What began as Europe’s largest Human Sustainability Conference is now evolving into something bigger.

Happiness Camp is becoming a global movement shaping the future of work, one rooted in wellbeing, purpose and human sustainability.

At the heart of this evolution is the newly formed Happiness Camp Executive Council.

A collective of some of the most influential leaders, thinkers and changemakers working today, spanning industries, geographies and perspectives. Together, they bring experience, courage and responsibility to the conversations that matter most about how we work, lead and live.

A Council built for impact

The Executive Council sits at the core of the Happiness Camp ecosystem. Its role goes far beyond shaping ideas or appearing on stage.

These leaders are actively guiding the vision of Happiness Camp 2026, helping define the content, partnerships and initiatives that will shape the experience and its long-term impact.

Their work includes driving exclusive research, hosting masterclasses with global leaders and launching the 2026 Happiness Camp Awards, recognising the organisations that are leading the way toward a more human and sustainable future of work.

This is where intention turns into action.

Jen Fisher

Director of Impact & Community at Happiness Camp

Riddhima Kowley

Global Head of Wellbeing@ Nokia

António Pedro Pinto

Founder & CEO of Happiness Camp

Claude Silver

Chief Heart Officer @ VaynerX

Cesar Carvalho

Founder & CEO of Wellhub

Felicia Cheng

Director, Global Wellbeing & Mental Health @ Salesforce

Madalena Carey

CEO of Happiness Business School

From conference to ecosystem

The formation of the Executive Council marks a defining moment in the evolution of Happiness Camp.

What started as a conference is now a living ecosystem of research, dialogue and action. One that brings together leaders who understand that wellbeing is not a perk, purpose is not a slogan and human sustainability is not optional.

Together, this Council embodies a new way of thinking about progress. One where success is measured not only by performance, but by how work supports people to function, grow and live well.

Shaping what comes next

The Executive Council will continue to shape the conversations, initiatives and collaborations that define Happiness Camp 2026 and beyond.

From the ideas shared on stage to the organisations we choose to spotlight, their leadership ensures that every moment reflects a global, human-centred vision for the future of work.

And this is only the beginning.

The Reset Alliance is open

Alongside the Executive Council, we are opening the next chapter of the Happiness Camp movement.

The Reset Alliance is an open call to professionals who want closer access, deeper conversations and a real voice inside the Happiness Camp ecosystem. A space for those who don’t just want to attend, but to contribute, connect and help shape what comes next.

Not everyone will be part of this.
But if you feel called, you probably should be.

Apply to join The Reset Alliance here!

The Reset is in motion.

We believe the future of work will be shaped by leaders who understand that wellbeing is not a benefit to be offered, but a foundation that must be built into how organisations function, grow and sustain performance.

Today, we welcome a voice that brings this belief into practice, at scale and with clarity. César Carvalho, Founder and CEO of Wellhub , joins Happiness Camp 2026 as part of our Executive Council.

César has spent his career removing the barriers that make wellbeing feel optional at work. His work is grounded in a simple but powerful truth: when people break, businesses break. And when people are supported as whole humans, organisations become stronger, healthier and more resilient.

At the heart of his perspective is a clear conviction. Wellbeing isn’t a perk. It’s what allows people to function, grow and live well. And it should never depend on individual resilience alone.

As César shared with us:

“I believe that all companies should be wellbeing companies.”

This belief is not theoretical. It is built into the systems, platforms and choices he has developed to make wellbeing accessible, integrated and part of everyday work life for millions of people.

Who is César?

César is the Founder and CEO of Wellhub, a global workplace wellbeing platform connecting people with accessible tools for physical, mental and emotional health. His work focuses on helping organisations move from intention to action, embedding wellbeing into how work is designed and experienced.

His leadership is shaped by a deep understanding of human sustainability and by personal experience. Becoming a parent reinforced what he already knew to be true: rigid structures serve no one. Work needs to reflect real life, not compete with it.

In his conversation with us, César shared reflections that are both direct and deeply human:

•⁠ ⁠The part of work culture he would cancel forever: glorifying burnout as a badge of honour for leadership
•⁠ ⁠The moments he feels most human in his work: when work mirrors real life and allows people to show up as they are
•⁠ ⁠The wellbeing practices that keep him grounded: rest, movement and reset moments

These reflections point to a necessary shift. Sustainable success does not come from pushing harder. It comes from designing work that supports people before they reach their limits.

