Unlocking strategic transformation through culture change

Learn how an enterprise software company partnered with BTS to implement a large scale strategic shift by engaging key stakeholders.
September 29, 2022
5
min read
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Client need

An enterprise software company made a large-scale strategic shift to focus on cloud-based offerings. The leadership team, though aligned on the goal, struggled to engage key stakeholders and implement the change efficiently. A lack of clarity and process blurred the overall vision and discouraged employees from authoring a way forward with the new business plan. With huge upfront costs for the company, making this shift successfully and swiftly was important to the leadership team to realize the value of their investment. Moreover, the time to profitability changed dramatically, demanding more from the sales team. Without alignment on process and customer retention, the change to cloud-based services wouldn’t prove profitable.

After several failed attempts to drive change at scale by outsourcing to other partners, the sales operations organization decided to lead the work internally and engaged BTS to provide an outside perspective as a “guide alongside” during their transformation. The goal was to provide the wider organization – their key internal stakeholders – with more timely and accurate data to better support engagement with customers while creating a scalable culture of continuous learning and innovation across the sales operations organization. The leadership team wanted this organization to feel true ownership and pride for the transformation and looked at this effort as a chance to rebuild the confidence that was lost during prior failed attempts.

Solution

Over the course of two years, BTS introduced approaches to boost morale and engagement within the sales operations team and invited them in to co-create the future of the organization. We challenged team members to shift the current way they were thinking toward one that required them to step into the shoes of the sellers they supported in order to solve problems in new ways. By reflecting on their stakeholders’ needs and overall user experience, and practicing simple, yet powerful, approaches to problem solving, sales operations team members implemented critical mindset shifts needed to make the change stick.

A few of these powerful approaches and shifts included:

  • Building deep user empathy to support the shift toward solving challenges with the “customer’s” end in mind. Team members spent more time proactively defining the problems to be solved for specific sellers and sales managers rather than just responding to requests from leadership. They considered who these sellers and sales managers are, the outcomes that matter to them, and why they are so important. These questions then became commonplace in team conversations as they sought to articulate and focus on identifying the right problems to solve in order to move change forward.
  • Challenging conventional wisdom to focus on possibilities for solutions rather than advocating for which solution is “right” or “wrong” before getting data and insights. BTS facilitation helped guide leaders to build agreement and communicate with team members around guidelines for ideation implementation and success. A critical focus question was “What would need to be true for this idea to work?” Leaders asked all sales operations team members to address this question when presenting possible solutions, debating the path forward, and working with cross-functional team members. This disciplined focus tapped into opportunities for many voices to be heard and set the expectation for all team members to think differently about what is possible.
  • Using creativity and diversity of thought to shift from building a perfect plan to recognizing that there are risks that can be avoided and others that just need to be managed when they occur. BTS prompted leaders to look toward the future and imagine what might cause a particular strategy, idea, or project to fail. This helped them to better prepare and mitigate emerging risks and obstacles. By prioritizing these risks based on the level of impact that they may have and assessing the probability of them happening, team leaders were better able to determine which threats to tackle first.

As a result of this engagement, and the team’s ongoing efforts leveraging their new ways of working, the sales operations team met their targets in the first quarter of the subsequent fiscal year, removed many unnecessary steps in the process, and maximized efficiency for their sellers.

Conclusion

This journey equipped leaders to build an organizational culture of learning, innovation, and efficiency. As a result, they were able to scale their business and grow both their top and bottom lines. This shift in process and culture helped the team realize the potential profit that cloud-based transition represented for the future of the wider organization. Adding structure forged a connection between vision and execution, making the strategy tangible and actionable. Refocusing on customer needs created efficiency that earned back valuable time for sellers in the organization. In the end, solving from the perspective of sellers in service of the company’s broader transformation toward a more cloud-based strategy laid a successful foundation that is leading the company to long-term growth.

