
Challenge
Gilead Sciences鈥 Commercial IT team, a 60-person global group supporting the sales and marketing arm of the organization, was experiencing massive shifts.
The U.S.-based team was relocated from Foster City to North Carolina, a new CIO had joined, and the department鈥檚 mandate was evolving: from IT service providers to strategic business partners.
Employee engagement scores within IT had dropped sharply. The team was under stress, and uptake on new ways of working was slow.
Gilead needed to shift mindsets without overwhelming an already burdened team.
Solution
With strong leadership from Mahul, a cultural champion within the IT group, Gilead partnered with Learnit to design a long-term, trust-centered learning strategy.
They started with an energizing, curiosity-sparking topic: Design Thinking. The goal was twofold: shift mental models and test team appetite for collaborative, instructor-led learning.
"The design thinking session was eye-opening. I hadn鈥檛 thought about user-first IT planning before." 鈥 Elena, Design Thinking
The success of the first session unlocked commitment from the team.
From there, Gilead launched a quarterly series of private workshops, serving both North America and a 鈥淩est of World鈥 cohort.
The curriculum followed a thoughtful arc鈥攕tarting with strategic and creative thinking, then building toward core skills like emotional intelligence, collaboration, and communication.
"Loved the energy in this workshop! Got real tools to reframe how I approach work." 鈥 Chris, Creative Thinking for Problem Solving
"This helped me better approach complex issues with a clear framework. I feel more equipped to think creatively and strategically." 鈥 Jared, Strategic Thinking
Topics rotated each quarter, often tied to broader company priorities鈥攍ike wellness, resilience, or annual planning.
The format and cadence helped normalize learning as part of team culture.
Results & Impact
Three years later, the program is still going strong鈥攚ith tangible cultural and operational results:
Low turnover: Gilead鈥檚 Commercial IT group has seen notably lower attrition than peer teams within IT.
Rising engagement: Internal surveys show improved morale and enthusiasm for team-building opportunities.
Sustained participation: Employees continue to sign up, engage, and advocate for the program.
Facilitator rapport: Learners view instructors like Christian as trusted partners鈥斺渁n extension of their team.鈥
"Christian felt like a member of our team. His style made it easy to be vulnerable and open up." 鈥 Lucas, EQ Series
"These sessions help break silos. I now know more about my peers and what they bring to the table." 鈥 Amir, Collaborative Leadership
"The global setup made me feel included. It was great to learn with colleagues from APAC and Europe." 鈥 Mei, Collaboration Across Borders
Most notably, even as topics shifted into deeper development areas like communication and EQ, enthusiasm didn鈥檛 fade鈥攊t grew.
"This gave me language to name and navigate difficult emotions at work鈥攕omething we never talk about in IT." 鈥 Priya, Emotional Intelligence
"I now approach conversations with more curiosity and less assumption. It鈥檚 made a difference in how my team responds." 鈥 Raj, Effective Communication
"Not your typical corporate training鈥攖his felt personal, real, and relevant." 鈥 Danielle, EQ for Leaders
In December 2024, Gilead committed to another two years of partnership with Learnit.
Why It Worked
Smart sequencing: Gilead started with high-energy, low-risk topics to build trust鈥攖hen layered in deeper behavioral skills.
Global inclusivity: Separate sessions for North America and 鈥淩est of World鈥 ensured accessibility and relevance.
Strong sponsorship: Mahul actively engaged the team, solicited feedback, and championed the program internally.
Facilitator consistency: Instructors like Christian built personal rapport with participants鈥攌nowing them by name and region.
What's Next
The Commercial IT team continues its quarterly cadence of workshops, with Learnit supporting both regional and skill-based themes.
The program has become more than a training plan鈥攊t鈥檚 a pillar of the group鈥檚 culture.
Future goals include:
- Tying learning more closely to career growth and internal collaboration goals
- Continuing to use learning as a retention and engagement strategy
- Exploring ways to scale the model across other Gilead departments