The Context: Strong People, Complex Conversations
At Waterline, leadership doesn’t begin with a title. It often begins when technically capable people are asked to take on more responsibility across leading teams, influencing peers, and navigating increasingly complex client conversations.
As the business grew, these expectations increased. Engineers and project leaders were required to give feedback, delegate work, manage uncertainty, and influence outcomes, often without having been formally supported to make the shift from problem-solver to people leader.
The challenge wasn’t intelligence, intent, or effort.
It was confidence in conversations.
Many leaders were defaulting to what they knew best such as solving problems themselves, stepping in too quickly, or avoiding conversations until issues escalated. Others were over-helping, unintentionally limiting the growth of those around them. Conversations were happening, but not always in a way that built confidence, capability, or trust.
The Decision: Invest in Capability That Lasts
Waterline had invested in leadership development before, but this time the focus was different. Rather than running a one-off course, the business wanted something that would embed capability over time and align closely with how Waterline actually operates.
As CEO Tim Strong explains, the intent was longevity.
“We wanted something we could build on over multiple years. Something that was woven into our values and how we work, not just an off-the-shelf program.”
Working with Red Wolf Group, Waterline designed Conversations with Confidence as a practical, behaviour-focused program that centred on the conversations leaders were already having — or avoiding — at work.
Fourteen participants from across the business took part, including emerging leaders, project managers, and team leads. Titles weren’t the focus. The ability to lead conversations well was.
The Approach: Learning That Translates Into Action
The program combined immersive workshops, one-on-one coaching, and real Waterline scenarios, supported by Predictive Index insights to build self-awareness and adaptability.
Importantly, the program was delivered over time. This allowed participants to apply what they learned in real situations, reflect on what worked, and return with questions and insights rather than simply moving on to the next topic.
From a People perspective, this spacing was intentional.
“The breaks between sessions gave people the opportunity to digest what they’d learned, apply it back at work, and then come back and reflect on the impact.”
Eve Mejias, Manager – People, Marketing & Sales Operations
Rather than teaching leaders to “communicate better” in abstract terms, the program focused on practical capability: how to structure feedback, how to delegate without over-functioning, how to adapt communication styles, and how to hold space rather than rush to solutions.
What Shifted: From Winging It to Leading with Intent
Across the cohort, a common realisation emerged — most people had never been taught how to have the conversations that matter most at work.
Michael, a Senior Electrical and Instrumentation Engineer, entered the program knowing communication was a gap.
“The program gave me tools and frameworks that closed those gaps and gave me a clear path forward, especially for tougher conversations.”
For Oliver, a technical lead, the learning was about understanding how his passion and ideas were landing.
“I realised I was so focused on my ideas that I wasn’t thinking about how the other person would receive them. That awareness changed how I communicate.”
Shane, new to Waterline and leading a team, found confidence in having repeatable frameworks rather than relying on instinct.
“Before, I was just winging conversations. Now I have frameworks I can use to give feedback in a way that’s constructive and actually helps people change.”
For others, the learning was more confronting. Margot, a Project Manager, recognised that her instinct to protect and help others was unintentionally holding them back.
“I realised I was over-helping. That was hard to hear, but it completely changed how I lead and how I support people to grow.”
Predictive Index played a key role in helping participants understand why some conversations felt easy and others didn’t — and how to adapt without compromising authenticity.
The Impact: Confidence That Shows Up at Work
Confidence didn’t come from being told to “be more confident.” It came from clarity, practice, and shared language.
Participants began to approach conversations differently. Feedback happened earlier. Delegation became clearer. Leaders slowed conversations down, listened more deeply, and invited others into problem-solving rather than taking everything on themselves.
Emma, in an operational leadership role, noticed a tangible shift.
“I’ve slowed down and become much more intentional in conversations. People feel heard, and that’s changed how we work together.”
Oliver saw immediate impact within his team.
“I stopped driving everything myself. Now the team brings ideas I hadn’t even thought of, and the conversations are far more collaborative.”
Trust also became a defining outcome.
“We’re framing conversations in a way that opens people up rather than shutting them down. That’s built a lot more trust across teams.”
Shane Miles
Business Outcomes: Leadership That Scales
From a business perspective, the impact extended beyond individual growth.
- Four participants stepped into formal team lead roles
- Leadership capability began cascading through teams
- Escalation around people issues reduced
- Engagement across the cohort increased noticeably
Eve observed a clear shift in how leaders showed up.
“I saw a real increase in confidence — not just within teams, but in how people engaged across the business and with senior leaders.”
For Waterline, this confirmed the program was delivering meaningful, repeatable impact.
“We’re building something we can continue to grow and embed over time. That’s what makes this different.”
Tim Strong, CEO
Waterline has since committed to enrolling another cohort of emerging leaders in 2026.
Why This Matters
Many leadership programs deliver insight. Fewer deliver behaviour change.
Conversations with Confidence works because it focuses on the moments that matter most — the everyday conversations where leadership is either strengthened or avoided.
That’s where confidence is built.
That’s where leadership shows up.