Client feedback

“As a result of going through the experience, my team asks better questions and is much more engaged than in years past in looking at our key processes and identifying ways to innovate and improve to drive efficiencies. In fact, we recently reduced a key month-long process by seven business days which allowed the team to celebrate, take a day off, and, just as importantly, repurpose part of the saved time to deliver valuable insights to the business.”
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Client Stories
September 5, 2018
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Enterprise transformation at a technology organization
Learn how a non-profit technology organization specializing in insurance shifted to agile in partnership with Netmind, a BTS company.

Client need

A non-profit technology organization specializing in compliance and licensing for insurance professionals needed to make the shift to agile to achieve its growth plans. After attempting and failing to make the shift in the past, employees were left with a negative perception of agile, incomplete training, and a feeling of disconnectedness.

The organization partnered with Netmind, a BTS company, to implement a new multi-year strategic plan, geared towards its long-term vision for future growth and the evolution of IT.

The solution…

Leadership, change agents, and team members within the organization went through an Enterprise Transformation solution from which they gained the necessary understanding to transform the company culture and processes. They also worked to optimize departments by focusing on the core business.  

They sought to achieve the following objectives:

  • Increase organizational agility and ability to adapt to a changing environment
  • Strengthen and refine the core business
  • Adopt a more market-centric and customer-focused experience
  • Strengthen the working relationship with the Board of Directors and parent company

How it works

In the Enterprise Transformation, leaders attended workshops on agile training practices, collaborative work sessions to establish baseline alignment, and experienced how to perform as an Agile team. Team members experienced ongoing assessments to evaluate progress and address immediate concerns.  

Results

As a result, the organization has cross-functional, self-directed, vertically-aligned teams who are now reaping the benefits of agile. Additionally, the teams have the tools for continuous improvement, which include coaching and accountability touchpoints, all of which will help them achieve future strategic milestones.

Client Stories
March 25, 2025
5
min read
Helping insurance leaders capture a new market through a business simulation
See how a global footwear and apparel company scaled front-line leadership development to boost employee engagement, reduce turnover, and improve retail team performance.

Client need

Advancements in autonomous vehicle technology and the rise of the sharing economy have sparked unique, high-growth opportunities within the insurance sector. As rideshare services and last-mile delivery become more popular, the demand for commercial mobility insurance has surged. Recognizing this potential, a leading insurance provider—historically successful in personal insurance for homes and vehicles—identified a strategic opportunity to expand into the commercial mobility market.

However, this shift came with its own set of challenges. To pursue this new market successfully, the company needed leaders who could not only envision the future but also execute on a strategy that balanced this emerging opportunity with the existing demands of the business. Leaders needed to be prepared to make informed, strategic decisions, guide their teams through change, and maximize resources to drive growth on both fronts.

Solution

To bridge this gap, the organization turned to BTS. Having invested heavily in talent development, the client sought an innovative capstone experience to equip executives with the skills to navigate the complexities of commercial and personal mobility insurance. This experience would combine traditional learning with immersive, hands-on practice to prepare leaders to operate in a dual-focus business landscape.

BTS collaborated closely with the client’s key stakeholders to build on an existing custom business simulation tailored to the company’s unique challenges and growth goals. Through interviews and deep dives into the client’s strategy, BTS crafted realistic scenarios that mirrored the critical decisions leaders would encounter as they pursued this new strategic direction. The aim was to ensure leaders experienced the trade-offs, resource allocation challenges, and leadership decisions required to achieve success in both the traditional and commercial mobility sectors.

The result was a dynamic, three-day virtual capstone event, where executives from diverse geographies and functions came together to compete in teams, simulating the operations of a combined personal and commercial mobility insurance company. Each team faced real-time decision points—balancing the needs of the established personal insurance business with the growth demands of the commercial mobility segment.

Throughout the simulation, BTS facilitators, along with senior leaders from the client’s organization, guided teams through reflective debriefs, helping participants unpack the impact of their choices, understand their strategic missteps, and explore the lessons needed to adjust. This design offered leaders an active role in both learning and execution, helping them see how each decision could drive or hinder the company’s broader vision.

