Early in my career, I was handed command of a recruiting company ranked 49th out of 50 in the world. Not 49th that year — 49th for as long as anyone could remember. The organization had been at the bottom for so long that failure had become the culture.
That assignment did not just teach me how to lead a turnaround. It taught me what it feels like to carry responsibility under scrutiny, sustain judgment when pressure compounds, and lead when there is no one around you who can hear the real questions you are carrying.
Executive Coach | Leadership in Transition Specialist | Retired U.S. Army Officer
Global turnaround in under 12 months
Top-performing company in the region
Resilience, judgment, and leadership under scrutiny
I walked into an organization that had been written off from above and had stopped believing in itself from within. There was no political cover. No quiet support from the leadership chain. I was accountable for an outcome that the system had already decided was impossible.
What I learned in those first months has shaped how I coach. You cannot walk into a broken organization as a hero. You cannot impose your vision on people who have spent years being beaten down. You have to read the room before you act. You have to identify the right people, put them in the right positions, and engineer early wins — not to check a box, but to give people a reason to believe that a different outcome is actually possible.
Within a year, that unit had moved from 49th to 6th globally. We became the most improved organization in the world and the top-performing company in the region.
And then the goalpost moved.
Every gain we made raised the floor. The better we performed, the higher the expectations climbed and the more intense the scrutiny became. There was no moment to exhale, no finish line where the pressure finally released.
The leaders I work with already know this. They are looking for the right thinking partner — not someone to fix them.
Anyone can lead through a crisis for 90 days. The real test is sustaining your judgment, your team’s confidence, and your own resilience as the pressure compounds and the expectations never stop rising.
That experience didn’t just teach me how to lead a turnaround. It taught me what it feels like to be at the top of an organization with no one around you who can hear the real questions you’re carrying.
Over 24 years and six countries, I moved my family through the same upheaval I was navigating professionally. New schools, new communities, new social networks rebuilt from nothing — while I was building mine. None of that stayed inside the office. It shaped how I showed up in every role I held.
I know what it costs to lead through sustained disruption — professionally and personally, simultaneously. I know what it looks like when a leader is carrying responsibility at the highest levels with nowhere obvious to think out loud.
Over a 24-year military career, I changed assignments every two to three years — across nine distinct career fields and six countries. These four recurring pressures became the foundation of my coaching practice.
A new country, a new culture, and an entire social and professional network rebuilt from nothing.
Leadership has red words too — the non-intuitive elements that no amount of technical competence automatically produces. The judgment to act without full information. The discipline to lead without imposing. The integrity to hold your standard when the organization is watching and your own leadership chain has already lowered theirs.
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