Add On Coaching to Transform Your Journey

You've proven your capabilities and delivered exceptional results. Now it's time to elevate your influence, amplify your visibility, and build a career that truly reflects your potential—all while maintaining work-life harmony.

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Woman Leaders Coaching Business

Accelerated Career Growth

At your career level, hard work alone isn't the challenge—strategic focus, expert guidance, and structured support make the difference. You've absorbed enough information. What you need now is an actionable roadmap, consistent accountability, and expert coaching that empowers you to lead with confidence in high-pressure situations.

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Define your strategic career direction

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Enhance your executive leadership presence

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Cultivate powerful professional networks

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Increase your impact and earning potential

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Eliminate barriers to your advancement

Breakthrough Results, Unlimited Potential

  • Understand your roadblocks

    Discover Crystal-Clear Career Purpose

    Gain absolute clarity on your professional aspirations—defining your ideal role, desired impact, healthy boundaries, and the authentic leadership identity you're cultivating. Eliminate doubt and advance with unwavering confidence in your direction.

  • Lead more effectively

    Transform Into a High-Impact Leader

    Elevate your leadership capabilities—mastering communication excellence, commanding presence, strategic decision-making, and authentic influence—positioning yourself as the professional who can manage expanded responsibilities while maintaining sustainable energy and work-life balance.

  • Thrive in hard times

    Build Sustainable Energy and Resilience

    Develop lasting practices and systems that fuel peak performance. Lead with composure, minimize stress and overwhelm, and cultivate the sustained vitality that makes professional excellence feel natural and energizing—never depleting.

  • Recruit and retain top talent

    Cultivate Powerful Professional and Personal Relationships

    Develop deeper connections in your professional and personal life through decisive, confident leadership. Enhance communication effectiveness, minimize conflicts, and establish robust support networks that align with and accelerate your ambitious goals.

  • Increase revenue

    Eliminate Career-Limiting Obstacles

    Recognize and transform the subtle behaviors limiting your advancement—excessive perfectionism, self-doubt, people-pleasing tendencies, decision paralysis, and overcompensation patterns—empowering you to lead with genuine authority and confidence.

  • Stay on track

    Design Your Strategic Career Roadmap

    Complete the program with a comprehensive, outcome-focused strategic plan and ongoing weekly accountability structures. You'll possess complete clarity on your next steps—supported by systems and community that sustain your progress well beyond program completion.

Expert Guidance Unlocks Unlimited Career Potential

You've moved beyond needing inspiration—what you require is a proven methodology and strategic support network.

Women Leaders Association Executive Coaching integrates professional expertise, practical implementation frameworks, and an exceptional community of accomplished professionals who understand the complexities of modern leadership. Within 8 focused weeks, you'll establish meaningful objectives, develop comprehensive strategies, and generate measurable progress that elevates both your confidence and your career path.

With complete membership benefits and event access included in both programs, you're never navigating this journey in isolation. You're simultaneously expanding your professional network, increasing your industry visibility, and building unstoppable career momentum.

Claim Your Complimentary 30-Minute
Career Strategy Consultation

Connect with our expert coaching team to define your career aspirations and discover the optimal program. Schedule your consultation with an executive coach today.

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What Recent Participants Say

★★★★★   4.9     Google Verified Business Reviews
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"Inspiring speakers who motivate us all to build our relationships with our fellow women leaders."

- Jolene Vos-Camy, Calvin University

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"I highly recommend this community for all women."

- Giselle Sandy-Phillips, Constellation

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"Great webinar topics and speakers! Looking forward to more ..."

- Dolly Greenhalgh, Playworks

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"The meetings are always valuable to me."

- Julie Mobley, Cullman Internal Medicine

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"The speakers are really great. They offer practical advice and inspiration for women in the workplace."

- Krista Bednorz, Wayne & Roberts

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"Came through again with meaningful content that was a valuable use of my time."

- Maria McWilliams, Vanderlande

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"Really enjoy the speakers and the connection to other women leaders. Valuable group."

- Shannon McVeigh, RSM Enterprises

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"Great thought provoking presentations."

- Tamaki Stratman, The Historical Society

Miami Business Women Coaching Services Buyer's Guide


Overview from a Buyer's Perspective.

The first mistake a business woman can make with executive coaching is to treat it like outsourcing my growth. A coach is not a mechanic who disappears my flaws while I keep running at full speed. The real value is that coaching gives me a structured place to think more honestly, see my patterns more clearly, and make better leadership choices under pressure. That only happens when I bring a real agenda. Vague ambitions like “be more strategic” or “be a better leader” are too soft to change my behavior. I need to name the actual leadership problem in front of me: a team I am overmanaging, a culture that has grown too quiet, a board relationship that has become defensive, or a habit of solving instead of listening. Coaching becomes effective when it is anchored in business reality, not abstract self-improvement.

Once I know what I want to change, I have to accept that useful coaching will feel uncomfortable. If every session leaves me feeling polished, affirmed, and untouched, I am probably being entertained rather than developed. The most valuable moments usually begin when I stop explaining myself and start examining myself. That means taking responsibility for the part I play in problems instead of blaming the market, my team, my boss, or the pace of the business. It also means admitting that some strengths may be overextended and now working against me. The decisiveness that built my career may now shut other people down. The high standards that made me successful may now look like control. Coaching works when I am willing to sit with that tension long enough to change, not just long enough to describe it.

