We were Social Care Recruiting. Now we are Williamson.
July 01, 2026 | 2 min read
Case managers and families over last four years have been asking us to right people for complex brain injury, and spinal injury care teams often where families were on the edge of giving up on finding support.
This has been through directly employed structure, where the families are the employers. That’s not the right option for everyone… so we have expanded to accommodate those we’ve been unable to support previously.
Williamson now does three things:
Direct recruitment. Campaign-based hiring for brain and spinal injury teams, with expert level reporting on how roles are designed and what they should pay. We then work until the right person is found, based on values and cultural alignment not driving status and experience alone.
Agency support. Taking the same principles from our direct recruitment expertise, we find and train the right fit people for families and funders who don’t want to take on the responsibility of being the employer.
Complex homecare (launching early 2027). For clients who need a full team, oversight and fall under CQC. Nurse-led, with case management and occupational therapy inside our own team. This launches once our CQC registration completes, registering us for Personal Care for children and adults, and for the Treatment of Disease, Disorder or Injury.
What we’re proudest of is the people doing it.
Angela Wicks, our Registered Manager, is a registered nurse of 30 years and former Group Director of Governance and Quality at Active Care Group, a board director at CMSUK and a member of the Spinal Injuries Association’s clinical advisory board.
Minnieke Vorster, our consultant occupational therapist and case manager, is a BABICM Advanced Registered Practitioner specialising in neuro-rehabilitation.
Alongside co-founder Marcus Williamson, and the care coordination and HR team, Tania Padayachee, Cindy Naidoo, Tracy Du Plessis and Ushmita Nakeshree, the backbone of the work we will do.
One more thing. Our new brand wasn’t designed in an agency. We asked the Sketcher Project, a community brought together by brain injury, to create it. Every colour and brushstroke came from their sessions, made by people living with brain injury. A daily reminder of why this work matters.
If you’re a case manager, deputy or family member and you’re not sure we can help, ask us anyway.