate cohort I was the only black woman and I think there was one black guy . I was the only black woman and I think there was one black guy , that's it . So I'm used to that . That wasn't .

Speaker 2

I didn't find that unusual , but I noted that over the last 10 years I was seeing a lot more black faces . I was so excited I'd be walking around , even in sale , and I'd be like , oh , I don't know that person Smile , and all of that . It's great . I noticed that even after George Floyd died , there was still a lack of black faces represented when it came to work . So I'd see black people around the city , see black people in restaurants , see black people in social circles , but whenever I'd go to a client to pitch or to train the executive team or anything , I wouldn't see any black people and I started to think that's a bit unusual , that's a bit rubbish .

Speaker 2

Then , in 2023 , the Guardian released the Cotton Capital Report , which said that in Manchester there is a distinct lack of representation , particularly of blacks , but generally ethnic minorities . It's not comparable to the population of ethnic minorities or global majority people in the workforce . So there's something like 5% in leadership across any of the sectors , whether it's private , public or third sector , compared to a population that exceeds 18% . So it's not comparable . Which is to say , black people , brown people . We exist in Manchester , but we do not succeed in Manchester .

Speaker 3

And so that is , that's the genesis , that is the genesis , so the goal , I think from my point I kind of have the lived experience of the challenges setting up my business and if I didn't have the network not being invited into certain areas or having the confidence to network into places and then recognize there wasn't many like me and , with the stigma , turned in for a stereotype from someone who's come from a recruitment background rather than someone who generally wants to change the game , it seemed once I started the business I could see where the gaps were , where things weren't easy , and then you walk into another room and it seems very easy for another crowd . And I'd seen this in recruitment where the big organisations had all the literature to say they could do all this . But then you looked internally and most of the people yeah .

Speaker 3

So there was a definitely disconnect .

Speaker 1

So you were the fixes .

Speaker 2

Yes , Because I got an opportunity to sit with andy burnham and ask him how we were gonna , as a city , rectify this , and there wasn't an immediate answer at the time , and so , as often , uh , I'm , I'm left with . Well , if , if they're not going to fix this problem , if not you , who right ? Then it's got to be me . So try to find different ways in which to resolve it .

Speaker 2

And the answer came through the goodness that is sam booth for the pro manchester right when she was able to say we , we will support you in trying to , to , to make our community more anti-racist , not just not racist , but truly anti-racist , truly inclusive , and we'll do that the way that you think , as an expert , we can , which is to create this committee , this network for racial equity .

Speaker 1

And this was your big event in July , wasn't it Early July , 4th of July ?

Speaker 2

something like that Independence Day , 2nd of July , 2nd of July , sorry 2nd of July . It was very close yeah .

Speaker 3

It was kind of strange because even on that train journey and discussing with you guys inviting me to be a co-chair on the board , did I say twisted my arm ?

Speaker 2

I didn't twist your arm .

Speaker 3

But everything did he say twisted my arm . I didn't twist your arm , but everything felt like the tuna . The two years that I'd seen all these struggles gone down to London , seen these events , seen the gaps and people telling me there was no appetite for that type of event and then . I met and it was like everything in my head , all the things I'd seen , and goes like well , that's exactly what we need to do .

Speaker 1

So what's next ?

Speaker 2

Oh , so Reg is not an event . Reg is a Reg Reg , racial Equity Group of Pro Manchester . You needed to give it a catchy name . It's got to get a name , get people remembering what it's about . Reg is not just the Connect event , which was a

The Racial Equity Gap in Manchester

Speaker 2

massive success we sold out twice , was it ? Bridgewater hall got people together in a collaborative , not combative , but a positive way of addressing this tricky bird . That is now inclusion . How do we do it ? But it is a movement . So there will be more events leading on to RegConnect 2026 , which is going to be even bigger .

Speaker 3

It's a whole day event .

Speaker 2

It's a whole day . We've got the commitment for a whole day this time , and for it to be an annual fixture of bringing corporates with racially marginalised individuals , who are either entrepreneurs or professionals , together ready to do business .

Speaker 1

What have you learned most in the last year ? Because you're two individually accomplished humans , right . High achievers accomplished , but coming together , you know , will come together with amazing opportunities but also things that you've had to navigate . What have you learned most about yourselves in this last I'll you've had sisters so you're used to sharing , maybe or not . Well , I I think the biggest the biggest .

