Mark Noon
Most senior teams know who is performing today. Far fewer know who is ready to step into the next seat, and why. Leadership benches collapse not through bad hiring but through the absence of disciplined, repeatable habits that develop people in the role they already hold.
Mark Noon is a retired U.S. Air Force Major and executive leadership coach who helps healthcare and operationally complex organisations build disciplined leader development systems, stronger engagement, and a successor bench that holds.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Mark Noon
- He has built leadership benches inside two of the most accountability-driven environments in American working life: the U.S. Air Force medical system and Studer Group’s healthcare client base. Senior teams get someone who has run the work, not described it.
- His signature framework, Set Up To Step In, gives organisations a concrete method for preparing successors before the seat opens, drawn from his book Set Up: Timeless Leadership Skills for Your Success.
- He has coached and presented inside more than 300 organisations across 43 states and several countries, which means the playbook has been pressure-tested across hospital systems, military units, and civilian operating environments.
- He treats employee engagement as a discipline rather than a sentiment, anchored in structured one-on-one rounding practices that frontline managers can repeat weekly.
- He pairs Studer Group’s service excellence lineage with first-hand command experience, a combination that lands credibly with clinical leaders who are sceptical of theory imported from outside healthcare.
Biography highlights
- Retired U.S. Air Force Major after roughly 20 years of service, including 12 years as a commissioned officer and clinical lab director.
- Career path moved from enlisted laboratory technician to officer with immediate appointment to a lab management role.
- Served across nine assignments in seven U.S. states and a tour of duty in the Middle East.
- Spent approximately eight years as a coach with Studer Group, working with healthcare systems on operational and service excellence.
- Currently a Professional Speaker, Executive Coach and Developer of Leaders with LeadershipTen.
- Author of Set Up: Timeless Leadership Skills for Your Success (T.H.E. Studer Group, 2018).
Biography
The hardest moment in any organisation is the one nobody schedules: a seat opens, and the person expected to fill it is not ready. That gap is rarely a hiring problem. It is the cumulative result of small leadership habits that were never made routine.
Mark Noon spent 20 years inside the U.S. Air Force watching that pattern up close, then nearly a decade at Studer Group helping healthcare leaders fix it. He retired as a Major after 12 years as a commissioned officer and clinical lab director, with assignments across seven states and a tour in the Middle East. The path from enlisted lab technician to officer running a lab gave him a working theory of leadership grounded in operational reality rather than abstraction.
That theory became Set Up: Timeless Leadership Skills for Your Success, published by T.H.E. Studer Group in 2018. The book and its companion keynote, Set Up To Step In, treat succession as a daily discipline, not an annual planning exercise. Leaders are not chosen, they are prepared, through repeatable habits that show up in how meetings are run, how feedback is given, and how one-on-one rounding is conducted with the people closest to the work.
His client work now runs through LeadershipTen, where he coaches and speaks inside hospital systems, military units, and operationally demanding civilian organisations. The footprint covers more than 300 organisations across 43 states and several countries, which gives senior teams something useful: a coach who has seen which engagement and culture practices survive contact with a stretched workforce, and which do not.
Key speaking topics
- Leader development and succession readiness
- Employee engagement and one-on-one rounding
- Culture aligned to strategy
- Healthcare leadership and service excellence
- Managing up and team reliability
- Lessons from military command for civilian leaders
Ideal for
- Healthcare CEOs, COOs, and chief nursing officers building leader benches across hospital systems
- Heads of leadership development and learning leaders responsible for succession and frontline manager capability
- Senior military and veteran-serving organisations translating command experience into civilian operating practice
- Operationally complex organisations where frontline leadership turnover threatens service quality
Audience outcomes
- A clear, named set of habits that distinguish leaders who are setting up successors from those who are not
- A working method for one-on-one rounding that frontline managers can run inside their existing week
- Language for talking about engagement as an operational discipline, not a survey result
- A frame for connecting daily leader behaviours to the strategy and culture senior teams have already committed to
- Confidence that the practices have been tested across military, healthcare, and civilian operating environments
Talks
A keynote on preparing successor leaders before the seat opens, drawn from the book Set Up.
Key takeaways:
- Why most succession plans fail at the habit layer, not the talent layer
- The daily leader behaviours that quietly build a successor bench
- How to identify and develop people who are ready to step in, not just step up
A talk on the managing-up disciplines that hold teams together inside complex operating environments.
Key takeaways:
- What managing up looks like when it is a team discipline, not a political move
- How to build the trust signals that allow leaders above and below to rely on each other
- Practical routines that turn collaboration from an aspiration into a working habit
A keynote on one-on-one rounding as the core practice behind sustained engagement.
Key takeaways:
- Why rounding outperforms surveys as an engagement instrument
- The questions and cadence that make a one-on-one useful for both sides
- How frontline managers fit rounding into a stretched operating week