Gerry Cryer. Perspective

She came wanting better English. By the end of the hour she said she could see doors where previously there had been only one path. She could push at them and see what was there. That is why I do this work.

Helping intelligent people see possibilities currently, you cannot see.

Language is rarely the problem.
It’s permission.

Gerry Cryer

“I used to solve the locked door problem with a hefty shoulder. It took a while to notice that most doors weren’t locked. They just needed someone to point out the handle.”

Gerry Cryer
Who

An unusually experienced business leader, mentor and novelist. Partner at PwC. COO. Author.

What

Perspective is the product. Everything else is a delivery mechanism.

Here

Essays, frameworks, letters and conversations designed to expand what feels possible.

Next Begin with a conversation →
Gerry Cryer

Gerry Cryer spent decades at the senior levels of finance and consulting, including as a Partner at PwC, before turning his attention to the question that had always interested him more: not how organisations work, but how the people within them think, limit themselves and grow.

Most people don’t have a language problem. They have a permission problem.

Enter the perspective →

The Central Idea

Perspective
is the product

For more than fifty years, I’ve been watching how people move through organisations, careers, relationships and expectations. I’m less interested in how people optimise within those roles, and more interested in how easily they hand over agency without quite noticing, and what it takes to reclaim it once they do.

I notice the same pattern everywhere. A student says he’s been unlucky recently, matter-of-fact, as if it were a characteristic, like being tall or short. What struck me wasn’t what happened to him. It was how quickly the explanation was already waiting. Some people treat events as information. Others treat them as verdicts.

“Once you decide what something means, you stop looking. The inquisitiveness disappears. And when you stop looking, nothing new seems to happen, which conveniently confirms the story you’ve already told yourself.”

English is often the language through which this work happens. But the outcomes (confidence, direction, possibility) have very little to do with grammar. They have everything to do with the stories people tell themselves about what they are allowed to want.

Begin with a conversation

The intellectual framework

Monkey MindThe voice that tells you it’s too late, and its extraordinary weakness
No RegretsDecisions are made with the information available. The question is what they taught you
The Illusion of FreedomMost constraints are self-imposed. Most doors are unlocked
Structural IntelligenceBehaviour is often a rational response to structure. Change the structure, not the person
Act or AvoidWaiting feels virtuous. But not choosing is still a choice, to stay precisely where you are
Identity and LabelsWhat you call yourself quietly determines what you allow yourself to attempt
Clarity Follows MovementIt rarely precedes it. The opportunities that mattered most didn’t exist yet when the decision was made
CuriosityThe one quality that changes everything, and the first thing organisations try to train out of people

Liberation-Based Leadership

A management architecture
for the age of AI

An evolving framework built on one conviction: awareness, not control, is what keeps organisations conscious as they accelerate. AI distributes knowledge. It does not distribute wisdom. That remains the leader’s work. A book is in development.

  • Skill before structureRecognise bias and context before amplifying reach
  • Structure for awarenessReplace permission layers with transparent feedback loops
  • AI as mirror, not masterSystems that propagate learning, not enforce compliance
Speaking and academic enquiries →

Thinking

Ideas in progress

These pieces are written in the middle of life, not at the end of an argument. They arrive after a conversation that stayed longer than expected, or because something refused to let go. They are not conclusions. They are thinking in motion.

01

Act or Avoid

Waiting feels virtuous. It isn’t.

I notice how often students talk about waiting, as if they’re in a holding pattern and nothing is really happening yet, when in fact quite a lot is already being decided for them just by staying where they are. You can tell yourself you’re being patient. What you usually mean is that you’re avoiding the discomfort of choosing without certainty.

“Clarity tends to follow movement rather than precede it.”

02

Identity and Labels

I called myself an accountant long after it stopped being true.

Labels carry more weight than we pretend. Once you’ve said them, even casually, they start doing quiet work in the background. They make some futures feel sensible and others feel slightly ridiculous or off-limits, without anyone ever saying so directly. Changing direction starts to feel like failure rather than curiosity.

“It isn’t about imagination. It’s about permission, or the lack of it.”

03

Risk and Regret

You can’t calculate the NPV of a life that no longer fits.

When I gave up a corporate career to write a novel, no analysis would have persuaded me otherwise. Financially it was a stupid decision. By the end I was selling furniture to buy food. When the last full stop was hit, I couldn’t have been happier. Most of what people fear isn’t objective risk. It’s inherited: institutional warnings dressed up as wisdom.

“The danger isn’t that you might choose badly. It’s that you never find out what was possible.”

04

The Illusion of Freedom

Most people are following invisible rules.

We like to believe we are free. Look more closely and you’ll find that most people are operating within boundaries they never chose to accept. The modern professional is not enslaved by others. He is enslaved by his own unexamined obedience. Real freedom is frightening. It means walking without a map.

“Every act of growth begins as a betrayal, of old expectations, of inherited identities.”

05

Monkey Mind: Wu Cheng’en

The headband isn’t punishment. It’s the condition of usefulness.

In Wu Cheng’en’s Journey to the West, the Monkey King wears a golden band that tightens when he loses control. For years I thought it was a cage. Now I see it differently. Freedom without discipline collapses into chaos. Discipline without freedom becomes slavery. The art is to hold both.

“You can’t live with your monkey running wild forever, but you can’t let the headband tighten until you forget who you were.”

Dear Vlod, Best Vlad. A novel. 2022.

A correspondence that probably shouldn’t exist.

