We are living through the most consequential convergence of our lifetimes — a world straining at its limits, intelligence being reinvented, and a deeper uncertainty about what it means to lead with purpose and be human. Most people feel it. Few have language for it. This is a space to find that language.
Growth at all costs. Technology as salvation. Leadership as authority. The old frameworks are failing in plain sight. And yet most conversations happening in boardrooms, business schools, and public life are still using those old frameworks.
I've spent nearly four decades inside that tension — working with institutions, executives, and emerging leaders across Europe, the Americas, Africa, and Asia. Not as someone with a system to sell.
Whether you lead a team, run an organisation, or simply refuse to sleepwalk through this moment in history — you're who I'm here for.
Three ways into the conversation — depending on what your moment calls for.
The talk — The Last Competitive Advantage — delivered to leadership audiences, conferences, and business schools. A 45-minute provocation, designed to change the questions the room is asking.
Half-day and full-day sessions for executive teams ready to go deeper. The framework applied directly to the questions your leadership is sitting with right now.
Ongoing thinking partnership for leaders and organisations navigating the convergence of sustainability, technology, and what it means to lead now.
A short guide & video
Three questions every thinking person should be sitting with right now. A short guide and short video. Not answers — starting points. Free.
Miguel J. Martins has spent nearly four decades at the intersection of the three forces reshaping our world: sustainability, innovation, and leadership.
From serving on the top management team that built Millennium bim from the ground up — today one of Mozambique's largest and most awarded banks — to structuring pioneering sustainable finance deals at IFC (World Bank Group) and unlocking capital for emerging markets worldwide, to co-designing the FT/IFC Transformational Business Awards, and teaching executives across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and beyond — his work has always asked the same underlying question: what does it take to lead well, in a world that keeps changing the rules?
Today, through MJM Advisors and as a professor at leading business schools across Europe, he works with organisations and individuals navigating precisely this moment — one where sustainability demands a co-evolutionary leap, intelligence is being redefined, and leadership must draw on a far fuller range of what it means to be human.
He is not here to offer a framework. He is here to change the questions.
Once a month, one question worth sitting with. A short reflection on sustainability, intelligence, and what it means to lead with purpose and be human. For anyone paying attention.