choice Magazine

Beyond the Page ~ The Universe Winks

October 18, 2022 Garry Schleifer
choice Magazine
Beyond the Page ~ The Universe Winks
Show Notes Transcript

In this interview, we talk with DJ Mitsch about her article, The Universe Winks ~ Creating out of strategic intent

Strategic intent, as defined by Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahald, is the "reason of existence of an organization and the ends it wants to achieve."  While this is a solid definition, what is missing in this statement is that a strategic intent also harnesses a law of physics: whatever you intend and hold as possible will draw you forward or compel you to attain it.  Taking note of this, DJ helped to start the Pyramid Resource Group with a solid business plan that was obsolete by the time it went to print. As the business grew, the notion of creating out of strategic intent became their pattern. 

DJ is a thought leader in the business coaching field, as a founding member of the International Coaching Federation and one of the first 25 coaches in the world to earn a Master Certified Coach designation.

She was the 6th President of ICF Global where she developed the template and committees to shape chapter development throughout the world.  DJ is also the CEO of Pyramid Resource Group, Inc a 25 year-old award winning coaching company, and founder of Pyramid’s Leadership and Healthcare Coaching Institute. 

Join us as we learn more from DJ about how coaches and consultants can convey goals or visions and missions using strategic intent.


Watch the full interview by clicking here.

Find the full article here: https://bit.ly/btp_mitsch

Learn more about DJ here.

Grab your free issue of choice Magazine here - https://choice-online.com/
In this episode, I talk with DJ about her article published in our September 2022  issue.

Speaker 1:

Hi, I'm Garry Schleifer, and this is Beyond the Page brought to you by choice, The Magazine of Professional Coaching. choice is more than just a magazine. It's a community of people who use and share coaching tools, tips, and techniques to add value to their businesses and impact their clients. And we'll come back to the word impact later on in the conversation. It's an institution of learning that's been built over the course of 20 years. Yes, we've been publishing for 20 years. Dedicated to improving the lives of coaches and their clients. In today's episode, I am speaking with author Darelyn"DJ" Mitch, who wrote an article for our latest issue entitled The Universe Winks~Creating Out of Strategic Intent. DJ's a thought leader in the business coaching field as a founding member of the International Coaching Federation. Back then, it was the Coach Federation. And one of the first 25 coaches in the world to earn a master certified coach designation. Congratulations, MCC. She was the sixth president of the ICF, International Coaching Federation Global, where she developed a template and committees to shape chapter, I did not know this, shape chapter development throughout the world. DJ's, also CEO of Pyramid Resource Group, Inc., a 25-year-old award winning coaching company and founder of Pyramid's Leadership and Healthcare Coaching Institute. With the energy and exuberance of two people, I think it's more but anyway, DJ is dedicated to unleash leaders to create vibrant and conscious companies. Her core belief is that coaching has the power to change the global conversation one leader, one team, and one company at a time. DJ created the Team Advantage, the original team coaching program in 1995, and has trained thousands of coaches throughout the world. Her corporate clients refer to her as a magician and describe DJ as someone who can accelerate leadership and team development while blending the human spirit into business practices so it is just normal enough. Wow. Welcome, DJ. Thank you so much for joining me today. And you have the energy of a dozen people. I'm just saying you've, you write for us regularly. You've also been an advertiser. Your history with the coaching profession, let alone just ICF, is well globally known and it's always a delight to meet with you and call you my friend.

Speaker 2:

Oh, you are my friend and Garry, I'm so thrilled to be here because choice is so needed in the world. You know, I think we all met at one of our mini conferences and sat in the corner and looked at do we continue with this? Do we not continue with this magazine? And it was like, absolutely, you've got to keep going because anything that's an upstart, as we know, it has has to have some time to really build.

Speaker 1:

20 years enough? Is 20 years enough time?

Speaker 2:

Yeah. It is and those of us who are mentors who write for your magazine, who've mentored a lot of coaches around the world, I think really see the need to continue to cultivate articles. So thank you.

Speaker 1:

Thank you. Well, and you know, and it's a gift that keeps on giving because the articles that you write or you read then end up being part of courses and programs in the schools and universities that train coaches. So please feel free. You've written many, so thank you for your permission to do so, and also for regularly writing.

Speaker 2:

You're welcome.

