What is environmental management all about?
It鈥檚 about finding out how running a business affects the environment. This can range from measuring the amount of petrol that salespeople use on their travels to the number of plastic cups thrown away at the water machine. Recycling paper, old furniture and computers is also a big part of reducing company waste.
We measure the environmental impact of all these activities and then advise firms on how to draw up a policy to reduce their waste and energy use. It really is something that every company is going to have to do in the end.
How did you get the job?
I started at Citex Consulting in April doing general facilities management consultancy work. But one of my colleagues saw my CV when a client had asked for advice on environmental management, so I just fell into the job. Now, most of my workload is connected with environmental management as Citex is about to set up a division dedicated to it. There are about five of us working in this area at the moment.
What do you do in a typical day?
At the moment, I am working very hard on business development. I spend a lot of time preparing proposals to present to potential clients. When I am not looking at the business development side, I tend to spend a lot of time researching a job and writing reports on the findings. We have already done work for Andersen Consulting.
On a day-to-day level, I spend the first hour sorting through e-mails, and I鈥檝e usually got at least one or two meetings. There鈥檚 a lot of team interaction here, and about once a week we go out to lunch, which is great. It鈥檚 not one of those jobs where you鈥檙e aware of the time. Days sail by, to the point when you look at your watch and it鈥檚 four o鈥檆lock and you鈥檝e still got four things to do. But that鈥檚 fine, I enjoy it.
How environmentally aware is the construction industry?
In Australia, the situation is much more developed than it is here. In the UK, especially in construction, it鈥檚 virtually unheard of to do anything environmental. Awareness is growing, but companies have no excuse for having an environmental policy that is words on a page rather than something that they actually act on.
You trained horses in Australia. How did that compare with consulting?
It鈥檚 not that different, but you鈥檙e not so much training as putting options in front of people and making recommendations. That is why I enjoy what I do. Plus, people are far more challenging than animals.
If I was to be asked 鈥渨hy do you get up every morning and go to work?鈥, my answer would be so that in however many years鈥 time, I could have as many horses as I want, and spend as much time training them as I want. The thing I enjoy most about working with horses is the training.
What do you do to relax?
I鈥檓 torn between the city and the country, so I enjoy going to the country for the odd weekend. My main passion is dressage and show jumping, but I鈥檓 not doing any at the moment because it鈥檚 so expensive over here.