Building Better Communication with DiSC
People don’t all operate the same way, and yet we keep acting like they should.
You can put two perfectly capable people in the same situation and get completely different reactions. One wants to talk it through, one needs time, one wants a decision, and one wants to understand every angle first. Then everyone gets annoyed, not because the issue is big, but because the process feels clunky and no one’s on the same page.
That shows up everywhere. At work. But also at home, with partners, kids, friends, family, and all the other places where you wonder why this feels harder than it needs to.
This isn’t about becoming more self-aware so you can heal your inner whatever.
It’s about understanding how you operate when you’re making decisions, when you’re under pressure, when you’re excited, when you’re annoyed, and when you’re trying to get something done with other people involved. It's about how you can make small shifts to connect better and agree more.
You'll stop assuming people are being difficult on purpose. You'll stop over explaining to people who don’t need it, and you'll start providing the data to people who want more than "vibes."
And that helps with very real stuff. Meetings. Feedback. Conflict. Planning. Leadership. Relationships.
DiSC gives you a common language for how people work and communicate, without turning humans into labels or making everything feel like a training course.
It’s practical. It’s usable. And it applies whether you’re sitting in a meeting room or standing in your kitchen arguing about who forgot to buy milk.
Who's Bek
Bek works with people on communication, behaviour, and the many ways humans manage to misunderstand each other.
She’s spent years inside organisations watching smart, capable people get stuck not because they don’t know what they’re doing, but because everyone thinks, reacts, and communicates differently… and no one ever talks about that part.
Bek is a qualified DiSC facilitator and is trained across a range of psychometric and behavioural tools. She uses them as guides, not labels, because humans are far more interesting (and complicated) than a neat little profile.
Her approach is practical, down-to-earth, and low on corporate theatre. No jargon. No scripts. No pretending people suddenly become rational at 9am.
Bek’s work sits in the space where work and real life overlap, helping people understand themselves and each other just enough that things feel clearer, lighter, and less hard than they need to be.
Contact "DiSC with Bek"
Address
Adelaide SA, Australia