Speaker 1:

So we mentioned earlier about impact because we were talking a little bit about how it's a favorite word of yours, and this happens to be in the Impact Column. So why is that so important and important to you?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think if we all shared a epitaph, it would be that we made a difference somewhere, right? I think that's a common thread for most human beings. Truthfully. I know it is for most leaders, and so where would we offer our services in ways that could be impactful? And I did not seek out coaching, right? I hired a coach to help me determine which job I would take next.

Speaker 1:

Oh, wow.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Back in the olden days, right, when I was a broadcast executive and the company that I had managed, which was a new sports station plus a contemporary hit station, The Last Series had been sold while I was in the hospital given birth.

Speaker 1:

Oh, there's that 12 people and work again.

Speaker 2:

And so I thought, you know, as I set out to look at the offers that came after that, nothing resonated with me, except that I wanted to spend more time with my children. So when I hired a coach to help me figure it out, in the third session with Susan Klein, and I said to Susan, this is what I wanna do. She said, Well of course it is. It's what you were born to do. And so, going into the impact conversation, for me, it was simply at that point creating a family life and a lifestyle business and working with my husband, which was, he's a scientist by education, very different than I am. So we started out that way is where can we provide impact in our community? Where can we be of service? And it was around leadership and changing the conversation and spirituality, honestly. How spirituality blends into that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Well, even your title adds a little bit of mystery and spirituality, the universe winks. Tell us more about what had you write this and let's get talking about strategic intent.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Strategic intent. So, I think in coaching, particularly as we become more evidence based and there's more of a science foundation, we have forgotten. I see a lot of people move in that direction as if that's the only way. There's a real either or going on in the coaching profession. And so when I thought about where can I be impactful, it was to bring the both"and" conversation back into the center, the origins of how coaching was really put forward. And it came out of this notion, I think Meg Wheatley spoke in 2001 at a conference in Chicago that I've mentioned in one of my articles. But she said,"We're not making this up. Coaching is being called out of us because this is our time to serve the universe." And for me, it was a convergent path because I had been on a journey as a broadcaster where one of my managers, I was a leader of this company, and one of them had gotten breast cancer. And so we did a deep spiritual dive together. And the bottom line in all of that is that's written in a book called Mystic Grits, A Southern Girls Journey to Wisdom because what I realized is the minute that we all galvanized our efforts around growing individually and collectively as a team, and particularly in the spiritual conversations, which were always underlying everything, all the business got handled beautifully above all the expectations anybody had of us and it got easy. So I thought about it and I thought where can I bring that notion forward into the business community in a way that everybody can put their hands around, right? S o it's to go back and pull the science b ack through and the universe, I think in coaching, a lot of people refer to the universe like they really know what it means. And I don't think any of us really do understand it. We can only observe it. We can only be mystified by the fact that this is, you know, with the web telescope out. Right? I don't know if you've seen all of Google pictures, but O-M-G what we're discovering. When we think that this little globe that we're on or our solar system or any of this is it, this is not the universe. The universe is the flow of information and energy and that is the cleanest definition I've found. It's just the flow of that. Every day we are basically harnessing the energy of that universal flow of things. So when we talk about the universe wins, it's like every day I get a nod that something I said or something I did was right on the money, right? We call those sometimes goosebumps, right? The aha moments. When there's a real resonance, whether it's in an individual conversation, something I am teaching or something I'm studying that somebody's teaching me. And so, for me it's like how do we know when something is good and when we're making an impact? So it's a nod that way. For example, one day I was laying on the foot of my bed and I had just lost this friend that I'm telling you about from broadcasting. She just died.

Speaker 1:

Oh, sorry.

Speaker 2:

There was an old planter in my bedroom that had a dead plant in it. I took the plant out, and I put it back in and just left it open. I thought, you know what I really love? I really love a beautiful tall plant in there. That afternoon, one of my clients, one of my coaching clients, sent me a beautiful plant for something that we had done together that filled the urn.

Speaker 1:

Oh my.

Speaker 2:

For me, it's like the universe winked.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It was sort of just a notion of this is at play all the time, we just don't see it, Garry. We don't notice.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. No, we don't. And we do, we're starting to, and like you said, we really don't know what that big word universe really means. We think we're it like you say, on this tiny little thing here and the more we go out there, we realize w e're just a microcosm to the rest of that thing we call the universe. We also use universe a little interchangeably too, right? Not just physically, but a lot I use it spiritually. Yeah. It's a word that everybody can, isn't that weird? I just thought of that. It's a word that everybody accepts. Y eah. So if you believe in God or Allah or, or, or, when you say the universe, everybody knows that that can mean whatever it means to you. It's like a universal translator,

Speaker 2:

Right? It is.

