Faculty
Catalysis learning experiences are led by a diverse group of faculty, all who have extensive experience in continuous improvement. Our faculty includes healthcare leaders, lean experts, and published authors.
Katie Anderson
Faculty
Katie Anderson is the founder of KBJ Anderson Consulting, an independent consulting practice focused on helping individuals and organizations lead with intention by connecting their purpose, processes, and practices to deliver higher levels of performance.
Katie has over 20 years of experience in supporting change and improvement in organizations across a range of industries, including healthcare, government, manufacturing, biotech, and academia. Katie previously held senior lean leadership roles at Stanford Children’s Healthcare and Sutter Health, and as a healthcare senior consultant at PwC Australia.
Katie is an internationally recognized speaker, consultant, and coach, and has lived around the world – including the United States, the United Kingdom, Spain, Australia, and Japan. She regularly leads executive Japan Study Trips (www.kbjanderson.com/japantrips) for lean practitioners wanting to take their understanding of operational excellence to the next level by discovering how Japanese organizations create cultures of respect and continuous improvement.
In addition to teaching for Catalysis, Katie is a faculty member of the Lean Enterprise Institute and leads the Association for Manufacturing Excellence’s Consortia program in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Katie holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Human Biology with honors from Stanford University and a Masters of Philosophy in Public Health (MPhil) from the University of Sydney, and was a Fulbright Scholar in Australia.
For more information and leadership resources, visit: www.kbjanderson.com or email Katie: katie@kbjanderson.com.
Caroline Attard
Faculty
Caroline is currently a senior leader in the National Health Service in the UK and is passionate about improvement work and the power of continuous improvement in delivering and sustaining change within organizations.
She has been a mental health nurse for over 23 years. Caroline’s career started in Malta, her native country, but she transferred to the UK over 20 years ago. Her professional portfolio includes community mental health, crisis work, and in-patient nursing. Caroline has held senior clinical roles in various organizations focusing on advanced clinical practice and has been a lecturer in mental health nursing and psychosocial interventions at various Universities in the UK at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. More recently she has held a senior National position as part of a clinical fellowship in mental health.
Caroline’s area of expertise is improvement work, and she has an expansive portfolio of quality improvement projects and transformation in all areas of health care using quality improvement methodology. She believes in the importance of the customer voice and has successfully coproduced with service users and care-givers the development and improvement of pathways and services for service users and care-givers.
She has worked as the Head of Quality Improvement within a healthcare trust and led a complete organization lean transformation. This involved developing and delivering a whole program for the implementation of the management system across all areas of health care. As a result, Caroline holds extensive experience in the development, adaptation, and implementation of management systems.
Caroline is co-author and editor of the Oxford Textbook of Inpatient Psychiatry and has several published works in books and journals.
Jenn Christison
Faculty
Jenn Christison has over 15 years of lean experience across manufacturing, healthcare and administrative services. Her educational emphasis in Society, Ethics and Human Behavior has informed her improvement framework, emphasizing team and leadership development strategies as foundational to establishing a culture of continuous improvement.
Starting her performance improvement career with The Boeing Company, she is certified in multiple lean workshop techniques and is known for being high energy, no nonsense and optimistic. Transitioning to healthcare, she most recently served as the Senior Director of Improvement Strategy for Seattle Children’s, where she partnered with the Executive team to improve the healthcare experience for all children, regardless of their ability to pay. She is especially passionate about applying the 3P methodology, encouraging hands-on, tactical improvement experiments that enable getting better faster.
Currently, Jenn runs own her business, Seven Ways Consulting, where she offers custom continuous improvement coaching, consulting and facilitation services to motivated senior leaders. In her spare time, she enjoys golf, baking and writing. You can also find her playing stand-up comic if you know where to look.
Yvonne DeGroot
Faculty
Yvonne DeGroot is an instructor who regularly teaches the following courses: Lean Overview, Problem Solving/A3 Thinking, Root Cause Analysis, Process Mapping, 5S, Creating a Continuous Improvement Culture, Project Management and Daily Continuous Improvement/Kata. In addition, she has experience with Hoshin Kanri, working with organizations to create and deploy their strategic plan.
