Dr. Vicky Omifolaji, Founder & CEO, Ndipreneur
Change rarely happens by accident. It is driven by leaders who are willing to question entrenched norms and take responsibility for improving the systems around them. While many adapt to flawed structures or learn to work around limitations, a rare few feel compelled to address problems at their core. They don’t stand on the sidelines waiting for someone else to take the initiative. Instead, they step forward, challenge inefficiencies, and implement practical solutions that drive meaningful change, leaving a lasting imprint on the industry they serve. Within the complex and often challenging environment of the NDIS, one leader who embodies this spirit of proactive and purposeful leadership is Dr. Vicky Omifolaji, the Founder & CEO of Ndipreneur.
Early in her clinical career, Dr. Vicky began noticing a recurring pattern in the mental health and disability sector. Many of the people she worked with weren’t struggling because they lacked ability or drive. They were constrained by systems that were fragmented, inaccessible, or simply not designed to support their growth. As a clinician, she could help one individual or one family at a time. It was meaningful and deeply fulfilling, but it also felt limiting. She realised that sustainable change required more than therapeutic intervention. It required structural solutions, education, and empowerment at scale. Working across diverse communities further opened her eyes to disparities in access to quality care, culturally responsive services, and sustainable business models within the disability and mental health sectors. She realised that to truly influence long-term outcomes, she needed to go beyond the consulting room and create platforms capable of multiplying impact. That insight led her toward entrepreneurship, allowing her to build supportive ecosystems, develop leaders, and design sustainable models that empower professionals and participants alike.
Bridging the Gap Between Passion and Structure
While working within the NDIS landscape, Dr. Vicky observed that many passionate practitioners were stepping into the sector with a genuine intent to make a difference. Their clinical expertise was strong. Their commitment was unquestionable. Yet many found themselves overwhelmed by compliance requirements, governance standards, and the operational realities of running a sustainable service. They knew how to care but not always how to build. At the same time, participants were experiencing inconsistent service quality, often because providers lacked the business infrastructure. It became clear that the NDIS did not simply need more providers entering the space. It needed providers who were equipped, informed, and strategically prepared to operate within a complex regulatory environment while still maintaining participant-centred care. That realisation led to the creation of Ndipreneur, a platform delivering structured coaching, mentoring, networking, and specialised training designed specifically for NDIS providers. “The mission was clear: to professionalise the provider ecosystem while empowering founders to build businesses that are both commercially sound and participant-centred. By equipping providers with education, systems, and strategic clarity, we ultimately improve outcomes for the very people the NDIS was designed to serve,” explains Dr. Vicky
Author, Educator, Global Influencer
Dr. Vicky commenced her career as a licensed clinical psychotherapist and accredited mental health social worker. Armed with a PhD in Philosophy, a BA in Education, and a Master’s in Counselling and Social Work, she brought both intellectual depth and practical insight to her work. With more than two decades of experience as a psychotherapist and award-winning coach, she has influenced thousands of individuals and businesses across four continents over the past seven years. “I am incredibly passionate about helping people achieve their goals and reach their full potential. My mission is to inspire and lead a new generation of achievers by equipping them with the tools, resources, and methods they need to succeed,” she shares.
Beyond her clinical practice, Dr. Vicky serves as CEO of D Care Partners and Founder and CEO of The Global Achievers Group. She also leads Vicky Omifolaji Consulting and Counseling Services, a fast-growing practice dedicated to helping individuals overcome adversity and achieve meaningful personal and professional milestones. Alongside her work as a leader and mentor, she is the author and publisher of 22 books and serves as the celebrity coach for The Next Global Competition. Through every role she undertakes, whether as a clinician, entrepreneur, author, or performer, Dr. Vicky remains driven by the same mission: helping people recognise their potential and giving them the clarity, tools, and confidence to pursue it.