Speaker 1:

I just thought of that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So that's a beautiful way of really capturing it and characterizing it. So then how do we tap into it? There was a big move around The Secret as a book and video series and all of that some time ago. I don't know that it's really so much a secret as to how to tap into it as it is harnessing what Albert Einstein said, which was simply, and I'm gonna condense this. He had, in 19 something, he had written to a Sunday school class that had sent him an inquiry. A little girl had asked him, is there a God? Do scientists believe in God? He essentially said that science follows spirit. I mean, it's a long, actually, I've written it down."Everyone who is seriously engaged in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that the laws of nature manifest the existence of the spirit vastly superior to that of men and one in the face of which our modest powers must seem humble." I l ove that quote. W ow. And Albert Einstein is sort of an example of humble, right, and h ow he went about studies and everything he taught. So a s we b egin to think about it, and we b egin to observe ourselves in t his space, particularly those of us who are now elders in this profession, it's like, what are we really saying to people when we talk about the universe? I think that's the first piece in the article is just every word matters, right? The universe winks, and then the strategic intent piece. You know, for years there was this study of quality management and quality circles and all that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

You remember those back in the eighties, right?

Speaker 1:

Yep.

Speaker 2:

Those were front and center in the radio stations, broadcast companies I managed. And so I looked at that and I thought there's process meeting something that I own that is my spirituality, right? There's a process piece, but there's something inherent in this that we need to learn more about. So Barry and I hired a coach who was working with couples, and these are couples that were entrepreneurs and upstarts. He would bring us together to look at, through quantum physics, basically, how we were creating our businesses. His name is Alan Collins. I haven't touched based with him in years. I don't know if he's still practicing out of Miami, Florida, but I'll just do a shout out. But the notion was that every month we studied a different topic, including how we held money and how we held different things in the origin of our business. And so our strategic intention, which was one of the things we spent about four months cultivating, was to change leadership so that there were more conscious conversations. That came from what I experienced with my friend who passed away, who was a manager for me. And it came from a lot of other points of entry in this process of discovery we were in as a couple becoming business partners, which I don't recommend to everybody.

Speaker 1:

It's like, don't coach your spouse.

Speaker 2:

Right, right, right. But even i n his engagement proposal, which was in Bermuda overlooking Church Bay, and he pulled a ring out of his sock and he said, We're gonna do some great things together. Will y ou marry me? And I was l ike, How can you turn that down?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Right.

Speaker 2:

But the great things together, we had no idea what that meant. We had just been dating a couple years, so it was a really interesting thing, but it was a foundation for us to go into this business, which is about raising conscious conversation.

Speaker 1:

Wow. What a great story too. I didn't know that. And 37 years later,

Speaker 2:

37 years later. Married Oh my God.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. And very different points of impact in our work. And then we come together with our group, which is an amazing group of people, and that becomes more impactful, right? If you go back to the spiritual basis, it's the where two or more people are gathered in the name of something, right? When you're focused, like, coaches are focused now having the human system become more conscious and connected. Yeah. And that's a big deal.

Speaker 1:

It is a big deal. And interesting that you and we were at the forefront of all of this shift. There's a better word for that, but when coaching came out, so to speak, when it was born or evolved, I mean, it's still evolving, don't get me wrong, but it's real now. 25 years later, give or take, 26 years later. And the impact we're making. I love this article, and I wanted to, I guess, learn how to use the words strategic intention in conversations to be of service. And I h ad trouble separating it from normal business practices, like strategic planning. Can you help me out with that?

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So first, back up and let me know what is your purpose on the planet? Why are you here?

Speaker 1:

Oh man. It so many things, and yet they all seem so trivial when we talk about the size of the universe, right? To serve, I'm here to be of service. I'm using coaching and choice as the vehicles that I'm using to be of service to, I don't want to say just create awareness, but you said it when you said the universe winks and the goosebumps and the aha moments. I live for those. And I know that's not the only thing coaching should provide, but boy, does that ever give you a little charge, right? It's like, Ooh. Even when you said it and you were talking about some stuff around it, I was getting goosebumps. So that's it.

Speaker 2:

But there's one piece of all of this that is a piece you know gives you the goosebumps. What is it? What resonates with you when you're of service and you know the articles in the magazine you're publishing are so on the money? What is that? What does it give you?

Speaker 1:

The word that keeps popping into my head and I don't know why is connection.