She is currently an instructor at a local technical college. Prior to this role, Yvonne spent 15 years with ThedaCare which included roles as brand manager in marketing, facilitator with the ThedaCare Improvement System, then as a consultant with the Organizational Excellence department. While in these roles she facilitated improvement projects, coached leaders and trained team members in lean principles and methodologies, taught business acumen, performed cultural assessments and supported teams to reach their patient, employee, quality, safety and financial goals. Areas within the healthcare system Yvonne supported included orthopedics, primary care, pharmacy, laboratory and perioperative services.
Yvonne earned her Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Western Governors University and is nationally accredited in lean, with a Lean Bronze Certification and is a Six Sigma Green Belt. She is a certified facilitator for Franklin Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, Leading at the Speed of Trust and The 5 Choices to Extraordinary Productivity. In addition, she is trained in the Dale Carnegie Course Skills for Success and High Impact Presentations.
With a passion for continuous improvement and problem solving, she is an active volunteer with CI², (Continuous Improvement, Community Impact) where she serves as a coach and mentor for non-profit groups in Northeast Wisconsin, helping to solve problems that achieve community impact objectives.
Mark Graban
Faculty
Mark Graban is the author of the Shingo-Award-winning book “Lean Hospitals: Improving Quality, Patient Safety, and Employee Engagement.” Mark is also co-author, with Joe Swartz, of “Healthcare Kaizen: Engaging Front-Line Staff in Sustainable Continuous Improvements” (also a Shingo recipient) and “The Executive Guide to Healthcare Kaizen.” In 2018, he released “Measures of Success: React Less, Lead Better, Improve More” and his newest book, released in June 2023 is “The Mistakes That Make Us: Cultivating a Culture of Learning and Innovation."
He serves as a consultant to healthcare organizations through his company, Constancy, Inc. and is also a senior advisor to the technology company KaiNexus. Mark has a B.S. in Industrial Engineering from Northwestern University and an M.S. in Mechanical Engineering and an M.B.A. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Leaders for Global Operations Program. Mark and his wife live in Texas.
Margie Hagene
Faculty
Margie is an organizational effectiveness and Lean Thinking / Continuous Improvement teacher and coach. For over thirty years, she has helped executives and senior leaders recognize their changing roles and responsibilities in complex systems. By providing frameworks for thinking and learning, and evidence-based structures for practice, she supports leaders in identifying and developing appropriate behaviors and skills for leading and creating an organization filled with competent, confident problem solvers.
For eighteen years, Margie worked as a global internal consultant for Ford Motor Company at all levels within the organization - from team leaders to the COO - in Product Development, Design and Manufacturing.
Since 2005, Margie has worked in a variety of leading service and manufacturing industries, including healthcare, PreK-12 education, distribution, food service, and transportation/mobility. Her work has included university programs in areas of leadership development, Lean Thinking, and organizational learning. Margie’s ongoing community work focuses on issues of hunger relief and land conservation.
Clients invariably learn to appreciate Margie’s ability to quickly assess leadership qualities, identify issues of misalignment among management, and recognize disconnects between agreed to policies and principles and actual daily behaviors. She embodies the belief that intentional, balanced focus on both the social and technical components in complex systems is essential for long-term effectiveness of any improvement efforts.
Margie holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Education from Butler University, Indiana (USA), and a Master of Science Degree in Education from Indiana University (USA).
Tom Hartman
Faculty
Thomas Hartman is an executive coach at Catalysis. His responsibilities include helping coach healthcare leaders and payers to radically improve healthcare quality and outcomes for patients and families, while reducing healthcare costs. Prior to joining Catalysis, Tom spent 19 years as a senior executive with Autoliv, the world’s largest producer of automotive safety products. He brings 29 years of experience on the lean journey, leading and mentoring organizations through the implementation and deployment of the Autoliv Production System — based on the Toyota System and culture — including three years working directly with a TPS Sensei (1998-2000). From 1997 through 2004, Tom was President of Autoliv’s global Airbag Inflator Division with annual sales of $850 million. Tom also served as senior director of Autoliv Lean Consulting, a venture he co-founded in 2007, resulting in the Autoliv Culture of Continuous Improvement being shared with over 100 companies. From 2006 through 2011, Tom mentored local management in the establishment of Autoliv’s AME and Shingo-Prize winning lean culture in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, and Brazil. Since 2005, Tom has served as a member of the Shingo Prize Board of Governors and in 2007 was inducted into the Shingo Academy in 2010 and the AME Hall of Fame in 2013. Tom has served on advisory boards for Economic Development, Healthcare, and Manufacturing organizations.
