The Human MRI: Ellie Ford on Reading People, Walking Away, and Work Life Integration

Ellie Ford has worn a lot of hats: anthropologist, documentary filmmaker, startup founder, TimeOut innovation lead, charity sector innovator, and now Chief People Officer at Zinc VC. What connects them all is an unusual ability to read people — a skill her CEO once called a human MRI scanner. In this episode, Erica talks to Ellie about the career conversations that have shaped her, why she said no to a fully funded PhD, and what returning to work after breast cancer taught her about where to put your energy.

What we cover:

From anthropology to exit. Ellie traces the thread from studying visual anthropology and making documentaries to building a personalised recommendations startup and selling it to TimeOut Group five years later — largely on instinct and a sense of possibility, long before the term ‘good search’ existed.

The PhD call that crystallised everything. A professor rang with hard-won funding and told Ellie that nobody would ever invest that much in her again. She said no anyway. What that moment revealed about values, curiosity, and the kind of career conversations that close doors rather than open them.

What venture-building taught her about careers. At Zinc VC, Ellie has taken hundreds of founders through a process of prototyping and iteration. Inflection applies the same methodology to people — a 12-week fellowship for mid-career professionals who want to think seriously about what comes next, with a bias towards action rather than theory.

The human MRI moment. Returning to work after breast cancer, Ellie walked into a conversation with her co-founders with three ideas for what to do next. One response changed everything — and became a north star for how she now thinks about the relationship between personal growth and business growth.

Work-life integration, not balance. Three children, three very different career contexts at the point of each birth. Ellie talks honestly about maternity reentry, the complexity of taking a full year off, and why she involves her kids in her working world rather than keeping the two separate.

Why career conversations are becoming urgent. As work accelerates and linear paths dissolve, knowing how to iterate, experiment, and widen your social capital is becoming the new form of job security — something Ellie believes we will all need to revisit every six to eighteen months.

Links:

Ellie on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/eleanor-ford-8b27661/

Inflection: https://inflection.zinc.vc/

Free Equation Builder: https://www.thecareerequation.com

Book an intro call: https://www.thecareerequation.com/book-intro-call

Erica on LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/ericasosna

Zoë on LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/zoeschofieldcoach

Next
Next

How to Stay Relevant in the Age of AI (Without Panic)