What to expect at HC 2026?

César joins a growing group of global leaders who are challenging outdated models of performance and redefining what success looks like in modern organisations.

His presence strengthens our collective commitment to human sustainability, reminding us that wellbeing is not an individual responsibility. It is a systemic one.

More voices will be joining the Executive Council in the coming months. Each one bringing a perspective that pushes the conversation forward.

For now, one thing is clear.

Happiness Camp 2026 just became more grounded, more honest and more focused on what truly sustains work and life.

Welcome, César.
The Reset is in motion.
And you are an essential part of it.

In fast-moving creative and tech environments, speed is often celebrated as strength. Endurance is praised. Pushing through becomes a quiet badge of honor.

But here’s what I’ve learned the hard way: staying human isn’t what slows leaders down – It’s what helps leaders sustain themselves – and their teams.

When work moves fast, emotions don’t disappear. They go underground. And when emotions go unnamed, they don’t go away – they leak. Into tone. Into tension. Into how safe people feel showing up as themselves.

Most leaders I know care deeply. They want people to feel well, valued, and energized. And yet they’re carrying pressure, expectations, and the weight of constant change. That tension – between care and performance – often stays unspoken.

That’s not a failure of values. It’s a lack of skill.

We talk a lot about emotional intelligence. Awareness matters. But awareness alone doesn’t help in moments of stress. What leaders need is emotional fluency – the ability to name what’s happening, regulate themselves, and respond with clarity instead of armor.

What we can name, we can navigate.
What we can’t name tends to run the room.

Staying human at work doesn’t mean oversharing or lowering the bar. It means creating conditions where people can do hard things without losing themselves. It means leaders naming the moment before trying to fix it. Holding hope and honesty at the same time. Treating leadership not as distance or power, but as service and connection.

People don’t burn out because work is challenging. They burn out when it’s challenging and lonely. When they don’t feel seen. When they believe being human is a risk.

Cultures that stay human don’t move slower.
They move with more trust and more resilience.
More room for joy and flourishing—even under pressure.

The goal isn’t to survive work.
It’s to thrive while doing meaningful things with other humans.

Staying human isn’t a personality trait.
It’s a leadership skill.
And it’s one we can all practice.

We believe the future of work depends on leaders who are willing to challenge the systems that exhaust people and call it performance.

Today, we welcome a voice that has been doing exactly that for years. Jen Fisher, Director of Impact and Community at Happiness Camp , joins Happiness Camp 2026 as part of our Executive Council and invited specialists.

Jen brings a perspective shaped by lived experience, deep listening and a clear conviction. Burnout is not a personal failure. It is a design flaw. And work culture will only change when we stop asking people to adapt to broken systems and start redesigning those systems with humanity at the centre.

At the heart of her work is a simple but powerful idea. Work should leave people better, not emptier. More human, not more depleted.

As she shared with us:

“I’m done playing nice with work cultures that treat humans like renewable resources.”

This perspective is not theoretical. It is grounded in years of working inside organisations, leading wellbeing at scale, and naming what many people feel but struggle to articulate.

Who is Jen?
Jen leads Impact & Community at Happiness Camp and is globally recognised for her work at the intersection of wellbeing, culture and organisational responsibility. Her career has been shaped by a deep commitment to changing how organisations think about performance, burnout and human sustainability.

Her approach is grounded in honesty, empathy and systemic thinking. And in challenging one of the most persistent myths of modern work culture: that pressure is the price of performance.

In her conversation with us, Jen shared reflections that feel both confronting and deeply human:

  • The work culture belief she would cancel forever: the idea that people must be pushed to the edge to perform
  • The wellbeing ritual that keeps her grounded: exercise, sleep and surrounding herself with people who meet possibility with “heck yes”
  • The moments she feels most human in her work: when someone pauses and asks, “wait, are we allowed to talk about this?”

These moments may sound simple. But they point to something essential. Real change begins when honesty becomes possible. And when systems are designed to support people, not extract from them.

What to expect at HC 2026?
Jen joins a global group of leaders who are redefining how organisations think about wellbeing, leadership and human sustainability. Together, they are shaping conversations about the future of work that are bold, uncomfortable and necessary.