Pam Helander
Faculty
Dr. Pam Helander (DNP) has spent more than three decades in healthcare in the roles of bedside nurse, quality team member and leader, and executive in the areas of hospital operations and system quality. She has worked as a coach/mentor of lean processes and as the leader of a value stream, transforming care and developing people. Much of her work life has been at ThedaCare, an integrated health system in Wisconsin.
Pam has also served on statewide task forces and local community forums (i.e. Rotary, Leadership Fox Cities, WNA Interprofessional Education) and is a member of the Outagamie Health and Human Services Board and WNA Work Force Advocacy Council.
She is a registered nurse with a Doctorate in Nursing Practice, Executive with a Masters in Organizational Leadership and Quality and is a Certified Healthcare Professional (CPHQ). Pam most enjoys seeing the growth and development of others through coaching as they understand how they can make a difference and see positive outcomes from their efforts.
Jeff Hunter
Faculty
Jeff Hunter has extensive experience in healthcare leadership, strategy formulation and strategy deployment. His peers respect his ability to analyze and synthesize complex information and ideas; communicate them in clear, understandable, and actionable terms; and facilitate strategic thinking among leadership teams with engaging, visual methods.
Jeff has a special interest in facilitating strategic thinking for professional organizations such as healthcare, higher education, and service organizations, as well as not-for-profit community agencies. His coaching and facilitation enables others to manage vision and purpose with strategic agility.
Jeff is on the faculty of Catalysis and the Donald J. Schneider School of Business and Economics at St. Norbert College. He is also a Strategic Planning Fellow for Sg2, a leading provider of health care intelligence, analytics, and consulting.
From 1991 until his retirement in 2015 he was the Senior Vice President, Strategy and Marketing for ThedaCare, a community-sponsored system of hospitals, physicians, behavioral health services, and home care based in Appleton, Wisconsin. He was primarily responsible for strategic planning, marketing, government relations, philanthropy, and e-health.
Prior to joining ThedaCare in 1991, Mr. Hunter managed the consulting practice for Brim Healthcare in Portland, Oregon. He began his career in healthcare with Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center in Denver, Colorado. Mr. Hunter received his B.S. in Economics from the University of Detroit and his M.A. in Health Services Administration from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Mr. Hunter is actively involved in his community, is a member of the Board of Visitors of the Donald J. Schneider School of Business and Economics at St. Norbert College, and Past President of the Board of Directors of the Boys and Girls Club of the Fox Valley.
Kevin McNamara
Kevin McNamara is the President and Chief Executive Officer of TIDI Products, LLC based in Neenah, Wisconsin. TIDI is a medical device manufacturer focused on the acute care market. TIDI has manufacturing operations in Wisconsin, Mexico, and China. Kevin has over 30 years of management and leadership experience in industries ranging from consumer-packaged goods to health care. His career has included sales and marketing roles at Procter & Gamble Company, Pepsi-Cola Company, and E.J. Brach Corporation. Mr. McNamara has been with TIDI or its predecessor companies since 1998. He has held Board roles in several “for profit” and “not for profit” organizations. He holds an A. B. Degree from Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine.
Jill Menzel
Faculty
Jill has over ten years of experience coaching lean principles, A3 thinking, and lean management system development.
Jill has spent eight years at ThedaCare as a Lean Facilitator, Hospitalist Manager, and Medical Staff Manager where she was an early adaptor, mentor, and coach of ThedaCare’s lean management system. She has successfully taught and coached lean concepts to both employed and independent physicians resulting in patient satisfaction, productivity, quality, and engagement improvements. Jill also supported hospital leadership in daily improvement, rapid improvement events, and value stream work. In addition, since 2012 she has been coaching a local Wisconsin school district as they implement lean thinking in the classroom.
Jill earned a degree in Chemical Engineering from Washington University in St. Louis, MO and in Chemical Physics from the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, MN. Prior to joining ThedaCare, Jill had twelve years of experience in manufacturing and quality roles in the paper industry.
Theresa Moore
Faculty
Theresa Moore is an Operational Excellence Coach and Instructor. Her responsibilities include helping connect executive and operational leaders in the development of organizational improvement systems as well as helping Process Improvement Teams transition from facilitator/event-based support to improvement coaches. While at Catalysis, Theresa has provided support to healthcare organizations through specialized curriculum design, educational services and executive facilitation.
