We spoke with Ashley, founder of Audience & Purpose, a communication and strategy design practice based in Aarhus, supporting research teams, companies and public organizations to think with more clarity, trust, and intention. Ashley has a rich background in crocodile science and facilitation, combined with a steady focus on the people behind complex processes, which slipped into our talk.
What follows is a conversation about the power of sharp questions over conventional smartness, as well as the tension between bombastic versus accessible digital tools. Crocodiles also came up, as a reminder that resilience is often slow and subtle. The following three takeaways influenced how we think about intelligence, participation, and what it really means to be involved.
1. Involvement means seeing the whole, not just the role.
“I worked in the field of crocodilian ecology and conservation and human-wildlife conflict mitigation all over the world. In the beginning, I used to say, ‘you guys do the humans, I’ll do the crocodiles.’ But you can’t really separate them. It’s too intertwined.”
Ashley spent years working in spaces where involvement wasn’t optional, but core to the purpose. Whether in the wild with crocodiles or in complex stakeholder dialogues, she learned early on that partial understanding can be trickier than we think. It’s never just about the data or the role someone plays. There’s always a deeper story.
In conflict mediation, she also saw how people who were supposedly “the problem” often held the key to long-term solutions, but only if they were taken seriously as whole people, not abstract stakeholders. That’s what makes involvement hard: it challenges the instinct to simplify, to rush, or to assume what others need. It demands a different kind of attention, one that listens with openness-first, rather than strategy.
“People can be 120% on board for years, but then there’s an abrupt change — something happens, and all of that shifts. That’s the moment where either curiosity kicks in, or conflicts start to arise”.
Real participation isn’t about locking things in. It’s about staying alert to what changes, and learning to update the full picture before deciding which new decisions to make. For that purpose, curiosity is a key skill. And it works best with an old tool: good questions.
2. Good questions matter more than final answers
“The cool thing about crocodiles is that, when you think about evolution and what species have survived, crocodiles are old. Like, really old. And they didn’t survive by changing everything about themselves. They stayed more or less the same with some tweaks here and there. And that was enough.”
Ashley dropped this reflection early in our conversation, but it stayed with us. Adaptation, in her experience, isn’t always about full reinvention. It’s about awareness: noticing what’s shifting, and responding with care rather than spectacle. That same logic applies to thinking. Sometimes, the cleverest move is the quietest one: a sharper question.
“People often think the smartest person in the room is the one who gives the answer first. But for me, the smartest person is the one who asks better and better questions.”
At Involved, we’ve seen this in our own work too. Some of the most impactful moments for our clients’ process happen before it begins, and someone rewrites a question that seemed simple, but wasn’t. Framing matters. And the more people involved, the more precision is needed to make space for honesty, not performance.
Crafting good questions takes time, and not every environment allows for it. Sometimes it’s not the people that block clarity, it’s the tools themselves. When the format rewards speed, or the interface feels performative, there’s less room to pause and refine what really matters. And when that space disappears, so does the chance to think with care.
3. Bombastic vs Accessible digital tools
“Many tools try to be impressive with the amount of features and the sophisticated interfaces they offer. But what really matters is that a tool has a low-enough learning curve that makes people feel capable”.
This insight hit home for us. Tools designed to dazzle often end up intimidating. While complexity isn’t always a flaw, it can become a barrier to genuine involvement — especially when the point is to include people quickly, meaningfully, and with minimal friction. In our own practice, we’ve seen how long learning curves shift attention away from the actual collaboration, turning inclusion into a tech test. As Ashley puts it, “If you have to create a tutorial for me to understand how to use it, I’m already gone.”
This mattered even more in her work supporting the European Croc Network, a volunteer-led initiative where participants are already stretched thin. As a co-founder, Ashley used Involved to help the network go beyond talk and move toward shared direction:
“We’ve talked for almost a decade about wanting papers, webinars, more involvement… but we needed to ask: does the group really want this? Or are they satisfied with the setup we have now?”
By using Involved, Ashley could surface collective will, and draft a strategy that aligned with it. “It only took me two hours to write,” she admitted. “Because it was just so clear. We all wanted the same thing.” That kind of clarity isn’t just logistical. It’s emotional. It helps shift thinking from me to us.
Final reflections
Ashley invited us to see something broader: involvement is not a tactic, it’s a mindset. It requires presence, patience, and the courage to slow down when clarity feels just out of reach. That slowing down is not a weakness. It’s a practice. One that allows us to see people more fully, ask sharper questions, and choose tools that enable rather than impress.
From crocodile conservation to stakeholder collaboration, the lessons are very similar: progress doesn’t necessarily come from control. It comes from connection, and from the small design decisions that help people feel competent, included, and curious together.
We are grateful to Ashley for reminding us that the conditions for involvement are not always loud or flashy. Sometimes they are subtle, relational, and ancient — and we need to pay closer attention to them. If you are also working to create more thoughtful, participatory processes in science, research, or public engagement, we’d love to talk.

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