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Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Talk to Your Inner Critic

 





 

 

Leader's Digest: Tip of Day

For years, you’ve likely heard that silencing your inner critic is the key to confidence. But suppressing that voice rarely works—and often makes you feel worse when it inevitably resurfaces. The better approach is to train it to work with you, not against you.

Trace its origin story. Your inner critic has roots in early experiences and social conditioning. Reflect on when this voice first appeared and whose expectations it echoes. Giving it a name (think “The Enforcer” or “The Coach”) creates psychological distance and makes it easier to engage with it productively. 

Separate the method from the message. Despite its harsh language, your critic is often trying to protect you. Pause when it speaks and ask: What are you trying to prevent? Thank it for its concern, then consciously reframe the fear into a healthier, more compassionate statement. 

Create distance and start a dialogue. Imagine your critic as a character and have a written conversation with it. Ask what it’s afraid of and what it’s trying to achieve. This dialogue can turn an adversarial voice into a cooperative one. 

Lead with self-compassion. When you hear harsh self-talk, respond as you would to a friend. Name what you’re feeling and remind yourself that one mistake doesn’t define you.

Give the critic a new script. Replace harsh judgments with constructive language. Over time, your trained inner critic can become a wise advisor, helping you grow with courage instead of fear.

 To your greater ability to work with your inner critic.


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement ? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, energy storage, facility services & maintenance, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

 

Sunday, June 8, 2025

7 Strategies for Shifting from a Blaming to an 'Owning' Culture

  


 

 

 

 

How to promote curiosity, experimentation, and learning – without the blame

Blaming is a natural human reflex. When things go wrong, we feel the impulse to defend ourselves from repercussions. However, playing the blame game – the urge to find a scapegoat – overshadows the need to address systemic issues.

Blaming has become pervasive in the corporate world. Finger-pointing is an easy way to deflect responsibility, even for minor mistakes. Companies need to replace blame with inquiry to promote learning, accountability, and innovation. They need to build a blame-less culture.

Companies can’t get rid of a blame culture without understanding the root cause. Blaming is a knee-jerk defense mechanism. Instead of admitting our faults, blaming someone else for our mistakes is always easier.
 

We're hardwired to use blame to release negative feelings, especially guilt. Author Brené Brown describes this human tendency to blame others as "a way to discharge pain and discomfort." It’s a quick escape route to resolve tensions and protect our self-esteem.

Our propensity to blame can be influenced by personality traits and context. 

The Fundamental Attribution Error suggests that we often blame others due to their intrinsic characteristics while attributing our own actions to external circumstances.

Blamers tend to have difficulties with emotion regulation. Studies have found that employees who are satisfied with their jobs are more likely to be good "corporate citizens," while receiving blame for something they didn't do can lead to withdrawal from work.

A culture of blame can lead to reduced collaboration, impaired emotional well-being, and increased turnover rates. Instead of learning from mistakes, blame encourages employees to hide their errors.

Scapegoating often gains momentum when leaders evade personal accountability. By using blame to hide their inadequacies or errors, a culture of blame quickly spreads toxic behaviors across the organization.


 

 

 

 


 

What Is a Blame-Less Culture?

Blame-less doesn’t mean the absence of blame but replacing blame with inquiry. It’s about stopping finger-pointing to avoid systemic accountability.

In a blame-less or "just" culture, the spotlight shifts from individual fallibility to systemic improvement. Blame might never go away completely, but it shouldn’t be the default reaction.

The underlying belief of a blame-less culture is that mistakes are typically the result of faulty company cultures rather than the fault of one or more individuals. Addressing systemic issues requires tackling the root of the problem rather than finding a culprit.

A blameless culture doesn't mean a lack of accountability. On the contrary, when teams own their mistakes, they learn from them, increasing ownership and responsibility.

Receiving criticism after a poor performance may not be pleasant, but it's better than receiving no feedback at all. If someone makes a significant mistake and no one says anything, they may think something’s wrong – or even feel paranoid.

How can your team or organization transition from a blaming to an ownership culture?

Seven Strategies for Building an Owning Culture

 1. Focus on the System, Not the Individual

Organizations often react to a mistake with a judgmental mindset, looking to find a culprit. However, individual errors are often just the tip of the iceberg. Shift from 'Who messed up?' to 'What in our system allowed this mistake to happen?’