Speaker 2:

Okay, good. So one of the root words for you is that you're a connector, right? It's an archetype that you bring to life in a lot of your conversations. You're doing it today with this interview. So maybe part of your purpose anyway, as we sort through this, is that you are connecting who with who? You're connecting coaches around the world, but you're doing more than that. So if this is the pebble in the pond, and there's a ripple effect, who ultimately receives the benefit of the work you do?

Speaker 1:

Oh, my family, me, my husband, the profession of coaching, my clients. I always love thinking when you say ripple, and by the way, that was the first cover of the first issue of choice was a globe dropping in and causing a ripple.

Speaker 2:

I still have my copy.

Speaker 1:

I just dug one out. It's around here somewhere. But it's knowing and see now that's giving me goosebumps. It's knowing that the conversation I'm having with the person I'm having it with, whether it be a client or a connection like yourself, this conversation is going to affect other people. It's going to ripple out, but it's also going to be inside of their ripple. When my, my intent is pure and my presence is there for whoever I'm with, it will always be for the better good.

Speaker 2:

Okay. Good. Yeah. I think most coaches share this mantle and this approach, right? That what we are doing is we are raising the consciousness level in our conversations for ourselves and others. I mean, it's not like we came to this knowing and wise and sage-like. We came to this, as a result of our own personal development and something that was being created. So I think you said it in that, you know, your work is around stretching and connecting people in this global conversation called coaching. And that you have a couple of different ways of doing that. I would ask you to just keep playing with that, right? So there are four steps that I put in the article, in the pattern. One is what's compelling you to take this story of who you are into the work that you do. And you already have realized a lot of that, Garry, if we just stay with you here. Step two is, who do you serve with this intent? For us, it's leaders and it can be youth leaders, it can be women leaders, it can be leaders of teams. It's leaders, right? And step three, boil it down to the five words which capture meaning. So if I ask you and you kind of summarize what we were just talking about, what are the four to five words that you want to just make sure are always in front of you

Speaker 1:

I'll tell you the two that are right now be bold and be provocative.

Speaker 2:

Okay. So that's about you doing something differently. But what does bold and provocative give you? Who does it serve

Speaker 1:

Everyone in that it allows them the opportunity to be the same. To be free.

Speaker 2:

Okay, Good. So what you're doing is you're unleashing the boldness and the provocative questions in others, right?

Speaker 1:

So I would say boldness and provocative nature in others. Okay, good. Or now possibility.

Speaker 2:

Okay, good. So now when somebody says, what's your strategic intent? It's to unleash the bold and provocative nature in others. Now you're in a different conversation.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And then the way that you do it, right? The how to gets really easy. It's like this is how I know I'm doing it through my writing and the publishing. This is how I do it with my individual clients. This is how I do it with all those that I'm putting forward, who were thought leaders in this business, in these ways in the broadcast.

Speaker 1:

Thank you. Yeah, exactly. Well, obviously I have to write a new Post-it note. Yeah. It's time because that one is the only one in front of me. I'll have one at a time.

:

But it's about who you're being but then the focus is on, instead of it being a strategic intent, that's sort of a capturing a storyboard for yourself or an archetype, right? So what you're doing is you're becoming a catalyst in that way. Yeah. But I heard you say that the connection was the important part of the work. That's the action actionable piece is how you're moving things forward. So that's how I would it.

Speaker 1:

Well, in connection and collaboration. Like, I connect people to other people. I connect people like yourselves, you and I, to the world. Believe it or not, there might be a few people that have never heard of you. So I want to reach them. And then collaboration, connecting to collaborate. What do they say that the group is more than the sum of its parts. Yeah. Right? And I totally get that. And I hate working in isolation. So my way out is collaboration and connection.

Speaker 2:

Well, I think that's the other piece of being of service, is that we have a longing and coaches can get lonely, right? We have a longing to be connected with other people which is why we developed a group right away. I had an article produced on me because I was pretty visible in our area on the broadcast side. So when I became a coach, there was this full spread article and everything. I 23 clients and I was like, Oh, I'm going to need some help.

Speaker 1:

Right?

Speaker 2:

So part of it is I love working with other people. I love the collaborations. I never do anything alone. I really don't, other than my coaching one on one. But that's always with the client, right? So it's like beginning to look at not only our personal branding, which is big in coaching, but also around who are we collaborating with, who are we connecting? And you've been very clear about that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

You know, you gave me this and I think you've alluded to why you think that strategic intentions are a needed way for designing futures. Because I can see mine evolving differently than the four words I started with when you asked me.