The experience allowed participants to connect their day-to-day responsibilities with the organization’s growth objectives in ways they had never seen before. Leaders could see firsthand how their decisions affected different areas of the business, revealing the immediate consequences of missteps or successes. Winning the simulation required not only protecting the existing business but also achieving substantial growth in the new commercial mobility space—driving home the importance of the company’s strategic pivot.

Results

This capstone simulation was hailed as the highlight of the company’s nine-month executive development program, providing leaders with a transformative experience that changed the way they viewed strategy, decision-making, and cross-functional alignment. Following the simulation, a survey of participants in the first cohort revealed the program’s profound impact:

  • 79% of participants reported a deeper understanding and appreciation for crafting an effective strategy.
  • 74% gained valuable insights into customer segmentation and its role in targeting diverse markets.
  • 85% appreciated the interconnectivity of various business decisions, better understanding the ripple effects across the company.
  • 79% recognized the power of diverse perspectives, noting that collaborating with peers from different backgrounds enriched their strategic thinking.
  • 74% left with a broader understanding of the business and its complexities.

Testimonials

“Though intensive, this simulation was exactly what I needed. It helped me see how the entire business fits together. I feel more confident in making decisions that consider the bigger picture.” — Participant
“This experience brought to life the complexity and interdependency within our business. I now have a much stronger grasp on finance for insurance, and I feel more aligned with our CFO’s perspective on the company’s financial health.” — Participant
“We always hear that decisions impact the entire business, but seeing that impact in real time was eye-opening. The simulation taught me that failure can be a powerful learning tool. Leaders need to take calculated risks, learn from setbacks, and push forward. I feel more prepared to step out of my comfort zone.” — Participant

Through this immersive capstone, leaders not only understood the organization’s strategic shift—they practiced executing it. The company now has a team of executives ready to lead in the fast-evolving commercial mobility market, equipped with the insights and confidence to drive sustained growth and innovation.

Client Stories
October 22, 2021
5
min read
Executing a strategic transformation
Learn how a global professional services firm partnered with BTS to accelerate growth, increase operational efficiency, and face the future.

Client need

A global professional services firm delivering risk advisory and insurance solutions to companies, institutions, and individuals was undergoing a strategic transformation to accelerate growth, increase operational efficiency, and prepare for the future. To succeed, this transformation would require investments to streamline processes and platforms, along with a shift in how people work. To improve operations, the organization had already segmented the business and reduced layers, attempting to drive simplicity, transparency, and distributed decision making across the firm. However, adapting to the new operating model would require systemic change.

The organization’s chief human resources officer (CHRO) engaged BTS to help jumpstart the strategic transformation. BTS collaborated with the organization to create a program that would align the broader leadership team, comprised of everyone below the executive committee, to this transformation. The goals of the program was to help leaders translate the new strategy into something meaningful and actionable at their departmental level, and also to catalyze the broader leadership team’s strategy execution.

BTS created a highly contextualized business simulation, including presentations, facilitated discussions, and focused training, all of which were customized for the organization.

Solution

BTS began the design process by interviewing 18 senior executives across the organization. These senior executives included the CEO, COO, CHRO, and presidents of regional divisions. They were selected to provide a broad representation of and perspective on the organization. The goal of this research was to define two broad topic areas:

The Business – understanding the organization's business model, the markets in which it operates, and the unique challenges and opportunities it faces.

The People and Leadership – understanding the behavioral and mindset shifts the organization wanted to see in its people, leadership, and culture.

Following the interviews with top-level executives, BTS conducted eight additional interviews with mid-level executives. This allowed for insight into specific business units and challenges referenced in the previous set of interviews.

Interview responses were distilled into a list of themes and organized into an “impact map.” The map defined the business impact envisioned by the organization and linked it to the knowledge, skills, behaviors, and mindsets the organization sought to foster.

The organization’s steering committee reviewed the impact map with the goal of gaining alignment on their key challenges, desired behavioral shifts, and key business results.

To achieve these behavioral shifts, the company collaborated with BTS to design a business simulation modeled after the company’s business. The simulation created a risk-free, engaging, and fun way to achieve learning objectives, and was composed of three rounds experienced over a two-day program. Each round had a theme with distinct learning points.

