You’ve proven yourself repeatedly, often more than your male colleagues needed to. You’ve mastered the technical skills and delivered results. Yet something still feels off. Perhaps it’s the exhaustion of code-switching between who you are and who you think you need to be at work. Maybe it’s navigating subtle biases, or the sense that to succeed, you must either soften yourself to seem approachable or sharpen yourself to seem competent, never quite allowed to be both.
If this resonates, you’re not imagining it. Women in UK leadership face distinct challenges: promoted based on demonstrated experience, whilst men advance on potential, judged more harshly for identical behaviours, and despite representing 42% of FTSE 100 boards, holding only 7% of CEO positions.
I’m Julia Carden, and I understand these challenges from lived experience as a former Royal Naval Officer. Now, through my coaching practice and PhD research into self-awareness, I support women leaders across the UK, from BMW, Sytner Group to universities and NHS charities, to develop leadership grounded in authenticity, not performance.
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Build executive presence rooted in authentic strengths, not borrowed masculinity
Develop self-awareness first, enabling genuine connection with yourself before expecting connection with others
Lead authentically in male-dominated environments whilst maintaining integrity and values
Address sector-specific challenges in public sector hierarchies, corporate environments, or technical industries
Create sustainable leadership through developmental coaching that works with the whole person
The challenges facing women in UK leadership aren’t about lacking confidence or needing to “lean in” harder. They’re systemic. Women face “prove it again” bias, demonstrating competence repeatedly, whilst men are assumed competent until proven otherwise. We navigate unconscious bias in promotion decisions, often as the only woman in senior meetings, lacking access to informal networks where real decisions happen.
The statistics tell the story. Women hold approximately 30% of senior leadership roles across UK organisations, yet only 7% of FTSE 350 CEO positions. Men remain 21% more likely to be promoted internally to leadership roles.
What makes this particularly challenging is the double-bind many women experience. To be seen as competent, we adopt behaviours coded as masculine: direct communication, decisive action, and assertiveness. Yet when we embody these traits, we’re labelled aggressive. To be warm and approachable, we risk being perceived as less competent. This impossible choice between authenticity and advancement exhausts even the most resilient leaders.
Leadership coaching for women addresses these realities not by teaching you to “fix” yourself, but by developing self-awareness to navigate these systems whilst staying grounded in who you actually are.
Core values such as competence, authenticity, and choice underpin my coaching engagements. You don’t need to choose between being competent and being authentic.
Through my PhD research into self-awareness, I’ve discovered what traditional leadership development misses: you cannot lead others authentically until you’ve established a deep connection with yourself. This isn’t therapy, it’s understanding your patterns, recognising what triggers you under pressure, and developing the capacity to choose your response rather than simply react.
Self-awareness enables self-connection, staying grounded in your values and strengths even when external pressures push you to perform a version of leadership that doesn’t fit. Only from this foundation can you genuinely connect with others.
Leadership coaching for women focuses on the real, lived leadership challenges women face at senior and emerging-senior levels. It goes beyond general confidence work and targets practical leadership capability, decision-making, and strategic career positioning.
What leadership coaching for women addresses:
At its core, the process is developmental rather than corrective. The aim is not to “fix” women leaders, but to strengthen awareness, authority, and choice, so leadership becomes more deliberate, sustainable, and self-directed.
My coaching approach is developmental in nature, working with the whole person, not just your professional persona, whilst holding awareness of the systems you’re navigating. This means addressing real complexity: caring responsibilities, energy management, personal values, and how work integrates with everything else that matters.
Whether we work one-to-one or in group coaching for teams, the foundation remains the same: building self-awareness, establishing authentic presence, and making conscious choices, transforming you into an authentic and effective leader.
“I can highly recommend Julia as a supervisor for your coaching practice. I came out of our first session with an overwhelming sense of being in safe, skilled, knowledgeable and supportive hands, and I find every session with her immensely valuable. She calmly supports you to think deeply, consider dilemmas from new perspectives, and raise your self-awareness, always with the best interests of your client in mind. I would not hesitate to recommend her.- Annabelle White
I have used Julia to deliver management training for key managers. Working with Julia is a breath of fresh air. She quickly understands the needs of the business and recommends practical and effective solutions. This means from day one, you feel like progress is being made.- Samantha Cheeseman
Leadership coaching for women isn’t about learning to fit in better. It’s about developing self-awareness to lead authentically, strategic thinking to navigate systemic barriers, and resilience to sustain your leadership without exhausting yourself.
If you’re ready to explore coaching that honours both your competence and authenticity, that addresses real challenges whilst developing your capacity to lead as yourself, I’d welcome a conversation.
Let’s start a confidential conversation
Email: julia@carden-consulting.co.uk Phone: +447855459658
Women can develop leadership skills through leadership coaching, mentoring, stretch roles, and structured feedback. Key actions include building executive presence, improving strategic communication, increasing decision-making responsibility, strengthening influence skills, and gaining visibility with senior sponsors and stakeholders.
Successful female leaders commonly demonstrate self-awareness, confidence with humility, clear communication, emotional intelligence, resilience under pressure, strategic thinking, and strong boundary-setting.
The five leadership essentials for women are grounded presence, decision confidence, influence and stakeholder management, visibility and sponsorship, and self-belief.
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