Annika Lübbert

My background is in cognitive neuroscience, combined with work in organisation development and training in communication and leadership skills.

Since 2025, I joined Wageningen University and the AMS Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions as a postdoctoral researcher, where I explore the personal challenges of professionals who seek to accelerate innovation in the construction sector.

Alongside this, I work as a freelance trainer, supporting scientists (via hfp-consulting) and other professionals by strengthening how they communicate, collaborate, and take action in complex work environments (see my portfolio – coming soon).

My work is grounded in a simple belief: well-designed structures can dramatically improve how people collaborate – and with that, unleash the level of energy, purpose, and joy they can experience at work.

I support teams and organisations in building a shared understanding of the challenges they face, and the resources they can draw on. By experiencing their different perspectives – on roles, relationships, and ways forward – teams learn to navigate complexity together, unlocking ideas and solutions they wouldn’t reach on their own.

My approach combines hands-on facilitation with practice-based research, allowing it to evolve and adapt continuously within real-world settings. I work directly with teams and organisations – as a visiting facilitator, through workshops, or in longer-term collaborations.

Along the way, I document real-life cases: the challenges people face and the strategies that help them reconnect with their own resourcefulness. This close integration of research and practice creates a rich library of lived examples and deepens the work – for me, and for the teams I support.

My work and curiosity for social learning are nurtured and sustained by a wonderful web of people – among them is the enactive research group, with whom I meet regularly to reflect, exchange and learn together. I also take part in research-practice collaborations focused on collective creativity, embodied learning and the important work of mediators of innovation.

In Sanskrit, my name means constant change (Anicca) and fearless force (Anika) – I resonate very well with that.

In my life, I move a lot – cycling, climbing, dancing, exploring. I’m drawn to the outdoors and to building things: from mornings by the water to weeks spent cycling across Europe with a hammock, to crafting the spaces I call home.

If all goes well, my next step is a small, beautiful house in south-west France.

I love lying on the floor, entering cold water, and getting in touch with people.

I am grateful for my current roles at ELS / WUR and the AMS Institute, and the networks around them – they continue to challenge and support me in growing as an independent, yet deeply situated, researcher and trainer.

This website is a window into my work: it provides recent ideas and activities, core principles, fragments from my notes, and glimpses of the projects and collaborations that shape it.

Take your time exploring.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is 20230831_085857_44-1024x576.jpg
August 18, 2023 – Pesaro, Italy. Night before catching the ferry to Mali Losinj, Croatia. Cycling from France to Slovenia.

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