Toyota's 5 Why's practice encourages digging deep to uncover the systemic issues that give rise to mistakes. Repeating “why” five times means the nature of the problem, as well as its solution, becomes clear.

The technique was initially developed by Sakichi Toyoda, who stated, "By repeating why five times, the nature of the problem as well as its solution becomes clear.

"This idea underscores that a punitive environment sees errors as symptoms, while blameless cultures consider systemic issues as opportunities for improvement.

Check out a related post:  The "5 Whys"-- Getting to the Root of a Problem Quickly

2. Make it Safe to Raise Issues

Creating an environment where employees are comfortable speaking out about issues is pivotal for robust problem-solving and innovation. Feeling secure about bringing up concerns, errors, or uncertainties will help prevent larger problems.

Volkswagen’s Diselgate resulted from an authoritarian management style that fostered a climate of fear. Many executives believe that the culture of silence resulted from pressure to solve problems quickly rather than doing a thorough analysis.

In the aftermath of the scandal, Bernd Osterloh, a VW supervisory board member, reflected: "We need a culture in which it’s possible and permissible to argue with your superior about the best way to go."

Reward people for raising issues and sharing what they learn after a mistake.

Check out a related post: The Best Leaders Make it Safe to Tell the Truth

3. Build a Culture of Compassionate Caring 

Compassionate caring refers to a sense of warmth, connection, and affection between employees. It can lead to significant increases in team collaboration and job satisfaction. This is not about office friendships but rather a more profound, emotional tethering that includes caring for others' well-being.

This could include starting the day greeting co-workers, asking about their family, or getting coffee before work begins.

Compassionate care is shown when colleagues who are together day in and day out, ask and care about each other’s work and even non-work issues,” Professor Sigal Barsade says. “They are careful of each other’s feelings. They show compassion when things don’t go well.”

Southwest Airlines places a great deal of emphasis on building a culture of 'LUV' among its employees: How staff interact with each other and customers leads to exceptional customer service.

Check out a related post: Empathy: An Essential Leadership Skill

4. Conduct Blameless Postmortems

While postmortems have become more common in many companies, the concept of a "blame-less" postmortem is relatively revolutionary.

Companies like Etsy, Atlassian, and Google have implemented this method to discuss and learn from failure – without the blame.

In a blame-less postmortem, the emphasis is on identifying what went wrong systemically, not who messed up. Etsy’s CEO, Chad Dickerson, wanted to shift the conversation from “Who’s the CEO going to fire?” to learning from mistakes. This practice has helped Etsy employees take more risks and move faster.

As Dickerson told Business Insider, “One of the things I allowed people to do is make mistakes more freely. The best way to learn to ride a bike is to ride the bike and fall down.”

Check out a related post: Calling a Timeout and Getting Aligned is an Essential Skill for High-Performing Teams 

5. Promote Autonomy and Ownership

Accountability is important, but ownership creates a more profound impact. A culture of ownership replaces blame with questions.

Managers often expect people to become more accountable without giving them the power to make decisions. With freedom comes accountability. By distributing decision-making rights to those closest to the work, teams often benefit from increased speed and better outcomes.

Amazon has adopted the principle of Toyota’s Andon Cord, giving support agents full authority to "pull the cord" when they suspect a problem with the inventory. This has helped prevent issues from escalating – without involving managers.

Check out a related post:  Developing Accountable People By Building a Culture of Ownership

6. Criticize in Private and Praise in Public

 Handling blame privately preserves an individual's dignity and keeps morale high.

Kim Scott, author of the book Radical Candor, explains: “A good rule of thumb for feedback is praise in public, criticize in private. Public criticism tends to trigger a defensive reaction and make it much harder for a person to accept they've made a mistake and to learn from it.”

This rings true for how criticism is best managed: privately. Direct, private conversations preserve individual dignity and avoid poisoning team morale.

Managers are human and sometimes lose control of their emotions, especially when things go wrong. However, smart leaders know how to manage their anger. Instead, they ask powerful questions to turn issues into something constructive rather than blaming.

Check out a related post: 9 Tips for Building a Feedback Culture 

7. Reward Collective Accomplishments

Companies often encourage individualistic, bad behaviors – usually to achieve short-term results. For example, only a few A performers get all the praise, even though the whole team contributed to the results, creating a cutthroat environment.

Companies get what they reward: Blame is often a defense mechanism for people to protect themselves from inequity. To shift your culture from blame to blameless, the team should be equally accountable for victories and failures.