Prior to joining Catalysis, Theresa spent over 10 years at ThedaCare. She started as an Improvement Facilitator and later transitioned to operations where she was the Director of ThedaCare’s System Laboratories. While Director, she led the strategic improvement initiative to optimize the laboratory value stream. Partnering with the information technology department, she leveraged the installation of a new information system to create business informatics that supported the lean improvement journey. Theresa returned to the ThedaCare Improvement Consultant role where she was responsible for coaching ThedaCare senior leaders, as well as improvement facilitators in lean principles and methodologies. Prior to ThedaCare, Theresa held numerous Plant Manager and quality positions for a variety of manufacturers including Alcoa, PolyOne and General Electric. Theresa received a MBA from Brenau University, Gainesville, Georgia and a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemical Engineering from Clarkson University, Potsdam, NY.
Theresa is currently an AME Excellence Aware Assessor as well as a volunteer coach with CI2 (Continuous Improvement, Community Impact).
Elaine Mead
Elaine Mead is currently an Executive Director of Improvement, Care and Compassion, IC&C, an organisation committed to supporting leaders on their improvement journey across the UK and Europe.
Elaine has enjoyed over 34 years’ experience working in clinical, managerial and Executive roles within the National Health Service across the UK. Her original professional clinical background was as a diagnostic radiographer with experience in general, research and academic settings.
In her previous position, Elaine held the position of Chief Executive of NHS Highland for eight years, originally moving to the Highlands of Scotland, as their first Chief Operating Officer. She was responsible for the development of the first totally integrated health and care system in Scotland, which continues to support services across 41% of the most remote and rural land mass of the UK.
Elaine is a passionate ambassador for quality and led the development of the Highland Quality Approach, an improvement system supporting NHS Highland to improve quality of care based on increasing value. Through this work she built a world-wide network of contacts to share best practice and has hosted multiple study-tours, presented at many key international conferences and has published on both quality improvement at scale and the integration of health and social care. Elaine coaches and supports teams at Board and Executive level to create value and minimise waste in systems through her works as Executive Sensei for NHS Improvement in England and also as Faculty member of the Institute of Health Improvement.
As a committed practitioner of Quality Improvement, Elaine is a certified Lean Leader from Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys having had a close association with the Virginia Mason Institute. Elaine has been awarded a Fellowship by the International Society for Quality in Healthcare ISQua and is a current member of Q Scotland. Elaine has had the opportunity to manage complex systems across the NHS in the UK and also deliver health care and screening in the private sector, working for a number of organisations including the Harley Street Clinic, London, the AMI Group and BUPA. She was a research radiographer on the staff of Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals Medical Schools.
Elaine took up position of visiting Professor at the University of the Highlands and Islands supporting the delivery of disperse multi-professional health and care training across the Highlands and Islands, is an active non-executive member of the Ireland East Hospitals Board in Dublin.
As a founding member of the Catalysis European CEO Forum, Elaine now continues to connect colleagues across Europe as Faculty, facilitating and supporting the Forum from her base in Scotland.
Al Pilong
Al Pilong blends executive coaching, financial acumen and team building skills to lead and coach multi-hospital health systems as well as non-profit organizations, to achieve peak performance from the income statement to quality outcomes. As a C-suite executive and executive coach, he leverages a patient-first perspective gained during his early career as a pharmacist and pharmacy leader to drive results.
Al leverages his extensive executive background in operational excellence, organizational effectiveness and team building skills in his coaching of leaders in hospitals, health systems, as well as non-profit organizations of all types, to drive results and achieve peak performance. Based on his experience as a CEO and C-suite executive, Al is an expert in navigating the interpersonal and political challenges of complex environments that leaders face every day and is skilled at supporting leaders to solve the problems they face along the way.
Passion for great leadership, passion for leaders, passion to see leaders succeed….this is what drives Al's work as both a coach and an executive.
Al’s expertise spans the full range of healthcare leadership and executive coaching—from strategic partnerships and operational excellence to financial stewardship, service line development and quality enhancement. He produced $73M in organizational turnarounds and steered $500M in facility construction projects across his career—all completed on time and budget. In addition, Al leads health systems to secure Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade “A” ratings and earn recognition for outstanding patient experience from Healthgrades.
Al is an expert in executive coaching, building high performing teams, leading turnarounds, safety culture development, physician and employee engagement, and driving financial stewardship.
