Spire Training Group isn’t your typical consulting and training company.

We are a team of proven leaders who have deliberately chosen a different path for our professional lives, giving us a perspective and training approach that is completely different from our competitors.

Our team members aren’t talkers – we’re doers.

Our home base is in the Green Mountains of Vermont, so we start our mornings with the real sweat of a trail run up Camel’s Hump rather than the treadmill rat race in Planet Fitness.

We followed the path of tactical leadership, mountain guiding, and community-level development rather than the suit and tie of the boardroom – we provide pivotal experiences that stick in your head and might forever change the way you approach leadership, planning, and human relationships.

Put simply, Spire is built to be different, because different is always the first step in evolution.

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The Spire Logo … What’s it Mean?

Historically, a “spire” has always been a position of advantage that leaders use to see the world in different ways. In early astronomy, revolutionary thinkers climbed to the top of the highest point in a city or on a mountain to position their telescopes and understand the motion of the world. Military leaders sought to gain access to spires to allow them to see the battlefield and make decisions.

As a vantage point, a spire allows us to see both ourselves and the challenges we face – it gives us perspective about our position in the world and where we need to go to acquire an advantage through new knowledge or positioning.

The Spire logo nods to this – the sharp pinnacle is the spire itself, surrounded by the circle of the world around us that we seek to understand. The constellation is Ursa Minor, the Little Bear, with Polaris the North Star at the pinnacle. Ursa Minor reminds us of two things – first, that climbing the spire is an arduous task, but one that gets us a better look at the world around us, and second, that we must remain focused on a guiding “true north” of values and ethics to help us navigate the world.