Round one was designed for leaders to learn how to optimize today’s business in service of driving long-term profitable growth. This involved gaining an understanding of the business landscape, as well as familiarity with the decisions and trade-offs that such growth requires. Round Two focused on the client, becoming a strategic advisor to clients, and enhancing leaders’ abilities to execute. Round Three prepared leaders for a future of making long-term investments in order to develop a sustainable competitive advantage.

Leaders were divided into teams of five at the beginning of the program. Each team included participants from a diverse array of functional and geographic sections of the organization. The experience was composed of seven main elements:

  1. Pre-Work and Introduction – Participants received a pre-start date reading assignment: a detailed case study featuring a fictitious company in a fictitious market environment. The company and market environment described were very similar to the organization and its environment. BTS facilitators kicked off the program by making a case for change, highlighting shifts in the market environment. Participants then broke off into pairs to reflect on those shifts and discuss what the changes meant for them as leaders. Then, BTS facilitators led a discussion wherein participants shared their reflections with the entire group.
  2. Strategy Session – In teams of five, leaders came up with a strategy for how they would lead the simulated company.
  3. Running the company - In their teams of five, leaders ran their simulated company by making over fifty critical decisions. Each team had their own designated breakout room where they would debate their decisions and enter them into a live digital-simulation platform. Periodically, teams would receive a “Wobbler,” which was an unexpected event that they had to respond to in real time (usually a competitor action, a client issue, or a talent issue). Their decisions impacted their KPIs and market share for each market and segment. Participants “ran the company” for three rounds, which represented a three-year timeframe.
  4. Know-Hows – After each round of running the company, participants came back to the main room for a teach-piece or “know-how,” which were skill or knowledge gaps identified as needing to be addressed. After Round One, the topic was “effective decision-making.” For Round Two, it was “future-proofing.” Round Three’s topic was “feedback culture.”
  5. Debriefs — With the entire group present, BTS facilitators reviewed the results for each team, linking the decisions that teams made to their performance. Each of the three rounds had a theme, and facilitators emphasized key takeaways related to these themes. At the end of each debrief, facilitators revealed where teams ranked against each other. Participants also received a report showing their team’s annual financial performance, along with another that summarized the competing teams’ performance.
  6. Application Session – During these sessions, participants committed to post-program actions, recording them using an electronic tool. Following the completion of the program, participants received follow-up reminders of their commitments at a scheduled cadence.
  7. Reflection Sessions — Solo reflections and team reflections were interspersed throughout the two-day program. During the solo reflections, which followed the know-how sessions and debriefs, participants reflected on what they had learned. After the “running the business” segments, participants reflected on their team dynamics. At the end of each day, BTS facilitated short discussions during which participants would share their reflections with the larger group.

To date, ten cohorts have gone through the program since its launch. Each cohort had 25 participants, all just below the C-suite.

At least ten more cohorts, each with a similar number of participants, plan to attend the program next year.

Results

Overall, the program was a great success. The CEO of the Italy division of the company concluded that the BTS program was “much better than any other session of its kind.” The CHRO and the executive team were enamored, and continued to communicate this in subsequent discussions. The organization also extended the original agreement to roll out even more programs.

In the application session section of the program, participants were asked to choose and commit to post-program actions related to on-the-job behaviors. Most frequently, they committed to actions around making informed decisions, prioritizing growth opportunities, and focusing on client relationships. These actions were aligned with the changes that the organization set out to make:

72% of participants stated or planned to have “tough conversations with colleagues about performance and/or with leaders about the business.”

74% of participants stated or planned to “focus on the broader client relationship and anywhere else you can solve risk for the client and align our value proposition.”

54% of participants stated or planned to “prioritize talent development, grow from within, and recruit externally when appropriate.”

Participant testimonials

“I thought this was the best training I’ve ever done. The learning from our team interactions was very illuminating. I loved the risk storming / pre-mortem methodology.”
“It was very useful for me, very genuine, and corresponded with reality. It was entertaining as well.”
“The simulation exercise was an outstanding learning tool. I would be very disappointed never to experience a similar exercise again AND would recommend that our company regularly use the software to measure learning.”
“The simulator tool was very comprehensive and intuitive. Enjoyed the cadence of mixing up sim time and organizational behavior group sessions in different teams. The feedback session was very useful. Excellent team of facilitators.”

