Peg Rowe
UNITED STATES | Through her business experience, Peg Rowe brings knowledge, wisdom and unique perspective on building high performance teams, creating a collaborative culture, developing leaders and delivering exceptional results. She works seamlessly with all levels of management, across groups or in one-on-one settings.
Her intuition, calm manner and orientation to action, once critical to her leadership, are key assets in her work with clients. Peg takes a practical, strengths-based approach to executive coaching. Practical in that it focuses on the key behaviors required for improved performance. Strengths-based, in that the focus is on what is currently working in the executives leadership style that can be leveraged for improved performance and satisfaction.
As a seasoned executive and leader of geographically diverse cross-functional teams, she has served in line management and staff positions while spending ten years in senior executive level operations and general management roles at American Hospital Supply Corporation, Baxter International, Caremark International and Paidos Healthcare Management Services. As a leader, Peg coached teams during major corporate transitions and change initiatives, exceeding business objectives.
As a coach and consultant, Peg has worked with leaders and teams at organizations such as Allstate, Caterpillar, Fresenius Medical Care, Gensler, Methode Electronics, Microsoft, Navistar, and National Opinion Research Center, as well as Not for Profits including The Center On Halsted, The National Runaway Switchboard, and The Neumann Association. Peg has a Masters in Management from the University of Missouri – Columbia. She has trained with the Coaches Training Institute (CTI) and the Gestalt Institute of Cleveland, and has fulfilled coursework in Organizational and Relationship Systems, High Impact Teaming, the DiSC Assessment, MBTI and FiroB. Her certifications include the Best Year Yet® Program, the Coaching in the Moment program, the Genos EI Assessment and John Kotter’s Leading Change Program.
Peg’s Blogs
Learn how to not only get underrepresented leaders into the pipeline but also how to ensure that they will succeed at the next level in his blog article by Peg Rowe and Elizabeth Ruske.
Tiara Global Leader, Elizabeth Ruske explains how oftentimes, acceptance is necessary for us to get “unstuck” and to begin to see alternatives and move forward.
Leadership is not a “one-size-fits-all” model. That’s why it is imperative that you know who you are and how you show up as a leader. In this article, we answer three questions we often hear from leaders as they navigate the current landscape and seek to advance their careers.
Statistics, like these just shared by Google, show that many companies still lack diverse leadership today.
The most common reason mentorship partnerships fail is because the relationship is NOT mentee-driven. When the expectation or assumption is that the mentor is the one managing the relationship, the mentoring partnership is already in danger.
Many attempts to start mentoring relationships fail repeatedly, both for individuals and companies, and we know why.
Do you think you are ready for a mentor, yet feel a little overwhelmed or intimidated about finding one? Have you tried establishing mentoring relationships before that have gone nowhere?
Companies know that mentorship works, and companies know that their people are looking for mentoring. Yet organizations of all sizes fail time and time again to create successful, strategic mentoring programs, and we know why.
In my career, I was an executive before the phrase Executive Presence was coined. You either had that job title or you didn’t, and moving up in the organization was based on bottom-line performance and who you knew.
Leaders today want to know how to lead when their employees and colleagues span generations, ranging in age from 25 to 75 years old. The experts in this panel discussion share best practices and lessons learned when leading in a multi-generational workplace.
Now that you have a plan you like, (which is probably an integrated plan), you need to work it!
In the wake of the #MeToo movement it is understandable that men may feel a heightened sense of fear or anxiety when working with female colleagues.
Many of us have worked for corporations, served on boards, published articles and books, started businesses and spoken in front of thousands of people for decades – and we still feel anxiety before an important meeting, a new client workshop or stepping behind the podium.
We have heard for years about how important it is for leaders and companies to establish core values to provide cultural direction. Yet it's easy for values to seem like meaningless jargon …
For Mothers’ Day 2013, Tiara International coaches shined the spotlight on their mothers in recognition of Mother’s Day. These influential women who shaped our lives provided us with incredible stories.
Mother's Day did not begin as a greeting-card-industry holiday. Mother's Day in the United States was created in 1908 by Anna Reeves Jarvis to honor the memory of her own mother
Today’s leadership development programming must be multi-faceted to meet the diverse needs of rising leaders.