Industrial services · South Asia
Leadership transition through a regional services restructuring
A global industrial services business, South Asia regional leadership
A global industrial services organization facing structural change in its South Asia operating model needed its regional leadership team to land the new structure with cohesion rather than friction. The existing leadership cohort had inherited the structure rather than designed it; the transition risk was that performance would dip in the first two quarters of the new year while leaders re-established roles.
Read full case study →Professional services · ASEAN
Building a coaching cadence inside a senior leadership population
A multinational services group, ASEAN leadership cohort
Senior services leaders across the ASEAN region were attending leadership programmes at scale, with limited durable improvement. The HR leadership team's hypothesis was that the gap was downstream of training: senior leaders had no one coaching them through the application phase. The brief was to build internal coaching capability inside the senior cohort itself, so that the development of the next leadership tier compounded through the line rather than through external vendors.
Read full case study →Healthcare · Multi-region
Executive presence development for a global leadership cohort
Global Medical Reimbursement leadership team, multinational healthcare
A global function within a multinational healthcare organization had grown its senior leadership team rapidly through internal promotion and acquisition. Technical credibility within the team was strong; senior-stakeholder credibility, the ability to brief the corporate executive committee, hold the room with regulators, take a hostile question without losing weight, was inconsistent and limiting career progression for several otherwise high-performing leaders.
Read full case study →Medical devices · Africa
Decision-making under volatility for a regional product-marketing leadership team
African regional product marketing leadership, multinational medical-device organization
A regional product-marketing leadership team operating across multiple African markets faced compounding volatility, currency, regulation, channel structure, at a pace that exceeded the organization's central decision rhythm. Senior leaders were defaulting to wait-and-see decision postures because the cost of being wrong felt asymmetric to the cost of waiting. Regional performance was suffering for it.
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