We can do better… together

Changing workplace culture through Restorative Practices.

Ada Gregory at lecturn

Relationships aren’t a soft skill. They’re the whole thing.

I help individuals, teams, and organizations build cultures where trust, accountability, and real collaboration aren’t aspirational — they’re everyday practice. Through restorative methods grounded in 30 years of real-world experience, I give people the tools to do the hard work of being in community together.

Ada Gregory headshot

I’m Ada — and I’ve spent 30 years building the answer to one question.

In 1992, Rodney King stood amid the wreckage of Los Angeles and asked: “Can we get along?” That question has followed me through a career that spans law enforcement, nonprofit leadership, policy planning, and organizational consulting. My answer — hard-won and still evolving — is yes… but only if we’re willing to do the work.

READ MY STORY

Managers, faculty, and team leaders have said:

This is probably the best workshop I have ever attended. The Restorative Questions will be a game changer for me as a manager.
— Majorie G.
I’ve attended 20+ of these in my career. This was one of the most potentially impactful.
— Greg P.
The key to change is to ‘narrow the boundaries of what is acceptable.’ That was a huge aha moment. It changed my life.
— LaToya R.
I feel more empowered to intervene—both because of the strategies and the chance to practice them.
— Janet H.

Here’s what working with me looks like.

STEP 1

You tell me what’s going on.

A free 20–30 minute call to talk through your team’s goals, the challenges you’re navigating, and what you’re hoping restorative practices can make possible.

STEP 2

I build your program.

No off-the-shelf curriculum. I design the training around your specific workplace context — the dynamics, the language, and the real situations your team faces.

STEP 3

Your team leaves ready to use it.

Participants finish with practical tools, new language, and enough real practice that they can apply what they’ve learned the next day — not someday

Justice that doesn't heal isn't finished.