Heather Moyse
Senior leaders are asked to perform under conditions that no plan accounted for. Composure, recovery, and the capacity to recalibrate quickly become commercial assets, not personal qualities. The question for organisations is how to develop those capacities in people who already think they have them.
Heather Moyse is a two-time Olympic gold medallist and World Rugby Hall of Famer who works with leaders on composure, recovery, and decision-making when conditions shift faster than the plan.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Heather Moyse
- She has competed at Olympic level in three sports she did not start as a child, including learning bobsleigh from scratch and winning gold in her first Games. That gives her a credible voice on rapid capability acquisition under high stakes.
- Her occupational therapy training (Master’s, University of Toronto) gives her a clinical frame for human performance rather than the standard motivational-athlete narrative. She talks about the mechanics of resilience, not the feeling of it.
- She is the first Canadian woman inducted into the World Rugby Hall of Fame and one of only two Canadians inducted. The credential is rare enough to anchor a senior audience that has heard many Olympic stories.
- She has worked with senior corporate audiences including CIBC, BMW, Sun Life Financial, Fidelity Investments, the Royal Canadian Mint, and the Canadian Armed Forces, so the translation from sport to commercial leadership is already calibrated.
Biography highlights
- Two-time Olympic gold medallist in women’s bobsleigh (Vancouver 2010, Sochi 2014, pilot Kaillie Humphries).
- Four-time Olympian.
- World Rugby Hall of Fame, inducted 2016. First Canadian woman, second Canadian overall.
- Master’s in Occupational Therapy, University of Toronto. BSc (Honours Kinesiology), University of Waterloo.
- Author, Redefining ‘Realistic’ (2017), with foreword by John C. Maxwell.
- Order of Prince Edward Island (2014); inaugural Randy Starkman Olympian Humanitarian Award (2014).
Biography
Bobsleigh is not a sport you take up casually. Heather Moyse was recruited into the Canadian programme as an adult, learned the discipline from a standing start, and won Olympic gold in Vancouver in 2010 with pilot Kaillie Humphries. Four years later, in Sochi, the same pair defended the title.
She is also a World Rugby Hall of Famer, one of two Canadians ever inducted, and competed internationally in track cycling after taking up the sport during a rugby injury recovery. Three sports, all picked up later than the orthodox path allows, all carried to international level. The story is not about innate talent. It is about how a person decides what is realistic.
That decision sits at the centre of her work with organisations. Her keynote and coaching content draws on a Master’s in Occupational Therapy from the University of Toronto, which gives her a clinical vocabulary for performance most athletes do not have. She talks about how leaders narrow their own range of options under pressure, how recovery is engineered rather than waited for, and how the gap between current capability and the next required capability is closed in practice.
Her book Redefining ‘Realistic’ sets out the argument in long form, with a foreword by John C. Maxwell. The corporate work, with audiences at CIBC, BMW, Sun Life Financial, Fidelity Investments, the Royal Canadian Mint, the Canadian Armed Forces and others, applies it to leaders who are being asked to recalibrate their assumptions about what their teams can do, and how quickly.
Key speaking topics
- Self-leadership under pressure
- High-performance mindset and recovery
- Resilience as an operational discipline
- Goal-setting and capability acquisition
- Leading through uncertainty and setback
- Personal accountability and authentic leadership
Ideal for
- Executive leadership teams facing prolonged change or post-restructure recovery
- Sales and commercial leadership audiences where sustained performance under pressure is the central question
- Senior women’s leadership programmes and high-potential development cohorts
- Conferences where the closing keynote needs an authority voice on composure and reinvention
Audience outcomes
- A direct account of how elite performers manage themselves before, during, and after high-stakes moments
- A working definition of what counts as “realistic” and how that judgment limits or extends what teams attempt
- Specific tools for breaking large objectives into the next executable step under time pressure
- A clearer view of how recovery and preparation interact, drawn from Olympic-level practice rather than metaphor
Talks
A keynote on the four elements Moyse credits with her ability to reach Olympic level in three different sports, applied to leaders managing reinvention under pressure.
Key takeaways:
- How elite performers reset perspective when conditions change
- The mechanics of breaking ambitious objectives into executable steps
- How authentic leadership shows up in moments of setback
A keynote that pressure-tests the assumptions audiences hold about their own capacity, drawing on her recruitment into bobsleigh as an adult and her route to gold in Vancouver.
Key takeaways:
- How self-imposed limits shape strategic decisions
- Why preparation and recovery sit on the same axis
- How to read your own signals of capability versus comfort