Mike Radtke
Faculty
Mike Radtke helps provide coaching, teaching, and support to organizations through their lean transformations. Mike previously served in different leadership capacities for ThedaCare over 15 years, including roles as an improvement facilitator, ancillary services manager, director of diagnostic imaging, and operational vice president with oversight of areas including perioperative services, trauma, air medical, therapies, and rehab. Prior to his leadership roles, Mike worked as a physical therapist at one of ThedaCare’s critical access hospitals. In 2016, Mike became a full-time improvement and leadership coach and has been serving organizations on their improvement journeys.
Mike was first introduced to lean process improvement and leadership practices in 2003 as ThedaCare began their lean journey. He had the opportunity to learn and apply lean practices both as a member of the improvement department and as an operation leader. Mike was part of the team that initially created ThedaCare’s lean management system as documented in Kim Barnas’ book Beyond Heros. He has been faculty with Catalysis since 2012, teaching problem solving, spreading improvements, strategy deployment, and developing lean management systems throughout North America. Mike’s experiences as a clinician, lean process improvement facilitator, operational leader and executive, provides him with a unique perspective. He thoroughly enjoys his role as a teacher and coach for organizations, supporting them in many ways to develop and enhance their management, improvement, and strategy deployment systems.
Mike has a bachelor’s degree in physical therapy from the University of Wisconsin—La Crosse and a Master’s degree in Organizational Change Leadership from the University of Wisconsin—Platteville. Mike has taught at numerous conferences throughout the United States on lean and lean leadership in healthcare, including being the keynote speaker at the Maine Lean Summit in 2013.
Bruce Roe
Faculty
Dr. Roe has an extensive background as a senior leader at the hospital and health system level, and deep experience in organizational transformation. Driven by a passion for patient safety and quality, he served as a senior leader for 12 years at St. Boniface Hospital, a tertiary care academic health center in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He initially served as Chief Medical Officer and Executive Champion for Transformation for 10 years, and then stepped into the role of President and CEO for two years. During this time, he led St. Boniface in its pursuit of operational excellence, and deployment of management and improvement systems. He then took the role of Vice-President and Chief Medical Officer at Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, a system which includes five acute care hospitals and delivers community-based and long-term care. During his two years in this role, he provided leadership in clinical service redesign and helped engage physicians and staff in extensive redesign of patient pathways and care delivery realignment.
Dr. Roe is a leader who models humility, curiosity, and relentless pursuit of excellence. He continues to provide leadership coaching and is a practicing physician in Endocrinology at the University of Manitoba.
Scott Saxton
Faculty
Scott Saxton has been involved with Lean and Continuous Improvement for over 30 years. Scott worked at Autoliv for 23 years, during which his most memorable learning came while working directly with a talented Toyota Sensei. Autoliv's culture was open to experimenting and applied Lean principles, tools, and management systems. As a Production Manager, Scott and his team were able to yield significant results as they applied grass root efforts using the Toyota Production System. Autoliv’s Utah operations saw substantial improvement across the organization as they immersed themselves into developing the Autoliv Production System. Scott continued in various positions at Autoliv, including Supply Chain Management and Operations Manager. He eventually launched and managed a Consulting Division for over five years. Under Scott’s direction and leadership, the Ogden facility received the prestigious Shingo Prize. With the maturity of the Autoliv Production System, the Consulting Division mentored hundreds of organizations in their improvement journeys.
Scott left manufacturing 12 years ago to apply his learning and experience to healthcare by accepting a position as the Northern Region Continuous Improvement Director for Intermountain Health. With the success of implementing Continuous Improvement in the North Region, Intermountain’s senior leadership chose to adopt the Continuous Improvement Model system wide. Since then, Scott has worked in several system positions, recently over Utah and Idaho supporting executive and hospital leaders.
Under Scott’s leadership, training certifications and improvement software were developed for leaders. He was instrumental in developing the Intermountain Operating Model which focuses on creating key management systems and employee engagement, yielding hundreds of thousands of employee ideas. This has led to significant improvement in quality, safety and cost reductions.
Scott has a bachelor’s degree in business, enjoys the outdoors, and works to develop youth in various programs. Scott lives in North Ogden and has been blessed with a wonderful wife, four children, and six grandchildren.