Speaker 3

Well , two , two lessons I learned one I was working for somebody else with gas business that try and understand why . The other , where the other person's coming from when they're in a conversation , because the resistance you might not understand . So if you can see their story and you'll be shocked and surprised and you're like , oh my god , now I can see why you were challenging . But the other thing is , sometimes you see gaps and it's a great idea which you think is simple to do , but the other person sees something so simple as a reason for it not to happen . So it's finding out . Okay , so how do we get us all to come together so we can move forward ? What's the common goal ? What's your interest that will bring us all to the table ? So that's my kind of mission and I try and look at everything like , okay , how can I make sure you see it or I see you of it ?

Speaker 1

so it's coming together , is it's like ?

Speaker 3

a partnership .

Speaker 1

You've just talked about your work , husband . It it is coming together as a negotiation , an agreement , vows are there vows ? I think there maybe need to be vows in this going forward .

Speaker 2

Okay , but now you're going to make me a joke . No , no , no , Okay . No , your husband's not going to tell me and Jill will kill me .

Speaker 1

What are you most proud of ? Obviously , you've had the big event . You know , amazing profile on social media . But what have you been most proud of ? It's the momentum .

Speaker 2

This guy's awesome . He's got so much energy . He's got an address book to rival anybody , but there's so much enthusiasm and energy it seems to have put a rocket up the bums of people who , when I was going to them before , and even some of the people that we invited to join us on Connect in advance I will not name and

Creating RegConnect: A Movement

Speaker 2

shame were . I'm not sure we can send anybody . Oh , I don't know if we can sponsor .

Speaker 1

But this is a big problem . We talked about this before and it's a conversation . We've had the wonderful Nazir Afzal on the podcast and we ripped up the cards of what we were going to talk about because we're like you know , this is tough right now .

Speaker 3

Okay , let me throw something in then . So , of the events that I see as successful , where my momentum and things move on , you have to have the council , higher education , private sector , public sector , all those people cementing so everybody is coming to the table and learning so we move forward . So there's no fear , it's understanding to move forward . And now the people seeing how successful that event was , those same people who were oohing and aahing we're now talking to about being leaders and other people .

Speaker 1

And I think leadership's really key here , because at the moment there's a pretty tough world out there , right and there's . There's some crazy stuff happening and lots of things being thrown out . You know , oh , we can't do that anymore , we can't say that anymore , we can't use that language , dni is gone , etc . It takes good leadership to change that . It takes leadership to go , but actually we need this . This is critical because this is for our people .

Speaker 2

Yeah , it takes courage . The thing is when I was an idealistic young employee , graduated from university first class honours oh .

Speaker 2

I'm going to go and change the world , and the world is my oyster . That's why I firmly believed because I was not growing up in a deficit , being told that I couldn't do anything All the barriers that I came across that had anything to do with race . It was always well . There's no evidence that it's to do with race or there's no evidence to support your supposition . However , we've got tons of data , tons of data that proves that actually , inclusion is a win-win for everybody .

Speaker 2

You are not doing minorities a favour by giving them an equal shot at the brass ring . You're doing yourself a favour . If you say that your organisation is a meritocracy , then make it a meritocracy . There should be absolutely no cultural barriers to progression , none at all . It should be about who brings the best to the table . And yet that is not proven .

Speaker 2

And when you break it down really simply , for instance , are you telling me that of all the black and brown people currently studying masters and PhDs and graduating out of local universities , not one of them will progress to be senior in your organization , simply because none of them are good enough ? Is that statistically possible ? No , of course not . Okay , so then it's something else , isn't it ? It's something else .

Speaker 2

So if I can have that conversation with you , simone , on a one-to-one basis , or any other person on a one-to-one basis , or any other person on a one-to-one basis , then you , as a leader , surely you know that it's the right thing for your organisation to go and say well , if Deloitte has backed up the fact that inclusion is beneficial for all companies there's a report that they've produced for the last two or three years running that proves it Diversity wins . And there's no way that I can say , well , we just don't want you . Why isn't the courageous leader saying I can hear the dissenting voices putting up saint george's crosses , but they're wrong . And whenever we close ranks , close our borders , close down , we all lose . It takes a courageous voice to do it , but that's your job as the leader isn't it ?

Speaker 3

I'm gonna . I think this is where me . I think we have the balance , the kind of yin yang balance , because , my how I look at it , when I grew up , there was no role models . The only people around were people who were selling drugs or robbing people , or there was nothing . So you have to create an image and belief based of what you've seen on tv , I think , of what you can be , and then you achieve it . But one thing I look back on is is awareness and education and belief that you can be there , and I think what we've got now in in great manchester is some areas where it's not aware . We're not aware of the accelerators or the or the incubators or the whole ecosystem . Everybody should be aware , no matter from the age of 16 17 . If I want to be an it director , there's I can clearly see it stories .