More global voices will join the Executive Council soon, and we will be sharing them in the months ahead.

For now, one thing is clear.

Happiness Camp 2026 just became more honest, more courageous and more human.

A reminder that resilience without empathy is just survival.
And one the future of work can no longer afford to ignore.

Welcome, Jen.
The Reset is in motion.
And you are an essential part of it.

Rethinking Human Sustainability in Modern Work Cultures
For decades, conversations about work have focused primarily on performance, productivity and resilience . Organisations have invested heavily in systems designed to help people endure pressure, adapt faster and recover quickly, often without questioning whether the environments themselves are sustainable.

At Happiness Camp, we believe the question needs to shift.

Not only how people perform, but how work leaves them.

This distinction sits at the heart of human sustainability . Work will always require effort, focus and energy. But when work consistently leaves people depleted, disengaged or disconnected , the issue is rarely individual resilience.

From Individual Endurance to Human Sustainability
Traditional models of resilience have framed strength as endurance. The ability to push through pressure, absorb stress and continue delivering regardless of circumstances. While this mindset has helped organisations navigate moments of disruption, it has also normalised exhaustion as a marker of commitment.

Human sustainability calls for a broader view.

It recognises that sustainable performance is not built on constant recovery, but on environments that respect human limits, rhythms and needs. It shifts responsibility away from individuals having to cope, and towards organisations designing work in ways that support long-term wellbeing, engagement and contribution .

This is not a soft or abstract idea. It is a strategic one .

The Link Between Wellbeing and Performance
A growing body of research shows that wellbeing and performance are not competing priorities, but mutually reinforcing ones . Over the past decade, research from institutions such as the University of Oxford’s Wellbeing Research Centre has helped establish clear links between employee wellbeing, including satisfaction, purpose and manageable stress levels, and organisational outcomes such as productivity, engagement and retention.

Organisations that pay attention to how people experience work tend to see stronger collaboration, greater adaptability and more consistent performance over time. When people feel supported, seen and able to bring their full selves to work , they are better equipped to contribute sustainably.

Human sustainability is not about lowering ambition. It is about redefining what sustainable ambition looks like.

Culture Is the System People Live Inside
Work does not exhaust people in isolation. Cultures do.

The way meetings are run, how success is measured, how pressure is communicated, how mistakes are treated and how much psychological safety exists in everyday interactions all form the system people operate within. When that system rewards constant urgency, over-availability and silence in the face of overload, individuals adapt by disengaging, disconnecting or burning out.

This is something we see consistently in conversations with leaders, organisations and communities connected through Happiness Camp. Across industries, roles and geographies, the pattern repeats. When culture ignores human limits , performance eventually follows.

Human sustainability requires leaders to examine not only behaviours, but the systems that shape them.

What Does It Mean for Work to Leave People Fuller?
When work leaves people fuller, it does not mean work is easy or comfortable. It means work is meaningful, coherent and aligned with human capacity.

People leave the day challenged but not depleted, engaged but not eroded, tired yet still connected to purpose. In these environments, learning happens naturally, collaboration improves and creativity increases. People are more likely to stay, grow and contribute with intention.

This is not achieved through perks or isolated wellbeing initiatives. It is achieved through thoughtful leadership, clear priorities and cultures that recognise people as living systems, not resources to be consumed.

A Responsibility, Not a Benefit
Human sustainability reframes wellbeing from something organisations offer to something they own.

It places responsibility on leaders to ask difficult but necessary questions. How does our culture feel to live in? What behaviours do we reward, explicitly and implicitly? What does success cost our people?

These questions are not comfortable. But answering them honestly is where meaningful change begins.

Looking Ahead
As work continues to evolve, the organisations that thrive will not be those that demand more resilience from their people, but those that design work in ways that sustain human energy, creativity and connection over time.

At Happiness Camp, we see human sustainability not as a trend, but as a necessary evolution. A shift from extracting performance to cultivating environments where people and organisations can grow together.

Because work should not be something people need to recover from.

It should be something that leaves them fuller.

We believe the future of work depends on leaders who are willing to slow down, question performance-driven habits and put people back at the centre of how organisations are built.