From there, I have to turn feedback into data rather than drama. Senior leaders often get less truth than they need, partly because people around them are careful, political, or intimidated. So if I want coaching to work, I cannot wait passively for clarity; I have to go get it. I ask my boss, peers, and direct reports what I do that helps them, what I do that makes their work harder, and what they wish I would do more or less often. Then my job is not to argue, explain, or cross-examine. My job is to get curious, look for patterns, and separate intention from impact. Coaching is especially powerful here because it helps me translate raw feedback into a practical picture of how other people actually experience me, which is the only leadership reputation that really matters.

But insight alone is not progress. Effective executive coaching becomes visible between sessions, not just during them. I need to leave each conversation with one or two behavioral experiments specific enough to test in the real world: ask more questions before making a call, let silence do some work in meetings, delegate the outcome instead of the method, recap conflict without assigning blame, or ask a colleague how my behavior landed before I defend my logic. Small changes, practiced consistently, beat dramatic declarations every time. I also need a way to review what happened. What did I try? What resistance did I feel? What response did I get? What would I repeat? Coaching starts to compound when reflection and action feed each other, turning self-awareness into judgment, and judgment into new habits that people around me can actually feel.

It also helps when I stop treating coaching as a private side conversation and start treating it as a supported leadership effort. The more appropriate the situation, the more useful it is to tell key stakeholders what I am working on. If I say to my team, “I am trying to listen longer before I jump in,” or to my peers, “I am working on being clearer in disagreement,” I create both accountability and permission. People can then notice progress, name blind spots, and respond to the change I say I want to make. Just as important, I need the relationship with my coach to be candid and adjustable. If I need more challenge, more structure, more reflection, or more directness, I should say so. Great coaching is not mind reading; it is a working alliance built on honesty, fit, and a shared commitment to my development.

In the end, I know coaching is working not because I have better vocabulary for my issues, but because my leadership produces better outcomes. My team becomes more open with me. Decisions get clearer. Conflict gets cleaner. Other people grow because I create more space for them. I recover faster when I get something wrong. I become less obsessed with looking impressive and more committed to being useful. That is what makes executive coaching effective from my side of the table: I own the agenda, I welcome the truth, I practice new behavior in public, and I measure success by changed impact, not by good intentions. The goal is not to become a perfected version of myself. The goal is to become a more aware, more adaptive, more trustworthy leader in the real conditions of work.



Key Questions to Ask and Consider.
These are the questions that come up most often when someone is deciding whether to hire an executive coach.

1. Do I need a coach, or do I really need a consultant, mentor, or therapist?
A coach is usually the right choice when you need better thinking, better decisions, and sustained behavior change, not just advice. If you mainly want expert answers, a consultant or mentor may be better; if the core issue is emotional distress or unresolved personal history, therapy is the better lane.

2. Is this coach actually qualified for someone at my level?
Look for two kinds of credibility: real coach training or credentialing, and enough business context to understand executive pressure, politics, and complexity. Credentials help you clear a quality bar, but relevant experience with leaders facing goals like yours is what makes the coaching usable.

3. Will this person be a strong fit for me?
Chemistry is not a luxury; it is what makes honesty possible. A good discovery call should tell you whether the coach listens well, asks sharp questions, adapts to your style, and can challenge you without turning the relationship into a performance. If the fit feels off early, that usually gets more expensive, not better.

4. How will we define success and know it’s working?
Before you hire, ask for a concrete picture of the engagement: the goals, the behaviors that should change, who will notice the difference, how often you will meet, and when you will review progress. Strong coaching does not stop at reflection; it converts insight into action, follow-through, and accountability.

5. What stays confidential, especially if my company is paying?
This should be explicit before the first session. In a well-run engagement, private session content stays private, while any updates to a boss, HR partner, or sponsor are defined in advance and limited to agreed themes, goals, or progress markers.

6. What is the average cost for an executive coach?
The broader coaching market averages $234 an hour globally, but executive coaching usually prices higher—think roughly $300–$350 an hour for many engagements, with C-suite specialists often at $1,000+ and 6- to 12-month packages commonly landing in the $10,000–$60,000 range.

7. What is the 70 30 rule in coaching?
It usually means the client does about 70% of the talking and the coach about 30%, mostly through questions rather than advice. The point is simple: great coaching creates insight and ownership, not a smarter lecture.

8. What is the best executive coaching program?
There is no universal “best”; the strongest programs pair experienced coaches with research-based methods, clear business goals, and measurable outcomes. That is why offerings like CCL’s leadership coaching stand out, while ICF standards and accredited education remain the cleanest quality filter when comparing options.

9. Who are the top executive coaches?
There is no single official ranking everyone agrees on, but widely cited names include Marshall Goldsmith, John Mattone, Alisa Cohn, and Carol Kauffman. The deeper truth is that the “top” coach is usually the one whose specialty matches your challenge—CEO behavior change, founder scaling, culture transformation, or high-stakes leadership.


Useful Articles
The Leader as Coach
Why the best teams treat feedback as a practice-not an event
How to Give (and Receive) Critical Feedback
Why Leaders Should Stop Treating Leadership as a Burden
How Leaders Can Get the Feedback They Need to Grow
Coaching leaders to solve complex problems, build relationships, and spark creativity



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When you're prepared to transition from analysis to action—supported by proven frameworks, expert guidance, and an empowering professional community—book your complimentary career strategy consultation today.

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