Speaker 1

Yes , if I want to be an entrepreneur .

Speaker 3

What's the what's the ecosystem ? Everyone should be aware . The fact that it's not aware that is an issue , because anybody if we grow , most of these people want to be entrepreneurs and they build a business that then helps the ecosystem Everybody benefits from it 100%

Courage in Leadership and Inclusion

Speaker 3

.

Speaker 1

Now we are at that point in the program where I'm going to ask you to delve into our Powerjar . What is the Powerjar , you might ask . Powerjar , we have questions from our previous guests and I'm going to ask you , Wayne , to go in grab a question .

Speaker 3

Oh , I could not . I'm going to ask . I'm going to ask Angozzi to go first .

Speaker 1

Look at that he's not forever friends . He's such a gent .

Speaker 3

I could never . I could never .

Speaker 1

No , you're picking one for the , you're taking one for the team . So whichever question , you both answer .

Speaker 2

Okay .

Speaker 1

Okay , there was Wayne thinking aha , and guys , it's on you .

Speaker 2

This is an interesting question , though , wayne , okay , and you , being a grandfather in disguise , will have a really good answer to this , I'm sure .

Speaker 3

Oh , wow , okay .

Speaker 1

Because he doesn't look old enough no , absolutely not to be a grandpa . What have we got ?

Speaker 2

six , six grandkids , six grandchildren okay , you get a one-way ticket to live in any decade , past or future . Which would you pick and why ?

Speaker 3

wow . And the first thing that came to my head is now and I'll tell you why I have grandkids that I now understand what it was like , because you said something before about growing up in Manchester . Actually , for the first six years of my life I grew up in London , chalk Hill , wembley , and with my grandmother and great-grand . Before there there was a fire . She passed away and then I moved back up here to end up living with my rest of my siblings and I ended up being the oldest of four siblings . That didn't know me . So that's the kind of background and history . So I've always had that . But now , seeing my grandkids and watching them I had two of them over the weekend and they're both neurodiverse on a scale , so to speak .

Speaker 3

To me , kids , or children , are the ones who are supposed to teach you how to be free again . They come into the life of their free and we're the ones who put the guardrails around them . As you get older , you realize that's the freedom they kind of show you how to be authentic . If you're aware of the resistance that they show you that , um , if you're becoming upset , and then hopefully you can see that as a way of looking into yourself . And why can't I let that go ? What is the story behind that ? And if you can look that as a beautiful journey every time you get angry or resistance from like , that's it . And I think grandchildren to me even show me how to be better with my own children and better with my own relationship , and I love that journey , so I'm going to go with now .

Speaker 2

You only have one second . That was a really romantic way of copping out of the answer . I would choose where are we now ? 20 , 24 . I choose 20 years from now . I want to see what happens to my little kids 16 and 11 . I want to see what happens to them in 20 ?

Speaker 1

and they're going , they're on this couch , yeah not with me I'll be . Yeah , but you know they'll be on this couch on the range grandkids or somewhere even higher .

Speaker 2

I'm just curious to see what will happen .

Speaker 3

But that's why it's great what we're doing , because we're trying to set something so it's easier and not as challenging , and it has a legacy .

Speaker 1

It's about breaking and paving that way . That's all it's about , simone .

Speaker 2

I can't look these kids in the eye and say that I didn't try . What a way to finish .

Speaker 1

I didn't try , I didn't mean it that ? Way . Um , what a way to finish . Thank you for bringing this .

Speaker 3

Yeah , thank you , it's it's lovely to talk about something , and that's possibly the reds connected possibly one of the proudest moments in my life . We got something , we put the energy together and what came out of it ? Because that event , just the , the energy was . I've not experienced like that . Everyone could talk to anybody it's breaking that mold and creating that uber connectivity .

Speaker 1

Thank you and guys . Thank you , wayne for joining us today .

Speaker 1

Please keep being amazing . Please keep connecting , joining the dots , breaking down barriers and not giving a damn Thank

The Power Jar Question

Speaker 1

you . Thank you for joining us . Please stay connected with everything we're doing . Follow all the details of everything that RegConnect in our show notes and please get involved . It's all about Deeth , not words . We can all pitch up , but we've all got to be intentional . Thank you so much and we'll see you next week . Subscribe on YouTube , apple , amazon , music , spotify or wherever you get your podcasts . Leave us a review or follow us on socials . We are power underscore net on insta , tiktok and twitter , or we are power on linkedin , facebook and we are underscore power on youtube .