Thinking clearly is
the rarest competitive advantage
any institution can have.
We work with organisations, institutions, and individuals who sense that the way they are currently designing learning, leading teams, or navigating change is not equal to the moment they are in — and who want to change that with precision rather than guesswork.
Learning is Human”
Three kinds of clients.
One governing philosophy.
Our consulting work is not sector-agnostic. It is rooted in a specific argument: that cognitive ownership — the ability to think, learn, and decide from the inside rather than the outside — is the most valuable capacity any institution, team, or individual can develop. If that argument resonates, we may be the right fit.
Academic Institutions
Universities, colleges, and schools navigating the intersection of traditional pedagogy and the AI era — and wanting a research-backed approach to the transition.
- Curriculum architecture redesign
- Faculty learning culture audit
- AI policy and assessment design
- Student performance frameworks
- Research capability development
Corporate Organisations
L&D leaders and HR heads in companies where traditional training is no longer producing the behavioural change the organisation needs.
- Learning culture diagnosis
- Manager-as-educator programmes
- Cognitive performance frameworks
- AI literacy for teams
- Leadership thinking labs
Independent Practitioners
Coaches, educators, solopreneurs, and knowledge-based practitioners who want to systematise what they know and build an institution around it.
- IP architecture and sequencing
- Curriculum design from experience
- Revenue model for knowledge work
- Research-to-practice pipeline
- Content strategy and positioning
“We do not arrive with a packaged solution and install it. We arrive with a diagnostic discipline and a set of frameworks refined over thirty years of practice across four countries — and we build the solution from inside your specific context.”— Milind Shantaram Majalkar · Founder, Abhidnya Learning Spaces
Where we work.
What we change.
Every engagement is rooted in one of these five practice areas — sometimes alone, more often in combination. The scope is agreed at the diagnostic stage.
Learning Architecture
The design of how knowledge is sequenced, delivered, and assessed — whether for a single course, a full programme, or an institutional curriculum. Built on the Panchatantra of Learning framework and grounded in whole-brain learning neuroscience.
Enquire →AI Governance for Learning Institutions
How to respond to the AI era as an institution — not by banning tools, but by developing minds capable of using them wisely. Policy design, assessment redesign, and the institutional culture shift required to make cognitive sovereignty the default.
Enquire →Research Culture Development
Building the capacity within institutions to generate, evaluate, and act on evidence about their own practice. For universities and schools that want to move from policy-by-intuition to policy-by-evidence — including faculty research mentoring and paper publication support.
Enquire →Cognitive Performance for Organisations
The MIL framework applied to teams and organisations: how to build a culture where people manage their own learning, navigate information abundance without paralysis, and lead from a position of internal clarity rather than external compliance.
Enquire →IP Architecture for Independent Educators
For coaches, trainers, and practitioners who have accumulated substantial tacit knowledge and want to build an institution, a curriculum, or a publication pipeline from it. From content inventory to sequenced delivery to revenue model.
Enquire →The engagement
has a shape.
Every consulting engagement follows the same four-stage discipline. The stages are non-negotiable — because skipping any one of them produces solutions that do not hold.
The Diagnostic Conversation
Before any scope is agreed, we spend one session understanding your specific context — the presenting problem, the underlying tension, and the outcome you are actually trying to produce. No charge. No commitment. Just clarity about fit.
The Brief
A short document that names the problem precisely, the outcome we are targeting, the scope of the engagement, and the criteria by which we will know it has worked. Signed off before any work begins.
The Engagement
The work itself — which may include diagnosis, design, facilitation, coaching, research, or some combination. Delivered over an agreed timeline with clear milestones. You will always know where we are.
The Transfer
Every engagement ends with an explicit transfer: the capability, the framework, or the system we have built together is handed over in a form your organisation can own, maintain, and develop independently. We build for your independence, not your dependence.
How engagements
are structured.
Three models, chosen to fit the nature of the problem. All begin with the diagnostic conversation.
The Thinking Partnership
A monthly retainer for leaders, founders, and practitioners who want a rigorous thinking partner for the decisions that matter most. Not a coach. Not a consultant. A peer who asks better questions than you are currently asking yourself.
The Defined Engagement
A time-bound project with a specific output — a curriculum design, a faculty development programme, an institutional policy framework, a research paper, a content strategy. Clear scope. Clear timeline. Clear deliverable.
The Institutional Audit
A structured review of a learning function, a training programme, or a curriculum — producing a diagnosis of what is working, what is not, and what a research-grounded improvement would look like. Delivered as a report with recommendations.
Start with
a conversation.
The diagnostic conversation is free, unscripted, and genuinely useful regardless of whether we work together. Reach out with a brief description of the problem you are sitting with.