Finding Your Direction
You know you have it in you, but you’re not sure where to start.
You’re smart and capable but you have no idea what you want to do.
You graduated, maybe picked up a job or two, and everyone around you seems to have a plan. Your parents have opinions. Your friends are posting promotions. And the advice keeps coming — “network more,” “follow your passion,” “just pick something” — but none of it actually helps, because the problem isn’t motivation. The problem is that nobody taught you how to figure this out.
How I work
That’s what I help with. Not by telling you what to do — you’ve had enough of that — but by helping you sort through what you care about, what you're good at, what kind of life you want to build.
We do this through taking stock, building curiosity, paying attention, and learning to spot the opportunities that are already around you — getting lucky on purpose. We map things out, tell stories and look at what’s been pulling at you that you might have dismissed because it didn't seem practical or impressive enough. And we work together until things start to move — not because I handed you an answer, but because you found one that fits.
This isn’t therapy. It’s not career counseling. It’s focused, honest, practical work with someone who’s helped a lot of people through this.
Here’s how we work together.
Book a discovery call. Tell me where you are — what’s working, what’s not, what you’re trying to figure out. I’ll listen, and we’ll decide together if this is a good fit.
We dig in. Through one-on-one coaching, we figure out what matters to you, what you’ve been ignoring, and what direction makes sense. We get you out into the real world — talking to people, trying things on, and testing ideas instead of just thinking about them.
You move with clarity on a plan that feels right.
When you’re ready, I’m here.
Clients Say:
“I came to coaching hoping to discover my next ‘thing.’ Working with Lisa has taken me on such an unexpected and rewarding journey. She has guided me in an exploration of what elements of my life really matter most.”
— M.N.
“I’m no longer afraid to stand up for myself, and I’ve started remembering what really matters to me. She gave me momentum, focus, and the courage to take real steps toward a life I actually want.”
— P.M.