24 February 2022

Dear Volodymyr,

I thought I should drop you a quick note to let you know some of my friends will drop into Kyiv later today. I wouldn’t worry too much; they will be very friendly. I would be very grateful if you could help them park their tanks.

Best, Vladimir

25 February 2022

Dear Vlad,

I just wanted to let you know that your friends turned up, and I am sorry, but I really couldn’t help them. They were very uncouth and scared all the farm animals.

Look after yourself. Best, Volodymyr

A novel in progress. The correspondence continues for as long as it needs to.

The Letters: thinking as it happens

Written at the end of a day, after a conversation that stayed. Not articles. Not advice. A correspondence you are free to overhear for as long as it feels worth your attention.

No schedule. No tricks. A letter when there is something worth saying.

Participate

This is not a subscription.
It is an invitation.

There’s no sequence to follow, no course to complete, no promised outcome. The objective isn’t to tell you how to live. It’s to unsettle the stories you may have been telling yourself without noticing. If that happens, even briefly, something useful has already occurred.

“This isn’t a clever sales funnel. It’s simply a conversation you’re free to overhear for as long as it feels worth your attention.”
Express interest →

Read

Letters and Essays

Thinking in progress. Written when there is something worth saying, not on a schedule designed to maximise engagement. Free to all subscribers.

Engage

Early Access to LBL

Liberation-Based Leadership as it develops: drafts, arguments and ideas before they become a book. For those who want to engage with the thinking before it is finished.

Challenge

Discussion and Dialogue

A small community of people who take ideas seriously. Not a forum. A conversation among people who understand that discomfort is often the beginning of clarity.

Connect

Direct Access

Occasional group conversations with Gerry. Not webinars. Real discussions where the questions matter more than the answers.

Coaching

The most direct application
of the perspective

When I talk to a student, I create the scene in my mind. I can see them wherever they are, struggling with whatever they’re struggling with. I never tell them what to do. I try to change the frame, to show them the same picture from a different angle, where the options that were invisible become visible.

Most arrive thinking they have a technical problem. A language problem. A confidence problem. Within a few conversations it usually becomes clear they have a permission problem. That is where the real work begins.

“The first conversation is not a sales call. It is an honest assessment (by both of us) of whether working together would be worthwhile. I will tell you if I think I can help. And I will tell you if I don’t.”
Begin with a conversation
Gerry Cryer
“Liberation-Based Leadership doesn’t begin in the boardroom. It begins the moment someone decides to think differently about what is possible for them.”
Gerry Cryer, Founder, Liberation-Based Leadership

On the first conversation: it lasts around thirty minutes. It costs nothing. By the end of it, both of us will know whether working together makes sense, and both of us will say so honestly. I work only with people I believe I can genuinely help, and only with those working at B2 level and above. Not from snobbery: the work requires real conversation, and real conversation requires real language.

I

Strategic Conversation

Regular conversations built around your specific situation, ambitions and the thinking you need to do. English is often the medium. Clarity, confidence and direction are the outcomes.

For professionals who know something needs to change but aren’t yet sure what.

II

Executive Mentoring

A thinking partnership with broader scope: leadership philosophy, decision-making under uncertainty, and what it means to lead consciously when AI is making decisions faster than humans can reflect on them.

For senior leaders navigating genuine complexity.

III

Speaking and Organisations

I speak on Liberation-Based Leadership, conscious decision-making in the AI era, and the human qualities that technology cannot replicate. Academic and conference enquiries welcome.

For organisations that want a genuinely different perspective on leadership.

About Gerry

I haven’t had a career.
I’ve done lots of things.

I’ve been a director in businesses, a partner at PwC Consulting in the Middle East, and I’ve lived and worked across several countries. I’ve also written novels, acted, taught, mentored and coached. None of that is especially remarkable on its own, and I don’t list it for effect.

When students hear all of this, they usually say: “Wow, what an interesting career.” I tell them, with real seriousness, that it wasn’t a career. I have done lots of things, all of which were engaging at the time. The opportunities that mattered most didn’t exist yet when I made the decisions that eventually led to them.

“When the lives that feel most alive are examined closely, they rarely read like tidy CVs. They’re messy. Pauses, wrong turns, things abandoned halfway through, decisions that only make sense later.”

What sits underneath all of it is one persistent curiosity: how easily people hand over agency without quite noticing, and what it takes to reclaim it. That is the work. Everything else is a delivery mechanism.

Gerry Cryer

“I write these letters to someone I’ve known for many years, who lives in Kyiv, faces real danger every day, and reads everything before it’s published. If she doesn’t feel a thought is solid enough under her real pressure, I don’t trust it enough to send out into the world.”

Gerry Cryer, on why he writes

What people say

The outcomes are rarely
what people expected

People arrive looking for better language, a clearer presentation, a stronger interview. They leave with something harder to describe and considerably more useful. The words below are theirs, not mine.

What I learnt from Gerry was not only English, but also the philosophy of life. Teacher, friend and penpal: Gerry helped me become a confident, risk-taking, brave, unrestricted and English-advanced communicator.

LyannaStudent

Learning English with Gerry has been more than just mastering a language; it has been a journey of personal growth and life reflection. Gerry is not just a language teacher but a mentor who has inspired me to look forward and dream bigger in both my life and career.

Kurt HungFounder, SunDance Ltd

Gerry is an outstanding mentor who has greatly improved my English and helped shape my career vision. His lessons are insightful, personalised and transformative. If you’re looking for a teacher who truly cares about your growth, Gerry is the best choice.

AndyStudent