Fennex, a leading provider of smart, scalable digital solutions for high-risk energy operations, has appointed Fiona Chambers as sales lead to support its growing ambitions across the UK.
Fiona brings a strong commercial background to the role, with over a decade of experience in pharmaceutical sales and, most recently, in delivering tendering software solutions to the public sector. Her proven track record in consultative selling and stakeholder engagement makes her well-positioned to drive Fennex’s continued growth in the UK market.
Fiona joins Fennex at a pivotal time. In May, the company was awarded the prestigious King’s Award for Enterprise in International Trade, recognising exceptional growth and global impact. Now, Fennex is turning its attention to expanding its footprint across the UK—particularly within the local Aberdeen energy market.
Fiona will lead efforts to introduce more UK-based companies to Fennex’s award-winning digital tools, including its flagship BBSS™ (Behaviour-Based Safety Solution). BBSS™ transforms safety reporting from a paper-based system into a fully digital platform, empowering teams to capture safety observations in real time, identify risk trends through live dashboards, and ultimately reduce incidents across offshore operations. The solution is currently used by over 50,000 people across 22 countries and has helped reduce recordable incidents by up to 43%.
Nassima Brown, strategy director at Fennex, said: “Fiona’s appointment marks an exciting step forward in our UK growth journey. Her commercial experience will help bring our proven safety technology to more organisations here at home. We’re thrilled to have her join the team as we continue to support safer and more sustainable operations across the energy sector.”
Commenting on her new role, Fiona said: “I’m excited to be part of a company that’s truly driving change in the industry. The BBSS™ platform is already delivering measurable safety and sustainability benefits internationally, and I’m looking forward to helping more UK-based operators experience that same impact.”