Thriving Against All the Odds
For Dr. Vicky, one of the most defining challenges has been scaling her ventures without compromising integrity. In sectors such as healthcare and disability services, growth is never just a business decision; it carries ethical weight. Expansion cannot come at the expense of compliance, participant well-being, or professional standards. This meant constantly balancing speed with sustainability, ambition with integrity. At the same time, there was a personal shift taking place behind the scenes. Transitioning from clinician to CEO required an entirely different mindset. “Clinical training equips you to solve problems for individuals; entrepreneurship requires building teams, systems, and long-term strategy. That transition demanded intentional leadership development, financial literacy, and the courage to delegate,” reflects Dr. Vicky.
She navigated these challenges through mentorship, continuous learning, and the guidance of a strong advisory network. Most importantly, she anchored every decision in clear values. Each strategic move was filtered through three core questions: Does this strengthen impact? Does this protect participants? Does this support long-term sustainability? Over time, growth became less about expansion for its own sake and more about disciplined scaling. Clarity replaced urgency. Structure replaced impulse. And through that deliberate approach, she has been able to build ventures that are not only expanding but resilient, ethically grounded, and future-focused.
Leadership Rooted in Structure and Empowerment
Strong leadership is rarely defined by authority alone; it is shaped by the systems and environments leaders create for others to succeed. For Dr. Vicky, leadership is both transformational and systems-driven, grounded in clarity, accountability, and empowerment. Whether working with clinicians, entrepreneurs, or partners, she focuses on building strategic thinking capacity rather than dependency. She encourages her teams to think strategically, to understand the bigger picture, and to take ownership of outcomes rather than waiting for direction. “In complex sectors like healthcare and disability, inspiration alone is insufficient — teams need clear processes, defined expectations, and measurable outcomes. I prioritise transparency, ethical decision-making, and psychological safety so that innovation can thrive within clear boundaries,” she asserts.
At the core of her leadership is a strong commitment to meaningful impact. She ensures that every team member understands not only what the organisation does, but why it matters. That shared purpose fosters commitment that goes far beyond compliance. “Ultimately, my role as a leader is to elevate others — to help them see possibilities beyond their current limitations while ensuring that execution remains disciplined and sustainable,” she adds.
Redefining Success
For many entrepreneurs, success is framed in scale, revenue, or recognition. Dr. Vicky measures it differently. For her, success is alignment between impact, integrity, and income. Over the years, she has come to believe that purpose without sustainability leads to burnout, while profit without purpose feels hollow. The real sweet spot lies where both can coexist. “For me, success means building ventures that create measurable social outcomes while maintaining financial strength, governance excellence, and operational resilience. It means developing leaders who go on to build ethical, sustainable businesses of their own. It also means influencing systems, not just transactions,” she shares.
Dr. Vicky does not see commercial sustainability as a trade-off against purpose. Rather, she views it as the very thing that protects it. When organisations are financially stable and well-governed, they are better positioned to innovate, expand access to services, and remain resilient in the face of regulatory or economic shifts. But personal growth and well-being are equally important for her. If the enterprise flourishes but the founder burns out, she does not consider that a win.
A Structured Approach to Work-Life Integration
Running multiple ventures while maintaining an active professional practice inevitably raises the question of balance. For Dr. Vicky, however, the word “balance” can be misleading. “I approach work–life integration as intentional design rather than passive balance,” she explains. “As a founder, seasons fluctuate, so trying to maintain a rigid balance across all areas of life is unrealistic.”
She focuses on managing energy, clarifying priorities, and strategically delegating responsibilities. She works within structured planning cycles — quarterly strategy reviews to reset direction, protected deep-work blocks to think without interruption, and clearly defined executive days that are separate from clinical or advisory commitments. This structure reduces cognitive overload and safeguards the quality of her decisions. Dr. Vicky also places strong emphasis on disciplined personal practices, ensuring that mental fitness, reflection, and continuous learning remain non-negotiable parts of her routine.
She sets clear boundaries around digital consumption and makes time to step back, reflect, and recharge. At the same time, she focuses on building strong leadership teams. Empowered teams multiply capacity, prevent bottlenecks, and reduce founder dependency, allowing her to focus on the bigger picture. For her, sustainability ultimately comes down to stewardship — of her wellbeing, her relationships, and the vision she is committed to carrying forward.