Research shows that group-based reward systems outperform individual or mixed incentives, producing more collaborative behavior. Rewarding team accomplishments reinforces the idea that collective success is more important than individual glory. This encourages shared accountability and lessens the impulse to blame other teammates when things go wrong.

By following these strategies, companies can shift from a blame culture to one of learning and ownership. Although this transformation is not immediate, resisting the urge to blame others is always a wise first step.

To your greater success and fulfillment,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT
 

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, facilities services, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Why Strong People-Leadership Is Vital Now More Than Ever

   


 

 

 

 

Recent surveys and forecasts have underscored a concerning trend in the business world: a significant leadership deficit. A Zippia survey revealed that a staggering 77% of businesses report a lack of leadership, with only 33% of employees feeling engaged.

Alarmingly, less than half of these companies (49%) are investing in cross-skilling and upskilling their leaders. Furthermore, a mere 31% are engaging in leadership development programs to identify potential leaders within their ranks.

The 2023 Global Leadership Forecast further accentuates this issue, with only 11% of organizations confident in their leadership bench strength. The root of this crisis lies in many organizations’ failure to provide leadership development and transition training for their employees.

This trend is particularly unfortunate as organizations grapple with significant workforce changes, high turnover rates, marketplace disruptions and declining engagement levels. With numerous changes impacting organizations simultaneously, the demand for effective leadership is at an all-time high.

Indeed, effective leadership is the pivotal element that determines whether an organization will flourish in the face of adversity or fade into the shadows of irrelevance.

Consider the case of Microsoft under the leadership of Satya Nadella. When Nadella took the helm in 2014, Microsoft was struggling to maintain its relevance. However, Nadella saw potential and initiated a cultural shift within the company.

He introduced a new mission statement and promoted a growth mindset, encouraging employees to learn and take risks. This led to a wave of innovation at Microsoft, resulting in the development of successful products and a significant increase in the company’s stock price.

Under Nadella’s leadership, Microsoft regained its position as a leading tech company. This story underscores the transformative power of effective leadership and makes a great case for leadership development.

Here are four reasons why leadership development is crucial now and should be treated as a top priority if we are to achieve future success:

1. The Key to Future Success

Leadership development is not just about creating leaders; it’s about shaping the future of organizations. It equips leaders with the skills necessary to motivate teams, unlock potential, and navigate change.

In an era marked by technological advancements and shifting market dynamics, the ability to adapt and innovate has become crucial. Leaders who have undergone comprehensive development programs are better equipped to steer their organizations toward success in this volatile environment.

2. Motivating Teams and Unlocking Potential

A well-developed leader can inspire their team to achieve their best work. They foster a culture of collaboration and innovation, where every team member feels valued and motivated. Moreover, they can identify and nurture the potential in their team members, guiding them towards personal and professional growth.

This not only enhances the performance of the individual but also contributes to the overall success of the organization.

Check out a related post: How good are your motivation skills? (5 min)

3. Navigating Change

Change is a constant in the business world. Market trends shift, new technologies emerge, and consumer preferences evolve. Leaders play a pivotal role in guiding their organizations through these changes.

With the right development, leaders can become adept at anticipating market shifts and making strategic decisions that keep their organizations ahead of the curve.

Check out a related post: Six Tips for Leading During Uncertainty  (5 min)

4. Improving Recruitment, Engagement, and Retention

Leadership development also significantly impacts recruitment, engagement, and retention. It signals to prospective employees that the organization values growth and development, making it an attractive place to work.

For existing employees, the opportunity to develop their leadership skills can lead to higher engagement levels. It provides them with a clear pathway for career progression, which in turn, increases retention rates.

Check out a related post: 8 Great Ways Leaders Can Immediately Boost Employee Retention (5 min read)

In today’s dynamic business climate, leadership development is not just significant, it’s paramount. It forms the foundation for future success, hinging on leaders’ abilities to inspire teams, unlock hidden potential, and navigate the VUCA (Volatile. Uncertain. Complex. Ambiguous.) business landscape. This is why it is vital for companies to invest in robust leadership development that includes training, coaching, mastermind groups and other learning activities.

To your greater success and well-being,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement ? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees or a SMART Development consultant please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, energy storage and facilities management, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.
 

