Client Stories
Leaders and organizations invite us into some of their most important chapters. These are a few of the ways identity‑level work has changed how they lead, live, and serve.
We partner with health systems and quality organizations whose work reaches far beyond their walls. These stories offer a glimpse into what Leadership Identity Architecture and our institutes have looked like in real systems.
Organizations
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Bitterroot Health
Helping leaders deliver consistent results.
A health system in a demanding environment needed leadership that could sustain performance, culture, and trust over time, not just during the latest initiative.
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Mountain Pacific Quality Health
Increasing the value of leadership at MPQH.
A regional quality organization wanted its leaders to have a more intentional, identity‑level approach to how they influence systems, partners, and communities.
What Leaders Say.
These leaders’ words describe the inner and outer shifts more directly than we ever could.
Bitterroot Health
Helping leaders deliver consistent results
Bitterroot Health is a community‑anchored health system serving a complex mix of clinical, financial, and human needs. Leaders were responsible not only for performance and growth, but for the lived experience of patients, staff, and the broader community.
Context & Stakes
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More complexity in operations and relationships
More pressure to deliver on quality, access, and financial stability
More visibility with boards, clinicians, and the community
Leaders knew they needed to deliver consistent results over time, not just push through the next initiative.
The Leadership Challenge
High expectations and limited bandwidth
Bitterroot’s leaders were capable and committed. At the same time, there were familiar tensions:
Competing priorities across departments and sites
The sense that how leaders showed up was just as important as what they delivered
They wanted:
A shared language and structure for leading in a consistent, grounded way
A more intentional way to think about who they were as leaders in this chapter
Growth that would support both performance and the culture they wanted to create
Why Bitterroot Engaged SoundMind
In SoundMind, they saw a partner who:
Understood the realities of health systems and rural/regional environments
Worked at the level of identity structure, not just skills and tools
Could provide a space that was both deeply humane and unflinchingly honest—sanctuary and stretch together
The shared aim was to help Bitterroot’s leaders deliver consistent results in a way that fit who they were and the community they served.
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Identity‑level coaching with key leaders
Using tools like Leadership Circle Profile or Hogan plus the 4 Elements of Identity Structure to map current patterns
Designing a Leadership Identity Blueprint for each leader’s current role
Leadership development experiences tailored to Bitterroot’s context
Sessions that connected identity, purpose, and daily leadership behaviors
Shared language around “structure determines performance” and “inner game drives the outer game”
Concrete experiments in real work
Applying new inner architecture in board conversations, team meetings, and cross‑functional work
Debriefing real moments to see what was changing and what still needed attention
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Leaders at Bitterroot described shifts such as:
Feeling like they had “elevated the lid” on their leadership abilities and potential—seeing more options in how to lead, not just how hard to work
Greater clarity about their purpose and passion in why they do what they do, and how that translated into daily decisions
More awareness of how their beliefs, stories, and emotional patterns shaped what others experienced in rooms that mattered
In their own words:
“I feel like I have truly elevated the lid of my leadership abilities and potential.”
— Becci Bargfrede
“My ability to articulate my purpose and passion in why I do what I do has never been clearer to me.”
— David Dobson
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While much of the work was inner and relational, the ripple effects showed up in organizational life:
Leaders experienced their growth as a privilege and partnership, not a remedial program—to them, this was an investment in the chapter ahead, not a judgment on the past
There was a stronger sense of shared identity among leaders—what it meant to lead at Bitterroot Health, not just at a generic health system
Leaders began to speak about results not only in terms of metrics, but in terms of how they were leading while achieving them
As one leader reflected:
“I found something special about SoundMind Leadership’s approach.”
— Bob Janicek
The Engagement
If You See Yourself in This Story
If you lead a health system, rural network, or quality organization, you may recognize pieces of Bitterroot’s story:
Bitterroot’s story is not about perfection. It’s about leaders who were willing to look honestly at their identity structure and do the quiet, sustained work of redesigning it for the roles they now hold.
A desire for consistent results and a healthy culture
Leaders who care deeply and are already carrying a lot
A sense that the next level isn’t just about new strategies, but about who your leaders are becoming
Next Steps
You’re already doing work that matters. You don’t have to keep doing it with an inner structure that was built for a smaller chapter.
For individual leaders:
Book a Leadership Discovery Call to talk confidentially about your role, what you’re carrying, and whether identity‑level work is right for you.
For sponsors:
Schedule a Conversation About Your Leaders to explore whether 12‑Month Leadership Identity Architecture or an Institute would be the right container for your system.