Jason Schulist
Faculty
Jason Schulist is the President of the Generative Local Community Institute (GLCI), a non-profit whose mission is to connect communities so that they can improve their problem-solving capability and accelerate community impact. Prior to forming GLCI, Jason served as Appvion’s Vice President of Continuous Improvement (CI) from 2013-2017. Appvion’s CI Deployment was awarded Runner-up in the PEX Global Award for Most Innovative Culture Change Deployment for 2016 and consistently exceeded Appvion’s Profit Improvement goals.
Mr. Schulist worked in the Utility Industry from 2004-2013 with roles as DTE Energy’s Director of the Program Management Office (PMO) managing a $1B portfolio of projects and as Director of Continuous Improvement saving over $700M while building CI capability and winning the IPQC’s Best Process Improvement Program in 2010. Prior to DTE Energy, Mr. Schulist held management positions in lean operations, business development, and corporate strategy with General Motors.
Mr. Schulist earned a bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from Marquette University and two Masters’ degrees in Electrical Engineering/Computer Science and Management from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Mr. Schulist is a Lean Six Sigma Black Belt and has a Project Management Professional (PMP) certification.
Jason has a passion for generative local community and has founded the Skillsfest movement that applies Continuous Improvement to thorny community problems. He is a co-founder of the Michigan Lean Consortium and past Chair. He currently serves on the Boards of the United Way of the Fox Cities, CAP Services, the MIT Club of Wisconsin, and the POINT Poverty Initiative in Northeast Wisconsin.
Don Shilton
Faculty
Don Shilton was president at St. Mary’s General Hospital in Kitchener, Ontario from 2010-2018. Shortly after becoming president, he unveiled an ambitious new vision for St. Mary’s to become “the safest and most effective hospital in Canada,” using Hospital Standardized Mortality Ratio (HSMR) as the overall indicator for safety.
To accomplish this vision St. Mary’s began implementing lean in 2011. As with many lean implementations St. Mary’s started strong and then began to struggle. This struggle led them in to implement a Lean Management System (LMS). Staff quickly embraced the rigor lean brought to their work and by 2017 were implementing an average of three improvements per employee/year. Staff achieved breakthroughs such as reducing hospital acquired infections by more than 60%, reducing patient falls by more than 50% and reducing staff injuries by more than 35%. In a 2017 survey staff were asked, “Overall how would you rate your organization as a place to work?” The St. Mary’s percent positive score was thirty-three points higher than the national average.
In 2016, St. Mary’s achieved the lowest HSMR in Canada for the second time in five years leading some in the media to call St. Mary’s, “the safest hospital in Canada.”
The St. Mary’s board also embraced lean thinking. During Don’s tenure they started meetings with a board member-led huddle, and regularly went on gemba walks throughout the hospital to better understand the connection between strategy and front-line work.
Since retiring in 2018, Don has joined the faculty of Catalysis to help executives and boards dramatically improve health system performance. He also consults with KPMG Canada.
Don has a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Waterloo, a Respiratory Therapy diploma from the Michener Institute of Applied Sciences, and a Master’s degree in Business Administration from McMaster University.
Michele Smith
Faculty
Michele is a dedicated Executive/Leadership Coach with extensive experience coaching individuals across all levels of the organization. She has broad experience as a designated leader and change management consultant, with expertise in team building, leadership development, and facilitation/coaching of leadership to arrive at an organizational strategy with aligned goals, solutions, and ultimately culture change. She is also a skilled Performance Improvement Coach and Facilitator (in person and virtual), with in-depth knowledge in healthcare, healthcare finance, and lean tools and methodologies.
As an International Coaching Federation accredited coach, and a certified John Maxwell Team member, Michele blends coaching, consulting, speaking, and facilitation with over two decades of business experience and her passion to help individuals become the leaders they want to be. This blend is a formula that inspires a deeper commitment to change and the achievement of transformative results. She understands challenges unique to high achievers, managers transitioning to senior leadership roles, highly technical managers, women in leadership, business disruption through mergers and acquisitions, and those of an achiever mindset who need to balance the needs of family, work, and their own well-being.
Ted Toussaint
Faculty
Ted teaches, writes, and consults on healthcare innovation both independently, with Catalysis, and with Prospect3. He specializes in innovation and new care model development, with a particular focus on primary care redesign.