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May 13, 2026
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Driving engagement and retention with scaled coaching
Discover how Wellstar Health System scaled leadership coaching to boost engagement, retention, and measurable business impact with Sounding Board, BTS’ scaled coaching solution.

Client challenge

Wellstar Health System, one of Georgia’s largest healthcare systems, had already invested heavily in leadership development for senior leaders. But as the organization navigated rapid growth, a major acquisition, and the demands of a shifting healthcare landscape, it became clear that the greatest leadership challenges were happening at the front and midline.

“Some of the greatest leader challenges are really at the front and midline levels… we’ve invested heavily in leadership development, putting more emphasis on our front line and mid-level leadership in terms of outcomes, said Laura Dannels, Chief Talent Officer at the time.
We’re not an organization who believes in just investing in high performers… you’ve got to invest in your entire workforce.”

Wellstar partnered with Sounding Board to bring a more scalable, flexible coaching solution to leaders across the organization.

The solution

Partnering with Sounding Board, Wellstar designed a scalable, personalized coaching program to extend leadership development across the organization while maintaining the quality of one-on-one coaching.

A proprietary 360 assessment, aligned to Wellstar’s leadership behaviors, served as the foundation for each coaching engagement. This ensured development was directly tied to how leaders show up and lead in practice.

“We really wanted to ground the coaching to a framework that matters to our organization,” said Garry Gross, Executive Director of Leadership Development.
“Helping our leaders create an environment where our mission, vision, and values come to life was paramount.”

Program goals:

  • Develop leadership capabilities aligned to Wellstar’s mission, vision, and values
  • Deliver personalized, relevant development for leaders at all levels
  • Strengthen the leadership bench and support succession planning
  • Foster a culture of innovation, learning, and engagement

Program overview:

  • Personalized, one-on-one coaching for leaders at all levels
  • Capability development aligned to Wellstar’s values
    • Serve with Compassion → Builds relationships
    • Pursue Excellence → Drives results, leads teams, and plans strategically
    • Honor Every Voice → Fosters inclusion and respect for differences
  • Scalable delivery across frontline, mid-level, and clinical leaders
  • Digital tools to track goals, capture insights, and measure progress

This approach made it possible to deliver consistent, high-quality coaching across roles and locations while keeping development relevant to each leader’s day-to-day work.

Results

As the program unfolded, Wellstar began to see a shift in how frontline and mid-level leaders showed up across the organization. Leaders in these critical roles had more consistent support navigating day-to-day challenges, and managers gained better visibility into how their teams were developing. Coaching became a more practical, embedded part of how Wellstar supports leaders in a complex healthcare environment.

Higher engagement and satisfaction

  • 96% of participants said the coaching experience was worth the investment
  • 99% said they could immediately apply what they learned to their day-to-day work

Measurable leadership growth

Participants reported double-digit growth across leadership capabilities including:

  • Executive presence (+16%)
  • Organizational collaboration (+14%)
  • Strategic thinking (+13%)
  • Time management and prioritization (+13%)
  • Communication (+11%)

Stronger retention and mobility

  • Coached leaders achieved a 90% one-year retention rate
  • Retention for coached leaders was 31% higher than non-coached peers
  • 3% of participants were promoted into new roles, exceeding organizational goals and industry benchmarks

Learn more about Wellstar’s leadership coaching journey with Sounding Board in this feature in Becker’s Hospital Review.

Client Stories
May 1, 2026
5
min read
Reimagining frontline leadership at scale in global manufacturing
How a manufacturing leader scaled frontline leadership development to 1,600+ leaders, driving measurable quality improvements and business impact through behavior-based coaching programs.

Client need

For a 175-year-old technology company, competitive advantage isn’t just built on technical innovation: it’s built on leaders who know how to get the best thinking from every person around them. That culture of drawing out ideas, developing people, and driving innovation through engaged teams had been a defining feature of the organization for generations. And it depended on having the right infrastructure to keep developing frontline leaders at scale.

