Leading High-Performance Teams | Forum Recap

A Soft Skils Forum about leading high-performance teams in practice, how everyday actions, reflection, and consistency shape impactful leadership beyond titles.

This session was led by Filippa Sjöstrand, Delivery and Project Manager, who brought a thoughtful and experience-driven perspective on what leadership looks like in practice. Rather than focusing only on traditional leadership roles, the session opened up a broader conversation: what it really means to lead, and how often leadership shows up in ways we don’t immediately recognise.

We continued our Soft Skills Forum sessions with one of the most relevant topics in any team setting: Leading High-Performance Teams. A subject that goes beyond frameworks and theory, and one that evolves alongside our roles, responsibilities, and the environments we work in.

Leadership Beyond Titles

One of the key ideas throughout the session was that leadership isn’t limited to formal roles or titles. In a dynamic environment like Nion, where we work across client teams, internal structures, and cross-functional setups, many individuals take on leadership responsibilities without necessarily having “manager” in their title. And that awareness matters.

Our everyday actions, how we communicate, support others, make decisions, and take ownership directly influence how teams perform. Leadership, in that sense, is not assigned; it’s practiced. Recognizing that influence is the first step toward becoming more intentional in how we contribute to the teams we’re part of.

From Theory to Practice

Drawing from her experience across multiple roles from delivery lead and project manager to business analyst and product owner, Filippa shared a mix of practical insights and reflections from real project environments.

A key message stood out: high-performing teams are not the result of pressure or constant urgency. They are built through consistency, clarity, and continuous improvement.

One of the simplest, yet most impactful practices discussed was regular reflection. Taking time to ask:

  • What did I learn this week?
  • What did I realise?
  • How can I apply this in practice?

This habit helps turn new knowledge into something tangible. Especially in a fast-moving environment, reflection creates space to pause, process, and improve how we work.

Turning Reflection into Action

Reflection on its own is valuable, but its real impact comes when it leads to action. The session highlighted the importance of adding structure to that process:

  • Writing things down
  • Turning insights into clear next steps
  • Applying learnings in day-to-day work

These small practices help bridge the gap between intention and execution. Even something as simple as maintaining a checklist can start to shift how we approach our work – bringing more clarity, focus, and accountability into everyday tasks.

Creating Awareness Across Teams

Another important takeaway was how easily leadership can go unnoticed. At Nion, we are often part of multiple teams at once: client-facing, internal, and cross-functional. In these setups, it’s easy to underestimate the impact we have on others. But leadership is often situational. It shows up in moments like:

  • Supporting a teammate
  • Driving a discussion forward
  • Taking ownership of a challenge
  • Creating clarity when things feel uncertain

Recognising these moments helps us grow individually, while also strengthening the teams we work in.

Final Thoughts

To wrap up the session, several core ideas stood out. Leadership is not defined by a title, but by the actions we take and the impact we create within our teams. High performance is not built through pressure, but through consistency and a thoughtful approach to how we work. Reflection plays a key role in turning experience into meaningful improvement, especially when paired with structure and small, intentional habits that make progress sustainable over time. Ultimately, leadership exists in everyday moments, across all roles – it’s something we practice continuously, often in ways we don’t immediately recognise.

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