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The Business Of Modelling
Kiki Minwegen, Model & Life Coach
Kiki Minwegen is an international model represented by Seeds Management in Berlin, whose career spans working in Paris, Milan, Cape Town and Germany. Alongside modelling, she is trained in nutrition and has gone on to become a life coach and mindfulness teacher, building a more holistic, purpose-led way of working alongside her creative career.
In this episode, Kiki reflects on entering the fashion industry at a young age, the pressures of perfection and constant comparison, and why modelling was never meant to be her final destination. She talks openly about identity, body image and mental health. Her transition into nutrition and coaching, and the importance of community, routine and self-connection. Kiki also shares how she defines success beyond image, money or status, and why finding purpose alongside modelling, rather than making it your whole identity, has been key to her wellbeing.
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45. Dan Corsi, Classic Model
45:26||Ep. 45Dan Corsi has spent much of his life working in front of the camera, starting as a child model before becoming highly visible through teenage magazines and later finding sudden fame as a member of 90s boyband, Northern Line. His career has spanned commercial modelling, music and DJing, shaped by both early opportunity and the reality of having that success end abruptly.In this episode, Dan talks openly about growing up in the modelling industry, the scale and intensity of pre-social media fame, and what it felt like to lose structure, income and identity when the band came to an end. He reflects on returning to modelling, reshaping his place in the industry, and learning how to build a sustainable commercial career through adaptability, professionalism and reputation rather than image alone.Dan also shares practical insight into longevity, the importance of treating people well on set, and why having additional skills and backup careers matters in an industry that can change overnight. His perspective offers a grounded, experience-led look at what it really talks to stay working long term, and how resilience, consistency and respect often matter more than early success.www.businessofmodelling.co.uk
44. Natalie-Amber, Modelling with Crohn’s Disease
45:52||Ep. 44Natalie-Amber has built a commercial modelling career whilst living with Crohn’s disease and an invisible disability. Having entered the industry at a young age, her experience spans across fashion, lifestyle and brand campaigns, alongside navigating years of misdiagnosis, emergency surgery and returning to work with visible scarring. Her perspective is shaped by firsthand experience of how health, access and understanding impact a model’s ability to work safely and confidently on set. In this episode, Natalie talks about growing up in the modelling industry, the realities of managing chronic illness alongside work, and the physical and emotional challenges of coming back to set after major surgery. She explains why honest conversations, preparation and clear communication are essential when health needs are involved, and how support on set often goes beyond what is visible on the surface. She also discusses the difference between token representation and genuine inclusion, how brands and production teams can do better in practice, and why consistency matters more than one-off gestures. Natalie reflects on advocacy, responsibility and the importance of treating health, disability and real bodies with understanding and respect, rather than as a moment or a message. www.businessofmodelling.co.uk www.natalieamber.co.uk
43. Susannah Boughtflower, Founder of Kids on Set
46:00||Ep. 43Susannah Boughtflower is the founder of Kids on Set and has spent many years supporting babies and children across commercial, photographic and film productions. Her work as a child wrangler is understanding that a child's experience on set must be carefully managed, with preparation, structure and calm playing a central role in how a shoot unfolds.In this episode, Susannah talks about what her role involves before, during and after a shoot, and how working practices around children have evolved. She explains why preparation and clear communication are essential, how calm environments help children feel secure, and why children need to be approached differently then adults when they are on set.She also discusses working closely with parents, agencies, photographers and production teams, and the importance of everyone understanding their responsibility when children are involved. She reflects on safeguarding, boundaries and professional standards, and why balancing the needs of the production with the well-being of the child is critical.www.businessofmodelling.co.ukwww.kidsonset.co.uk
42. Ian Boddy, Children’s Commercial & Editorial Photographer
58:20||Ep. 42Ian Boddy is a children’s commercial and editorial photographer with extensive experience working across fashion, advertising and editorial projects. His career has been shaped by a clear understanding that photographing children carries a responsibility that goes far beyond getting the shot. In this episode, Ian reflects on how his approach to working with children has evolved over time and why trust, calm and communication are key to every successful shoot. He talks openly about the importance of creating the right environment on set, respecting a child’s pace, and recognising that young children cannot and should not be treated as small adults. Ian discusses the role photographers play alongside agencies, parents and production teams, how industry expectations have shifted, and why preparation and experience matter when working in fast-moving commercial settings. He also shares his view on responsible practice behind the camera, balancing client expectations with a child’s wellbeing, and why the experience a child leaves with is just as important as the final image. www.businessofmodelling.co.uk www.ianboddy.co.uk
41. Sue Walker, Founder & Director, Kids London
37:04||Ep. 41Sue Walker is the founder and director of Kids London, one of the UK's most established children's model agencies. With decades of experience working closely with young talent, families and casting teams, Sue has built her career around trust, responsibility and long-term thinking within the children's modelling industry.In this episode, Sure reflects on how children's modelling has evolved over time and the increasing awareness around safeguarding and wellbeing. She talks openly about the responsibility agencies carry when representing young people, the importance of clear boundaries, and why children cannot and should not be treated like small adults. Sue discusses the role of parents, agents and clients in protecting children, the realities of working within a commercial industry, and why saying no can be just as important as saying yes. She also shares her perspective on responsible representation, longevity and why doing things properly, with the child's wellbeing at the centre, matters more than ever.www.businessofmodelling.co.ukwww.kidslondonltd.com
39. Francois Pouria Latscha, Brand Specialist
29:37||Ep. 39Francois Pouria Latscha is the founder of Dubai Beach Boy, with a background in luxury hospitality and global brand marketing. Having worked on international campaigns and large-scale brand projects for hotel groups before launching his own fashion brand in Dubai, he brings a commercial, real-world understanding of branding, positioning and customer behaviour. In this episode, Francois talks through his journey from luxury hospitality into fashion, how his experience in marketing and brand strategy shaped the way he built Dubai Beach Boy, and why understanding your customer matters more than chasing trends. He shares practical insight into storytelling, personal branding and authenticity, explains why starting small and growing sustainably is key, and offers a clear perspective on what makes a brand, product or visual identity genuinely connect in a crowded market. www.businessofmodelling.co.uk www.dubaibeachboy.com
38. Sally Andrews, Casting Director
41:04||Ep. 38Sally Andrews casts actors and models across commercial, fashion and digital campaigns. Her career spans in-person castings and the shift to self-tapes, giving her a clear view of how casting decisions are made, how talent is assessed, and how the process has changed over the past decade. In this episode, Sally breaks down how casting works today, what casting directors are looking for when reviewing self-tapes and Spotlight profiles, and why many strong performers fall short for reasons that have nothing to do with talent. She shares practical insight into authenticity, preparation and presentation, explains common mistakes that stop talent progressing, and offers a grounded perspective on what genuinely makes someone castable in an increasingly competitive landscape. www.businessofmodelling.co.uk
37. Sarah Gabillia, Influencer & Content Strategy Director
36:56||Ep. 37Recorded with a live audience in the SR offices, Sarah Gabillia is a creator and influencer strategist with experience working both agency and client-side, including leading influencer strategy for global beauty brands. Her career spans large-scale creator campaigns, brand partnerships, performance strategy and navigating the realities of a fast-moving, highly saturated space. In this episode, she breaks down how the creator economy works today, why brands often misunderstand creative freedom, and what creators need to know about value, usage and long-term partnerships. Sarah also shares what defines successful creators heading into 2026, why metrics alone don’t tell the full story, and how consistency and authenticity underpin sustainable careers. www.businessofmodelling.co.uk