By: Mary Scott
In many conversations about leadership today, the focus often stays at the level of ideas. Frameworks are discussed, strategies are outlined, and new ways of thinking are introduced. What is less often explored is what leadership development actually looks like in practice and what changes when that work takes hold.
Catherine Rocheleau, Founder and CEO of Ignite Leadership International®, has spent decades working in the space between insight and action, partnering with leaders through periods of growth, transition, and complexity. Her work centers on helping leaders move beyond theory into tangible and sustained change.
With more than 30 years in business and over 17 years as a leadership coach, Rocheleau has worked across industries including healthcare, professional services, hospitality, and manufacturing.
Her work has also been featured on major media platforms, including Fox Business’ “Worldwide Business with Kathy Ireland”, Bloomberg Television, CTV, and CityTV, and she is a three-time international bestselling author and a Quilly Award recipient.
One client, a small business owner, entered Rocheleau’s mastermind at a point where his business felt stuck between maintaining day-to-day operations and pursuing a long-considered pivot. While he had ideas for a new direction, the demands of running the business kept pulling his focus away, and the shift never fully materialized.
Through the structure of the mastermind and ongoing coaching, that began to change. Bringing his ideas into the group created space for deeper exploration, while consistent feedback and accountability helped him move beyond scattered thinking into a more defined plan.
The client shared, “Catherine’s support helped me stay focused and take consistent action. Instead of feeling scattered, I was able to build momentum day by day.”
With that clarity, he was able to step back from daily distractions, refine his direction and take the right actions at the right time. What had previously felt uncertain became structured and achievable.
More than a decade later, that business direction remains in place.
These kinds of shifts reflect a broader pattern in Rocheleau’s work, where the most significant changes often begin beneath the surface.
“Leaders often believe they need to add more. More strategy, more effort, more answers,” Rocheleau says. “But in many cases, the real work is about seeing what is already there more clearly and making different decisions from that place.”
This perspective becomes especially relevant in today’s environment, where leaders are expected to lead through constant change while maintaining performance, culture, and direction. The pressure to keep everything moving can leave little room to step back and assess what is actually working.
Rocheleau’s approach focuses on creating that space.
Through her Catalyst: Human Centered Leadership for Sustainable Impact coaching program, Rocheleau works with leaders to step out of reactive patterns and into more intentional decision-making. The focus is not on slowing things down for the sake of it, but on creating space for clearer thinking, stronger direction, and more sustainable performance.
“Leaders don’t need more pressure,” she says. “They need clarity. They need a way to step back, look at what’s really happening, and make decisions that align with both the business and themselves.”
Rather than operating in a continuous state of reaction, leaders begin to move toward more intentional decision-making. That shift may not always be visible from the outside, but internally, it changes how challenges are approached and how progress is sustained.
In one organization, this translated into clearer alignment at the leadership level, allowing teams to move forward with more cohesion and fewer internal barriers. In another, it meant identifying patterns that had previously gone unnoticed, opening up new opportunities for growth and direction.
For Rocheleau, these outcomes point to a deeper understanding of leadership itself.
“The goal is not to fit into a model,” she explains. “It is to build the capacity to lead in a way that actually works for the reality you are in.”
That idea challenges a long-standing belief that leadership development is primarily about acquiring new tools or frameworks. Instead, it shifts the focus toward awareness, clarity and the ability to respond differently in real time.
While her work includes structured methodologies, including her SPARK™ framework, Rocheleau sees these as guides rather than rigid systems. The emphasis remains on helping leaders lead within their own context with greater intention and confidence.
As Rocheleau continues to expand her work, she is also sharing these insights more broadly through upcoming speaking and media engagements. She is scheduled to speak at the Summit of Inspiration on May 8, hosted by Deb Drummond of Mission Accepted Media, with the session also being live-streamed on The Women’s Channel. She will also be featured on Underground Radio C’s “Connected with Cari” on May 16, part of a broader radio network with international reach.
At a time when leadership is often defined by speed and output, her approach offers a different perspective. Progress does not always come from doing more. In many cases, it comes from seeing more clearly and acting with greater alignment.
For the leaders she works with, that shift is not theoretical.
It shows up in how decisions are made, how teams are supported, and how momentum is built over time.
And in that sense, leadership is not just about what gets achieved. It is more about how it unfolds.
To learn more about Catherine Rocheleau’s leadership work or Catalyst coaching program, visit Ignite Leadership.