 

 

Sunday, May 25, 2025

Resolving Team Personality Conflicts by Fostering Pyschological Safety

  



 

Dear Coach Mclees~

In my experience, it is easier to work on teams with people who are alike.  When people are really different, it seems like there is much more friction on the team. I am now a manager of a team that has a lot of different types of people, and I don’t know how I can create a cohesive, well-running team with this group. It seems like it might be easier to change out some of the team members, but that doesn’t seem right or fair. How can I get everyone to work well together?

Signed,
Dilemma of Differences

Dear Dilemma~  

It can be hard to interact with and meaningfully connect with someone who is different from us. The more we differ, the further apart we are, the harder it is to build a bridge. Why? Because most of our relationship skills are grounded in finding commonalities. When those commonalities are subtle or scarce, we struggle to connect.

So, if difference is hard and commonality is easy, why choose hard over easy? There are several good reasons, but here are two:

Values: We choose diversity because we believe in human dignity and equality. You hint at this yourself when you mention that it doesn’t seem right to let someone go or transfer them simply because they are different. You are right. It isn’t right.

Results: We choose difference because there is good research that shows that when a team brings different perspectives, experiences, and approaches together with respect and care, we get better results than we would from a homogeneous team.

Of course, there is a major qualification on that last statement that is also at the heart of your question – how the diverse team comes together is crucial to tapping into the power of our differences. 

Amy Edmonson and a legion of other scholars have convincingly shown that the key ingredient for a team coming together well is psychological safety—not liking, not socializing, not commonality (although all those factors can help create psychological safety).

As Dr. Edmonson defines it, psychological safety is “the belief that work environment is safe for interpersonal risk-taking.” It is “the experience of being able to speak up with relative ideas, questions, or concerns. It is present when colleagues trust and respect each other and feel able—even obligated—to be candid.” Our work over the last 30 years has shown us that teams with high psychological safety get better ideas on the table, creating a smarter group and better solutions.

One of the interesting characteristics of psychological safety is that it is inherently a team dynamic. It doesn’t exist in any meaningful way at the individual or organizational level. It lives and breathes (and dies) at the team level.

So, if you want your team to work together well and you accept that psychological safety is the key, how do you build it? Here are three things to do to get started.

1.   Measure.  Dr. Don Berwick, CEO of IHI, says that “a measure is the shadow of your heart.” If we sincerely care about something and want to change it, we will measure it. So, start by assessing where your team is in terms of their level of psychological safety and then decide on what would be a reasonable level of improvement. Surveys are an effective way to assess how psychologically safe people.

Continue to measure through regular pulse surveys. This is not a one-and-done. You need to evaluate whether what you are doing is increasing psychological safety (in which case, keep doing it!) or not (in which case, you need to try something else).

    Questions you can use to measure psychological safety:

  • If you make a mistake on this team, it is often held against you.
  • Members of this team are able to bring up problems and tough issues.
  • People on this team sometimes reject others for being different.
  • It is safe to take a risk on this team.
  • It is difficult to ask other members of this team for help.
  • No one on this team would deliberately act in a way that undermines my efforts.
  • Working with members of this team, my unique skills and talents are valued and utilized.  
      Note: Use a Likert scale.

2.   Choose a Generous View. At the very heart of psychological safety is the belief that I won’t be judged negatively for being me. Unsurprisingly, it is the negative judgments we make about one another that, more than almost anything else, destroy psychological safety.

To create psychological safety, we need to consciously and consistently choose a more generous view of others. This isn’t an exercise in imagination or a rationalization of bad behavior. I am not advising we simply pretend that everyone and everything is great. Rather, I am suggesting that if we can suspend judgement and replace it with curiosity, we will be better able to hold space for the universal contradiction that good people do bad (or even just annoying) things.

3.  Maintain Good Intention. Dr. Edmonson asserts that psychological safety is neither created nor destroyed by the content of our conversations. It is entirely dependent upon the perception of intent in the conversation.

If you want to create safety in a conversation, a relationship, or a team, start by cultivating good intent and then sharing it. Sharing your good intention out loud can have a powerful positive impact on those around you. It lets them know what your motives and intentions are. It also helps you stay accountable to and connected with that good intent even when issues pop up that might otherwise irritate or frustrate you.

Your team may never become “besties.” But that shouldn’t be your goal. Solid friendships don’t always equal high performance; people may love being on a low performing team with high comradery. Building a high-performing team that learns together, achieves results, and respects one another is a much more worthy goal and one that is within reach of all teams.