Ted served in various innovation and improvement roles at Boston Children’s Hospital and Atrius Health. At Atrius he helped build the Atrius Health Innovation Center and worked with teams to design new clinical care models. The innovation center worked on primary care redesign, a home-based urgent care program, and a hospital at home model. Since leaving Boston, he has worked with clients on using design, innovation, and improvement processes to target various aspects of primary care, new customer acquisition, health coaching, and system-wide primary care redesign.
Ted co-wrote the article “How Atrius Health Is Making the Shift from Volume to Value” which was published in Harvard Business Review, and has co-authored white papers on new care model development that were published through Catalysis.
Brian Veara
Faculty
Brian retired from being Program Director for the Catalysis Healthcare Value Network in 2023. He has personally coached leaders in all aspects of their Clinical Business Intelligence program management to include their analytics maturity assessment, data governance and skills matrix development. Brian came to Catalysis from ThedaCare, where he provided Clinical Business Intelligence program leadership throughout its’ Lean journey. Before joining ThedaCare, he spent over four years as a national Business Intelligence and Data Warehouse consultant and five years as an IT Director for a Fortune 500 retail chain. Brian has experience working in healthcare and also in the retail and manufacturing sectors. Brian has presented Business Intelligence subjects at the National Retail Federation (NRF) the Health Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS) and various Data Governance conferences.
Adam Ward
Faculty
Adam Ward has an uncanny ability to extract high levels of performance from the teams he works with. He is a natural teacher that breaks down complex topics in the simplest terms. He is an inspirational leader who tells stories with powerful examples that inspire innovative action while staying grounded in the state of the business. He has experience across a multitude of industries, but healthcare became a passion for him, eventually leading to him writing the bestselling Lean Design in Healthcare, a book about establishing systematic innovation within healthcare organizations. He now runs his own consulting firm.
Just recently, as an Innovation & Strategy Consultant at Simpler (an IBM company) Adam was responsible for executive coaching of clients. His client list included the US Air Force, Harvard University, Atrius Health, ThedaCare, the Veteran’s Administration, EnerSys, Lockheed Martin, the Gemological Institute of America, Northwestern Mutual, and more. He has established innovation teams, improved product development output, coached c-suites on innovation, and helped developed corporate strategies. After IBM acquired Simpler, he was chosen to create integrated services combining Simpler’s proven operational excellence system and IBM’s artificial intelligence, blockchain, and IoT technologies.
Previously, as the Product Development Strategist at GE Healthcare, Adam worked for the Chief Technology Officer of the $16B company. He was key in creating and implementing multiple, transformative initiatives including the Product Leader program for the twelve, Diagnostic Imaging divisions and the Disruptive Cost Workout, which saved tens of millions of dollars during its launch year and went across other GE units as the standard.
Prior to working at GE Healthcare, Adam was a Design Leader for Honda R&D Americas. He was responsible for the electrical system of vehicles, routinely leading cross-functional teams of 50+ individuals with project capital budgets more than $100M and material spend exceeding $1B annually.
Adam holds an MBA from The Ohio State University and a BSME from the University of Maryland. He has served on several non-profit boards, led capital campaigns, and speaks regularly at conferences. He is a student coach and lecturer for the MBOE program at Ohio State.
Elizabeth Warner
Faculty
Elizabeth J. Warner, MD FACP CPE received her Medical Doctorate from Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine, with AOA designation, and completed her Internal Medicine residency at Kalamazoo Center for Medical Studies. She continues to pursue lifelong learning as a Masters student in Positive Organizational Development at Case Western Reserve University. Elizabeth is a board-certified physician who has served clinically in ambulatory primary care, geriatric care in a post-acute setting and hospital-based palliative care.
Seeing recurrent, entrenched care delivery problems, Dr. Warner developed her leadership skills to serve her community at a different level. As Primary Care Medical Director at Bronson Healthcare Group, and then as Medical Director of Continuous Improvement Support, Elizabeth empowered all learners to embrace lean thinking in order to transform healthcare into a sustainable, joyous profession. She served as the internal “sensei” (coach) of her organization, and lead trainer for the system-wide management system implementation.
Dr. Warner is now founder of Warner Well Being LLC, to serve healthcare transformation on a national level. She has a unique blend of experience, curiosity and lean knowledge, anchored in the professional principles of medicine and Shingo principles of operational excellence. Through coaching, training and speaking, Dr. Warner will propel individuals and organizations forward on their transformational journeys.