Speaker 2:

We've been using this process and the theory of strategic intent for many years in our teamwork. For example, we'll have accomplishment narratives written ahead of time. So when we finish putting together business plans with strategic plans with folks, we'll just ask them to project themselves out for six months and to say where they are, what they've realized, and to really write into their future. And just that simple exercise has been significant. For example, one vaccine group in a pharmaceutical company, we are going to eradicate a disease state for which we have a therapy.

Speaker 1:

Wow.

Speaker 2:

And they had a vaccine for H1N1 and when H1N1 came out, they had 900 new reps in place, they had the vaccine available, they had end aisle displays in drug stores around pharmacist counters, et cetera. They had done everything they needed to do in four months to prepare for the launch of that drug. They could have chosen any drug, but they chose that one. H1N1, which is bird flu, came around and they had everything in place to handle it. So it's like, what are the strategic intentions that we need to be holding politically geopolitically. Right now I think coaches want to change the world for the better. We all have these big notions and then sometimes we feel small and alone because we can't figure out where to start to have that level of impact. But the truth is, you start right where you are. And your level of impact is in loving the people in front of you. When I started this business with Barry and we had a lot of coaches that we were beginning to deploy in places, I was meditating one night. I had a sick baby, sick infant and I'd been up for two days. I was just meditating and I thought, what is it that I'm really supposed to be doing here? Do I need to just stop all the motion with the business and just focus on being a mom? And got really quiet in my meditation and the message that came like a lightning bolt was just love the people I put in front of you. Oh, okay.

Speaker 1:

That's easy. Right. Check that one.

Speaker 2:

That is part of the strategic intention. And then what showed up in front of us were, you know, women, I did a lot of work with women's groups and coaching, et cetera, but also with women in our area I saw a friend who had just walked outta McDonald's and she said, There's a woman in our McDonald's. We're in Carey, North Carolina, which is$ 110,000 per capita median household income. I mean it's wealthy area. Y eah. She saw a woman walk out of McDonald's with her two children. She got in her car and she had bathed them, fed them a breakfast biscuit, split it between the two of t hem a nd t aken them to school. She was living i n her car in our area. And I was like, this cannot be, this cannot be. My intention around that was to do something to help those women. So a couple weeks later I am presenting to a group of GSK women leaders and a woman who had been also presenting that day walked up to me afterwards. Her name was Pat Nathan and she was the foremost female for Dell Computers who did their sustainability projects around the world. She had moved back here, home, to Chapel Hill and she said, You know, I really want to start, I'm starting a Dress for Success chapter here and I want to start it with a good board and I've just collected four or five people. She said, would you meet me for breakfast? I said, you bet. I looked at what she was up to and she said, do you know anybody who might want to be part of my board. And I was like, are you asking me? She said, would you do it? This is small. And I was like, Oh yeah. So I was so excited to get started with her and it really helped her build out the board. I'm so proud of what that organization does. I'm emeritus now and I go to the fundraisers and that kind of thing, but it really is making an impact.

Speaker 1:

Impact. And I've heard of that group even here in Canada.

Speaker 2:

Around the world. Yeah. It's global.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. And there's a men's version as well here that I've contributed to myself. Good. Because it's just amazing to help others that way. I'd like to acknowledge you and Barry for, that's not all you guys do, and I think you mention a little bit in the article, but you are so much involved in your community, in ways outside of coaching, that it's just amazing. And I recommend that anyone listening to this recording take a look and see the kind of things that you do and the kind of things that they can do as well.

Speaker 2:

If you're looking for a pattern, just read this article because there is one. There's stuff in front of you to do coaches that's more than just going out and selling yourself. It's go be of service somewhere.

Speaker 1:

Right. Like we said, coaching is being of service. Yeah. But being in your community be of service, right? That's right. And in fact, if you're a follower of the International Coaching Federation, the core competencies, it suggests contributing back to and it doesn't always have to be just the coaching community. Give back to any community., right? No, that's awesome. So thank you for all the great work that you do in and out of the coaching profession and just for being who you are. You started to say what, and I this is one of my favorite questions, well actually I have another one. Okay. Hold on. What would you say would be a strategic intention for the coaching profession?