Today, we highlight a voice that has been shaping that belief from the very beginning. António Pedro Pinto, Founder & CEO of Happiness Camp , is part of the Happiness Camp 2026 Executive Council and invited specialists.

António has been building a vision that sits at the heart of the movement we are creating. One where work is not something people need to recover from, culture is not treated as a perk, and leadership carries a real responsibility for how people feel, live and grow.

At the core of his work is a clear conviction. Work should fit into life, not consume it. And organisations should leave people better, not empty.

As he shared with us:

“I’m interested in building organizations people don’t need to recover from.”

This perspective is not aspirational or abstract. It is deeply practical, grounded in lived experience and reflected in every space, conversation and community António has helped create through Happiness Camp.

Who is António?
António is the Founder & CEO of Happiness Camp, one of Europe’s largest movements focused on human sustainability, workplace culture and wellbeing. His work sits at the intersection of leadership, culture and human experience, challenging organisations to rethink how work fits into people’s lives.

His approach is grounded in presence, responsibility and real connection. And in questioning one of the most damaging assumptions of modern work culture: that pressure equals purpose.

In his conversation with us, António shared reflections that feel both honest and necessary:

•⁠ ⁠The part of work culture he would cancel forever: any culture that mistakes pressure for purpose
•⁠ ⁠The wellbeing ritual that keeps him grounded: going to the gym with his people, turning movement into connection and mental therapy
•⁠ ⁠The moments he feels most human at work: when conversations shift from performance to presence and real connection

These moments may sound simple. But they reveal something essential. Humanity at work is built in everyday choices, not grand statements.

What to expect at HC 2026?
António joins a global group of leaders who are rethinking how organisations approach culture, leadership and human sustainability. Together, they are shaping conversations about the future of work that are courageous, honest and deeply human.

More global voices will join the Executive Council soon, and we will be sharing them in the coming months.

For now, one thing is clear.

Happiness Camp 2026 continues to grow as a space where work slows down, people reconnect and better questions take centre stage.

A reminder that culture is not a perk.
It is a strategic responsibility.

Thank you for building Happiness Camp, António.
The Reset is in motion.

We believe the future of work depends on leaders who understand that learning is not about answers, but about awareness, courage and conscious growth.

Today, we welcome a voice that embodies that belief with clarity and intention. Madalena Carey, CEO at Happiness Business School, joins Happiness Camp 2026 as part of our Executive Council and invited specialists.

Madalena has been shaping a vision that aligns deeply with the movement we are building. One where education is not treated as a transfer of knowledge or a checklist of skills, but as a living process that transforms people, cultures and the way organisations evolve.

At the heart of her work is a simple but powerful idea. Learning should help people reconnect with themselves, question certainty and build cultures that are human at their core.

As she shared with us:

“I co-create people-centred cultures by helping organizations embrace agility, purpose, and real human connection.”

This perspective is not theoretical. It is lived, practiced and deeply embodied in the way Madalena teaches, leads and builds learning spaces.

Who is Madalena?
Madalena leads Happiness Business School, an academy dedicated to human development, leadership and conscious learning. Her work sits at the intersection of education, culture and human sustainability, supporting people and organisations in moments of growth, change and uncertainty.

Her approach is grounded in presence, curiosity and courage. And in challenging one of the most limiting patterns of modern work culture: the illusion that certainty equals safety.

In her conversation with us, Madalena shared reflections that feel both bold and deeply human:
• The part of work culture she would leave behind forever: certainty disguised as security
• The mindset that guides her in moments of doubt: choosing movement over waiting
The moments she feels most human in her work: learning environments where people feel safe to question, explore and grow

These moments may sound simple. But they point to something essential. Growth does not come from control. It comes from awareness, courage and conscious choice.

What to expect at HC 2026?
Madalena joins a global group of leaders who are redefining how organisations think about learning, leadership and human sustainability. Together, they are shaping conversations about the future of work that are honest, challenging and deeply human.

More global voices will join the Executive Council soon, and we will be sharing them in the coming months.

For now, one thing is clear.

Happiness Camp 2026 just became more curious, more courageous and more intentional.

A reminder that growth rarely lives in certainty.
And one the future of work can no longer afford to ignore.

Welcome, Madalena.
The Reset is in motion.
And you are an essential part of it.