What this looks like
at scale.

The thinking partnership that defines coaching is not new. These are examples of what it produced in earlier contexts, when the stakes were high and the people involved had every reason not to change.

HSBC · UK · 1998

Unlocking what people can do when they think differently

A consultancy brought in to modernise a bureaucratic culture made an unusual recommendation: give people a seemingly impossible challenge and get out of the way. The challenge, raise £100,000 in 100 days, deliver it internationally in 72 hours, get on TV, budget £45, was designed to break the ceiling on what people thought was possible. I was project manager.

The project was built around war refugees in Azerbaijan, with an open invitation to participate however people chose. What followed illustrated something important. Given the space and a compelling purpose, people found ways to contribute that nobody would have predicted or prescribed. Some did a sponsored swim, a cake sale or a walk with their kids; others climbed mountains, drove off-road through the Caucasus, or leveraged networks to secure corporate equipment and air transport. The project expanded to include a local school.

What this connects to What stayed with me was watching people discover what they were capable of given the freedom to be themselves. In coaching, that is the work: creating the conditions for someone to see past the ceiling they have accepted, and move.
£140k raised · technology and language centre built in Azerbaijan · on TV and radio

HSBC · US & Canada · 2003

Leading without authority, at scale

HSBC undertook a global technology programme to build what became the foundation of their global internet banking services. Around 1,000 people spread across Canada, the US, UK, India and Hong Kong, working on hundreds of interdependent projects. I had project authority over all of it, line authority over none of it.

The programme was delivered through exceptional teamwork, grounded in a genuine understanding of what each stakeholder valued and needed. New structures were introduced built on shared lessons, transparent targets and Goldratt's theory of constraints. A simple operating principle held it together: "the impossible we can do; miracles take a little longer". Output increased fourfold. The programme was delivered on time and added lasting value to the organisation.

What this connects to That experience taught me about what people can achieve when they have a clear vision and are trusted to deliver against it. Coaching works on exactly the same principle, the coachee holds the authority; the partnership provides the structure.
productivity increase · delivered on time · ~1,000 people · five countries

HSBC · US · 2014

Rebuilding a workforce that had stopped believing

A 300+ FTE operations site that was struggling: performance was poor and morale worse. I was site director, charged with turning around the engagement. I did not arrive with a turnaround plan. Instead, I made myself highly visible, listened, was present and spoke frequently to inspire with vision and purpose, helping people to make connections between what they valued and what they needed to do.

Over time, the energy in the room shifted. Not because of a new strategy or a reorganisation, but because people felt seen and heard. When the engagement ended, the site was fundamentally different from the one walked into, not through prescription, but through attention.

What this connects to From this I learned the power of positive engagement and what happens when people feel seen and heard. In coaching, this is not a warm-up, it is the work. When someone feels genuinely listened to, something shifts. That shift is where change starts.
300+ people re-engaged · performance recovered · built through trust, not prescription

ING · Netherlands · 2020

Building trust to give up control

Centralising operations into a new hub in Warsaw met significant internal resistance, largely driven by fear of losing control. The standard response to this kind of resistance, push harder, communicate more, was not enough. My role was Operations Director, driving global transformation.

What worked was active listening: understanding what was really driving the concern, then delivering against specific promises that addressed those concerns directly. Connecting the change to what stakeholders needed, rather than what the programme required of them, was what made the difference between compliance and genuine movement.

What this connects to Here I learned why building understanding and trust is vital for people to move toward something new rather than away from it. In coaching, this is the same insight: people move toward what they choose, not what they are told. The coach's job is to help them find what that is.
resistance resolved · programme delivered · trust built before momentum followed

The same thinking partnership,
for you.

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