In 2020, that infrastructure was disrupted. The COVID-19 pandemic forced the organization to pivot its in-person development to virtual almost overnight, risking the erosion of frontline leadership capability while simultaneously needing to navigate the broader shocks of the pandemic: supply chain volatility, shifting materials costs, and a workforce managing profound uncertainty.  

Stalling frontline leadership development meant risking productivity, employee engagement, talent retention, job performance, and downstream impacts on quality and operating margin, at a moment when the organization could least afford it.

The question now was how to reimagine frontline leader development to equip thousands of global leaders to continue supporting their teams through disruption, and to ensure the next generation of managers could help their people do their best work under any conditions.

Solution

The client partnered with BTS to reimagine frontline leader development from the ground up, equipping leaders globally with the practical skills, tools, and mindset shifts needed to support their teams in doing great, innovative work.

The partnership began in 2019, and over five years has reached over 1,600 frontline leaders capturing 700+ documented behavior change actions. In 2022, BTS collaborated with the organization to refresh the program to reflect their evolving strategy and develop a sharper focus on supporting a culture of continuous improvement and innovation with coaching and feedback.  

The blended program experience combined the following elements:

  • Immersive leadership simulations: Scenario-based experiences placing leaders in realistic situations, surfacing Multiplier and Diminisher tendencies in real time and making the learning immediately personal and actionable
  • Multipliers and Diminishers framework: A structured exploration of how leaders either amplify or diminish the intelligence of those around them, including specific “experiments” leaders could use to better understand their own leadership approaches
  • Custom leadership frameworks: Including a structured, step-by-step process for having significant feedback conversations, a tool to understand and flex to communication preferences, and a coaching approach designed to help leaders guide team members toward their own solutions, building capability and long-term ownership.
  • Structured application sessions — on-the-job practice components designed to bridge the gap between the program experience and day-to-day behavior, giving participants specific frameworks to apply immediately with their teams
  • Peer networking and breakout groups — cohort-based learning that participants identified as a standout feature, both for deepening the learning and for building cross-functional relationships that extended beyond the program
  • A commitment-capture platform integrated into the program to log participant actions and reinforce behavior change after the program ended; over 670 participant actions were captured across the program’s delivery

Throughout the program, leaders examined the impact of their own behaviors, recognizing where they were unintentionally diminishing their teams, and built new habits around challenging, creating space for mistakes and learning, listening, questioning, giving developmental feedback, and creating ownership. The feedback model gave participants a practical process for the positive and constructive conversations that actually change performance.

Results

More than 1,600 frontline leaders and individual contributors have participated in the program—the population closest to daily execution, quality, and operations. A recent impact study told a clear story about the effects of the program across participants:  

100% of participants reported actively applying what they learned. 59% reported producing significant, measurable business impact, with concrete evidence to describe it.

The results weren’t theoretical. One engineering leader restructured how his team developed project plans, creating space for debate and ownership instead of coming in with the answer. His team exceeded their quality target by 10 percentage points and accelerated the project timeline by +4 months.

One production leader used the feedback model to coach a struggling supervisor and cascade the process across his entire leadership layer. His unit reached #1 performance in its division, improving a key quality KPI by more than 18% year-over-year. A department head with over a decade in leadership set new production records after learning to flex his communication style and draw out quieter team members. And a development lab supervisor used the program to clarify her leadership identity, earn a promotion, and coach her direct report to one as well.

The study also confirmed that when managers actively supported participants post-program, the likelihood of significant business impact increased substantially, shaping the organization’s next phase of reinforcement and cohort follow-up.

For an organization whose competitive advantage rests on the innovation and intelligence of its people, the program gave its leaders something technical training rarely delivers: the confidence, the tools, and the self-awareness to make everyone around them better.

