Imô brings 10+ years of experience in storytelling and strategy, and for the past 2.5 years has served as Capco’s Internal Communications Lead for APAC and the Middle East. In this role, Imô partners closely with regional leadership to shape communications that are clear, considered, and human – helping colleagues feel connected to purpose and part of something bigger.
As Co-Lead of Women@Capco APAC, Imô champions inclusion and belonging through conversation, community, and meaningful action.
Outside of work, Imô can be found perfecting a snatch lift in her barbell class, exploring new neighborhoods in search of excellent coffee, or writing in her journal. Based in Hong Kong by way of London, she also juggles life as a working mother of three spirited young boys.
Inspired by the book In the Company of Women by Grace Bonney, this campaign highlights stories like Imô’s that embody the empathy, confidence, and authenticity of female leadership at Capco.
Her Path, Her Words
1. What three words would your colleagues use to describe you?
Connector, calm, and creative. At Capco, I bring people together across teams, cultures, and ideas. I lead with steadiness, even when the group chat is on fire, and I lean on creativity – especially through words – to build clarity, meaning, and community. Those qualities shape how I show up every day.
2. Which of your traits are you most proud of?
Empathy, resilience, and authentic communication. These qualities help me create spaces where people feel safe to show up as they are. At Capco, that means fostering collaboration across cultures and championing voices that might otherwise go unheard. For me, communication is more than connection – it is empowerment, and I’m proud that my work reflects that.
3. How do you celebrate your achievements?
As a communicator working across cultures, continents, and time zones, I’ve learnt that success isn’t always loud or visible. Often, it lives in the unseen: the story that sparks purpose, or the campaign that quietly unites people globally.
I celebrate both milestones and the small, in-between moments through journaling, which allows me to pause, reflect, and honor the messy middle.
At Capco, celebration also means empowerment: amplifying women’s voices, creating space for stories, and proving that achievement matters most when it inspires and uplifts others.
4. Has learning from a mistake ever led you to success?
I make mistakes every day, and each one helps me learn and grow. As a perfectionist in recovery, I remind myself that I am fallible and susceptible to missteps, it’s simply part of being human. Giving myself the same grace I extend to others has made me stronger as a mother, wife, friend, and communicator. Those lessons in humility and resilience often lead to the greatest growth.
5. If you were magically given three more hours per day, what would you do with them?
Make mischief! Fueled by coffee and optimism, I like to believe I can do it all. Spoiler alert: I can’t, and that’s okay. Inspired by Oliver Burkeman’s reflections on the epidemic of modernity, I’ve learned we can’t master limitless demands. True peace comes from accepting we’ll never finish everything in a world of infinite possibilities – and finding joy in what we do choose.
6. What’s your favorite thing to come home to after a long day at work?
Always the same: my three small humans yelling “Mummy!” and crashing into me as I open the front door, followed by the beautiful, messy rhythm of family life. It’s loud, seldom quiet and I wouldn’t have it any other way. That balance between the energy of home and the purpose-driven work I do at Capco keeps me grounded and reminds me why I do what I do.
7. Name a woman (or man), past or present, whom you admire or look up to.
I am the woman my younger self aspired to be, and that makes me proud. Along the way, I’ve learned to value my resilience, empathy, and sensitivity – not as soft traits, but as real strengths. They allow me to navigate challenges with grace, listen with intention, and help others feel seen, heard, and empowered. That, to me, is the truest measure of admiration: honoring the self you’ve become while continuing to grow into more.