The Challenge
Following a period of significant organizational change and leadership transitions, The Semios Group was focused on strengthening leadership capability and creating greater consistency across its global operations.
Leaders were spread across Canada, California, and Australia, creating challenges in establishing a common leadership approach and fostering alignment across regions and functions.
The organization recognized the need to equip current and emerging leaders with practical skills to lead teams effectively, navigate change, and reinforce a high-performance culture aligned with the company’s growth strategy.
Solutions Implemented
Designed and developed a customized six-month Leadership Development Program to support approximately 60 leaders across three continents.
• Created a blended learning journey consisting of virtual learning, micro-learning modules, in-person retreats, and follow-up sessions focused on leading self, leading teams, and leading culture
• Incorporated personality and communication assessments to strengthen self-awareness and improve collaboration, influence, and leadership presence
• Delivered highly practical leadership experiences focused on communication, feedback, coaching, delegation, conflict resolution, talent development, and team effectiveness
• Reinforced culture-building behaviours and accountability practices to help leaders create engaged, high-performing teams and sustain long-term organizational success
The Results
• Established a common leadership language and shared expectations for leaders across global regions
• Strengthened leaders’ ability to communicate effectively, develop talent, and lead teams through growth and change
• Increased alignment and collaboration across functions while reinforcing Semios’ desired culture and values
• Created a leadership development framework to support current leaders and prepare future leaders for continued organizational growth
• Equipped leaders with practical tools and peer connections that support ongoing development and organizational performance