Testimonials

“The program gave me greater confidence to try new things as a leader. It helped me realize what I do and what I don’t do.”  - HR Leader
“The skills I learned in the training helped me be more efficient. It helped me do the right thing, right away.” - Production Manager
“Feedback is very important to create a positive environment; and how to [give] feedback is a specific skill I learned from this training and how to share constructive feedback.” - Production Leader
Financial advisor showing a tablet to a middle-aged couple discussing documents and a calculator on a table.
Client Stories
March 18, 2026
5
min read
Redesigning work with AI: Moving from access to impact at scale
What happens when teams stop experimenting and start applying AI to their most critical workflows? See how BTS partnered with a large U.S. health insurance organization to bring teams together in focused design sprints and shift from incremental efficiency gains to meaningful, scalable impact.

Client need

A large U.S.-based health insurance organization operating at the center of a complex national ecosystem had already made a serious investment in enterprise AI. Leadership was not experimenting at the edges. They were leaning in.

Capability and commitment existed across the organization, but unevenly. Some teams were already pushing boundaries. Others hadn't yet found their footing. Most of the gains had come in personal productivity. Valuable, but the core work itself had not yet fundamentally changed. The opportunity was to go deeper, to move from AI-assisted individuals to AI-reinvented workflows.

Across the health insurance landscape, pressure was intensifying. Medicaid and government program contracts were becoming more competitive. Decision cycles were faster and more analytics-driven. Clinical evidence was evolving rapidly. Regulatory scrutiny was high. Security risks were constant. AI was no longer a future conversation. It was a present expectation.

Inside the organization, world-class experts were still constrained by manual processes.

Specialized teams were synthesizing large volumes of complex, fast-moving information, working to keep pace with an environment where the inputs never stopped changing. The work required deep expertise and judgment, and it also demanded repetitive processing that consumed days when it needed to take hours.

Other teams faced pressure where speed and precision directly influenced competitive outcomes. Manual approaches were creating lag at exactly the moments when faster insight mattered most.

Across functions, the pattern was consistent. Highly trained professionals were spending valuable time on low-leverage tasks, stitching together data, transforming files, and correlating inputs that AI could handle.

Leadership understood that AI licenses alone would not create advantage. To compete in an increasingly analytics-driven insurance environment, expertise had to scale. Insight had to move faster. Teams needed to reinvent how core work happened.

Solution

BTS partnered with the organization to move from AI access to AI application.

Through a series of focused design sprints, intact teams worked on their highest-value workflows using our GROUNDING → EXPERIMENT → BUILD → AMPLIFY methodology. The structure was simple and disciplined. Set context. Experiment quickly. Build against real work. Create a path to scale.

Participants brought their actual work into the room. Analytical frameworks. Competitive and operational documents. Risk and intelligence inputs. Data pipelines.

No generic demos. No abstract hypotheticals.

The turning point came when AI began working on their actual content.

Research syntheses that previously took days began structuring themselves in minutes. Competitive analysis that once required manual review surfaced patterns instantly. Data transformation workflows streamlined in real time.

Skepticism shifted to possibility.

We positioned AI as augmentation, not replacement. In a sector defined by professional expertise and accountability, that framing was critical. The goal was to elevate expert judgment, not automate it away.

Some teams left with working prototypes. Others left with detailed blueprints aligned to enterprise privacy and security requirements. Another team took away a re-prioritized set of additional tools to incorporate into a HIPAA-compliant environment. Every team left with a redesigned workflow.

Results

In five days, more than 100 leaders advanced 30 priority use cases tied directly to operational performance and competitive growth.

Early outcomes included:

  • Significant reduction in manual research synthesis and data preparation
  • Faster, more structured competitive intelligence to support high-stakes decisions
  • Clear implementation pathways aligned to security and regulatory constraints
  • A scalable model for continued AI-enabled workflow reinvention

Just as important was the mindset shift.

Participants stopped viewing AI as a tool sitting outside their work and began treating it as embedded infrastructure for how work gets done.

“This showed immediate relevance to our work.”
“Now I understand what’s actually possible for my team.”
“We just accomplished in two hours what used to take us two months.”

In a U.S. health insurance market where insight, speed, and precision directly influence who wins and who grows, the organization moved decisively from AI access to AI advantage.