Speaker 2:

You know, I think we actually carved the original one out. So those of us who were original board members and part of that kind of move, you know, the Sandy Vis and Shell Richardson's of the world and that group was basically to create an organization and Thomas Leonard, let's just nod to him, Thomas Leonard said this first I think is we've got to preserve, protect, and advance the business of coaching. And that's why the International Coach Federation was born at that time. We called ourselves a federation because we wanted to break out of just a professional society kind of idea. So we go back to the original intention there. I'd say that that's what's happened. And then like in any upstart or any kind of future casting there's the scouts, the pioneers, and the settlers, and we have now entered the time of the settlers, right. The people who give up the walls and make the rules and come up with the competencies and all those things that are important. In fact, the Hamel guy that I mentioned in the first part of the article quote on that is he came up with the whole notion of core competencies. That was his University of Michigan

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So he came up with that. So the core competencies, everything that's happening now is to give structure and bring the science in to what we developed that was a movement. So as we cast a vision for the future, you know, is p eace possible or is it something that we aspire to? You know, that everybody has said that at some point in their life. I just want world p eace. I think for me it is to begin to look at the either o r conversation. It's you're either this or that. You either are a Russian or you're Ukrainian. Yo u're e ither from Europe or you're from Asia. Whatever it is that's in the either or equation, what we're moving to is the acceptance of, and the understanding of a global community. In the Neil De grass T yson book that's called the Starry Messenger-Cosmic Perspectives on Civilization, I think is one that's worth picking up. I've just gotten my copy, I haven't opened it yet, but he was interviewed by my favorite newscaster, St ephen C obert which is wh ere I g o t o g et my n e ws t h ese d a ys. He was interviewed and he said he would like to get Elon Musk to create a big old rocket to take all the world leaders into space and have them look back down at this planet and see where the boundaries are. If there are any.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 2:

Just see what it is we're actually sharing and take them so far out in the universe that they're looking around in awe of just who we are as this species and what we're up to as a game. And maybe it would change things. So as we look at what we're changing and we sometimes want to think in global ways and do, I think it's to inherent in all of us to come back and say, if we can just provide a lens for leaders that has us become more conscious in our conversations, more understanding, less right about everything, right?

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Now we're moving the conversation to conscious leadership of self and others, and I think that's the brightest thing we can do right now.

Speaker 1:

Wow. Well said. Thank you. And finally, I always like to ask, what do you want our listeners to do as a result of this article in this conversation? Take the four steps, obviously.

Speaker 2:

Well, they can do the four steps. I think there are a couple things. One is to really look at how the bees are pollinating the garden. There are a lot of us who are the elders who are offering articles and classes and free classes. There are ways to connect with this community and really tap in to not only steal or take ideas to go out and do tomorrow before you don't understand the real foundation, but to really do your work. Get grounded in what is possible when you have developed yourself as a coach leader. So I would say that take a leadership approach to everything and do your homework. So that's one thing I'd want you to take away. The other is go ahead and do the strategic intent exercises here and keep playing with it until it makes sense. And it's not only self focused, but other focused not only on your own personal growth, but how the energy and information will flow through you into the impact you're going to make. I think that's probably the big piece.

Speaker 1:

Full circle back to impact. Well done DJ. Well done. Couldn't have said it better myself. Well, listen, I want to thank you so much for joining us for this Beyond the Page episode. What's the best way for people to reach you?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I would say www.pyramidresource.com is our home website and we have many tributaries from that. We do coaching one on one, we do team coaching and we do the coaching school. So we have three different channels and they're all there. There is a zombie rescue team toolkit that came out of my Zombies to Zealots book, which is also ripe with a lot of great information. And while it was published a few years ago, it's got a great case study in the back and you can just read that section of it. I would suggest that you download the Rescue Team Toolkit, which is free, and over almost a hundred thousand people have downloaded that, just to take a look and to see what is it that I'm really up to and are these soulful goals? Why did I come to this? Cause I think most coaches do have this as a calling. It's symbolic work. So why am I really up to this game now and how am I communicating that and how am I being of service and clarify that and provide articles for choice Magazine.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. You know, I was saying to somebody the other day that still people aren't aware that there's a magazine for the coaching profession and I said, well, that's why I started it because there wasn't one, and we're the only independent, unbiased, globally distributed print and digital magazine for the coaching profession. I like to say we're the psychology today of coaching. You know, it's our professions magazine.

Speaker 2:

It is a beautiful magazine too. It's really well done. I love my colleagues who are authors and are on your editorial board. I think that it's time has come.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Thank you. Well, and thank you for being here, honestly. And say hi to Barry. That's it for this episode of Beyond the Page. For more episodes, subscribe via your favorite podcast app. And don't forget to sign up for your free digital issue of choice Magazine by going to choice-online.com and clicking the signup now button. I'm Garry Schleifer, enjoy your journey to mastery.