top of page
SCROLL
Case Studies


CASE STUDY - North American Asset Management Firm
A high-performing Managing Director was widely regarded as a top candidate for promotion. Their dedication, work ethic, and results were never in question—but their leadership style was creating unintentional bottlenecks. As deadlines slipped and approvals stalled, it became clear that the leader’s habit of being involved in every detail was holding both them and their team back.


CASE STUDY - Global Gold Mining Company
A high-performing General Manager leading one of the company’s key operations faced a pivotal moment during a presentation to senior executives. Despite impressive operational results, their delivery failed to inspire confidence. The message was detailed but flat, leaving senior leaders questioning whether the GM was ready to operate at the next level.


CASE STUDY - Global Manufacturing Company
During a period of major organizational transformation, the CEO of a Fortune 500 manufacturing company brought in Nexus Coaching to work with their technically brilliant CFO. While the CFO consistently delivered results, their quiet, analytical style had begun to create tension at the top. The CEO—who valued open advocacy and visible alignment—felt increasingly uncertain about the CFO’s support during high-stakes meetings.


CASE STUDY - Canadian Gold Mine — From Hands-On to High-Level
A newly appointed VP of Operations at a Canadian gold mine was struggling to find footing in their new role. Though technically excellent and deeply respected, early friction with the CEO surfaced after missed deadlines and operational slippage.
The issue wasn’t capability — it was calibration. The VP had been promoted for their operational mastery but found themselves pulled back into familiar territory: fixing, managing, and solving problems their directors should have owne


CASE STUDY - Redefining “Courage” to Unlock C-Suite Readiness
When a top performer was told to “be more courageous,” the Nexus Coaching Approach revealed what was truly blocking their* succession path.
bottom of page
