Transformed Leaders
Lead Transformations
Your leadership matters! Become a spiritually deep, risk-taking, non-anxious leader who knows how to cultivate flourishing in the people and places you lead.
We’re here to equip you on that journey—because when you experience transformation, you naturally lead others into it.
You want new growth but change is hard.
Are you ready?
Our four stage process provides a map to guide change and new growth.
Our four-stage process of transformation is infused into all we do with individuals, cohorts, and organizations.
Seeds: The easily ignored quiet invitations calling leaders towards new growth
Roots: The unseen foundation of identity, character, and motivation
Shoots: The visible formation of capability and competence
Fruit: The abundant fulfillment of character and competence modeled on Jesus of Nazareth that nurtures others and leaves a lasting legacy
LFT is for leaders who are ready to go deeper—beyond quick fixes and surface-level strategies.
Business, Non-Profit, and Christian leaders who desire to become spiritually deep, non-anxious, and risk taking with new skills and tools to lead at a higher levels of impact from the deeper places of character, identity, and motivation.
What People are Saying...
Ready to create ripples of transformation?
Discover your next step.
Podcast
The Lead from Transformation Podcast
If you’re hungry for more than surface-level leadership tips, you’re in the right place. The Lead From Transformation Podcast is where leaders and coaches who want to lead at higher levels come to reflect honestly, discover language to explain experiences and learn ways to lead from a deeply rooted place.
Each episode is a conversation grounded in real stories, transformational postures, spiritual and neuroscience insights that help you get to the root of what’s really going on—beneath the noise, burnout, and busyness.
Discover the easily missed invitations to change…
Free Rooted in Rest Reflection Guide
Whether you’re a beach raker, a doom scroller, or just someone feeling guilty for slowing down—this guide will help you begin to name why slowing down feels so hard.