 Click here to read a related post:  5 Super Team Building Strategies from NFL Football (5 min read)

To your greater ability to build real teamwork,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

 Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, third-party maintenance providers, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Sunday, May 18, 2025

3 Strategies Leaders Can Deploy When They're Overworked and Understaffed

 

When managers are overloaded as many are now, the usual leadership advice is to delegate more. But what if you’ve delegated everything you can and you still have too much work? If your team is drowning too, delegating more work simply means shifting the overload. This is not a sustainable option.

I’ve seen this situation many times working with leaders and teams. Fortunately, there are three key strategies you can use to reassess and reconfigure the work you do to free up your limited time and capacity.

1.   Redefine “good enough.” Not every task requires an A+ effort. Set clear expectations around what “fit-for-purpose” quality looks like—for yourself and your team. That means intentionally assessing what level of effort makes sense for a given piece of work. Do you discuss what is “good enough” for specific assignments with your team members? Or what corners should be cut? 

     If you and your team are too busy, it’s essential to take time to figure out how to work differently. 

     Ask yourself and discuss with your team:

Where could you do B-quality work, cut corners, or streamline processes to save yourself time and energy? For example, can you shorten weekly updates? Can you send bullet points instead of narratives? Do you really need a full project plan if the situation is simple?

What agreements could you make with your boss to simplify or reduce deliverables and processes? For example, could you tell your boss that it would be helpful if you could send simpler or fewer communications? Will a rough draft suffice instead of a perfect document to get the information across? Can a decision-making process be streamlined?  

Clarify where you can simplify or cut corners without sacrificing impact.

How can AI support you and your team in reducing time required for “good enough” work? Ask your team what apps they are starting to experiment with and encourage them to do more. For example, meeting summary apps have gotten really good. First draft writing apps are also helpful. 

When managers and teams step back to assess if there are tasks on which they can lower the bar strategically, the answer is almost always yes, and encouraging “good enough” work energizes the team.

2.   Eliminate low-value work. Hidden, habitual tasks often waste the most time. Ask your team: “What would we stop doing if we lost a workday each week?” Go beyond surface-level cuts. Reassess reports, approvals, and processes—many are more about tradition than value. And remember that if a change doesn’t work, you can always reverse it.

We all know it’s important to eliminate low-value tasks, however, in coaching leaders I've sees that many low-value tasks have become unconscious habits, hidden in plain sight. Even teams that have worked on streamlining stop too soon and miss opportunities. There are many more hours to be saved if you look deeper.

In my experience, it consistently takes two rounds of “looking” to get people to identify all of the tasks they could offload or reduce.

Here is a simple offloading process you can use with your team:

  • Ask your team, in advance of an offloading session, to think of all the tasks that could be eliminated. In the actual session they will often first come up with things that other people can stop doing. That’s fine. It gets them warmed up.
  • Then ask them to go deeper and think about what work they themselves could stop doing if they had one day less per week to work? This is when I've typically seen breakthroughs.
  • Of course, you need to make sure that eliminating work does not negatively impact customers, colleagues, or finance.

3.  Strategically reduce your availability. Always being accessible increases your team’s dependence on you. Step out of projects where your presence isn’t critical. Shift to check-ins or on-request advising, reduce meeting time, and explore asynchronous updates. Freeing up your time empowers others to step up and lead.

Many leaders think they should always be available. But too much availability creates more interactions and makes team members more dependent on you than necessary or ideal. With a bit more space, your team members will experience more room to act and this frees up time for you too.

Here are some questions to ask yourself:

  • What projects or initiatives are you too involved in now? What could you step out of completely?
  • How could you scale back your involvement and still provide colleagues with what they need?
  • Are more asynchronous updates possible?
  • Can you attend only the relevant parts of meetings? Or only key decision-making meetings?
  • Could you try 15-minute catch-ups with direct reports or colleagues instead of longer meetings?

Be creative in removing yourself where you can (and helping your team do the same), and tell colleagues why, so they understand your motivation.

When you are overloaded and delegating more to your team isn’t an option, there are still ways to free up capacity. Now is the time to reassess and be intentional about what you do and how you do it. Working in a fit-for-purpose way that matches appropriate effort with true need, removing habitual low-value work, and being strategically unavailable will enable you and your team to free up vital time and energy for what matters.

PS. Many managers don't delegate properly. Click here to learn what you can do to develop the capacity of your team with delegation.

To your greater success and well-being,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement ? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile:323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, energy storage, facility services & maintenance, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.