“If your intentions are good and you’re willing to move forward, you have the power to create a better future for yourself and those around you.”— Geoffrey Smith, (TGS 2002-06) Co-founder, Australian Spatial Analytics and 2025 QLD Australian of the Year
СƵ’s Senior School Speech Night was marked by a powerful address from Old Boy Geoffrey Smith (2002–06), recently named the 2025 Australian of the Year for Queensland.
Geoffrey, co-founder of Australian Spatial Analytics (ASA), has become a national leader in recognising the untapped potential of neurodivergent Australians in the workforce. His organisation provides geo-spatial and engineering services while creating meaningful employment opportunities - with 80 per cent of ASA’s employees being neurodivergent and 61 per cent previously experiencing long-term unemployment.
A Strong Grammar foundation
Reflecting on his time as a boarder at TGS, Geoffrey spoke of the lessons learned in resilience, listening deeply and assuming the best in others. He recalled the camaraderie of sport and the School’s enduring emphasis on service and leadership: “Grammar instills a strong sense of prioritising support for others, over chasing power or wealth for oneself.”
These values, he said, gave him the confidence to try new things and the freedom to choose his own path, a freedom that ultimately led him to build a social enterprise that is changing lives across Australia.
Turning obstacles into opportunities
Geoffrey shared his journey from corporate data analyst to social entrepreneur. After leaving a conventional career, he worked with a small non-profit supporting people with disabilities into employment. There, he witnessed the despair of autistic Australians being systematically overlooked despite their talents.
The statistics are stark: unemployment among autistic adults is ten times higher than the general population. Yet Geoffrey recognised their unique strengths — pattern recognition, attention to detail, and analytical thinking — as precisely the skills Australia’s growing digital economy needs.
This insight became the foundation of ASA. Today, the enterprise has provided careers for more than 275 Australians, delivered projects worth over $30 million, and reinvests every dollar earned into creating new jobs.
Ripples of impact
Geoffrey described the profound ripple effects of ASA’s work — not only for employees but for their families and communities. He recalled a psychologist who contacted him to say she shares ASA’s story with parents of autistic children to lift them out of despair and show them a hopeful future.
“I had no idea how far those ripples would permeate when we started,” Geoffrey reflected.
A message for students
Speaking directly to the boys of TGS, Geoffrey urged them to embrace unexpected paths and to act with courage even when the way forward is unclear:
“Your journey does not have to follow a straight line.”
“Be a doer, not a fretter - take a different path.”
“Purpose-driven innovation shows that social and economic impact don’t need to be in competition; they can be two sides of the same coin.”
He reminded students that strength of character lies in showing up, moving forward, and supporting others along the way.
Celebrating 150 years
As TGS marks its extraordinary 150th anniversary, Geoffrey’s words resonated deeply with the School’s mission of educating boys and developing their good character for life. His story of service, innovation and resilience stands as a testament to the enduring values of Grammar and the impact its Old Boys continue to make in the world.
Geoffrey Smith’s journey reminds us that courage and purpose can transform not only individual lives but entire communities - a message that will truly echo long beyond this milestone Speech Night.
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