Ally —
You have spent sixteen years helping other people find their voice. You built the programs, trained the coaches, designed the assessment, kept the global community standing through ownership changes, ethics scandals, and a network acquisition. You did the work nobody else could have done. And then, very quietly, you let your own brand sit on a shelf.
What I heard on our call wasn't a person who needs to find her gift. It was a person who can’t read the label from inside the jar — an Enneagram 8 with a peacemaker’s heart who can architect anyone else’s destiny but feels strange holding up her own. You said, “I’m good helping other people define it. For myself, I don’t know.” So we start there.
This proposal is one document, not three. It is built around the way you actually move — intensely, fast, and only on what feels resonant. It assumes you don’t want to be coached through generic frameworks. It assumes you want a strategist on your side of the table, an outside set of eyes that can see what you can’t, and a vehicle that finally lets the women you were made to lead know where to find you.
“I want to see people know who they are and then go and do what they were made to do. Especially leaders — because it is such a lonely place.”
Everything that follows is in service of that sentence.
With respect and a great deal of conviction,
Taylor Dempsey



