PODCAST · business
The Coach Approach Ministries Podcast
by Coach Approach Ministries
Welcome to the Coach Approach Ministries Podcast! Coaching is a skillset and a mindset that helps people find focus, discover options and take action. At CAM, we train the very best Christian coaches in the world, and over the last decade, we've trained well over a thousand. Through this podcast, we want to share insights from the Coaching Community and help you to develop a broader understanding of coaching. You can find out more about us at www.coachapproachministries.org and sign up for our proven coach training.
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517
How Coaching Changes the Coach
Episode Overview Coaching is usually discussed in terms of what it does for the person being coached. In this episode, Brian turns the question around: What does coaching do to the coach? Drawing from more than fifteen years of coaching, Brian describes how the coaching mindset has changed the way he relates to other people, handles his own insights, and carries responsibility. Coaching has made him less individualistic, less compelled to give answers, and less likely to take ownership of problems that properly belong to someone else. More than a professional skill, coaching has become a way of understanding Christian community, personal maturity, leadership, friendship, marriage, and faith. Key Ideas 1. Coaching changes how we understand community Coaching is a fundamentally collaborative process. The coach is the expert in the conversation, while the client is the expert in the subject of the conversation. That partnership offers a picture of healthy community. People do not need to have identical strengths, roles, or perspectives in order to work together well. They contribute differently to something neither could create alone. For Brian, this has deepened his understanding of the body of Christ. Christian faith is personal, but it is not merely individual. We are joined together, dependent upon one another, and called to create something collectively that no single person could produce independently. 2. Coaching changes how we steward awareness Coaches regularly notice patterns, connections, and possible solutions before the client does. The temptation is to immediately share every insight. Brian has learned that an awareness does not go to waste simply because he chooses not to say it. When an insight is not immediately released, it can continue to work within the coach. It can mature, connect with other ideas, and produce greater depth. The discipline of not correcting, explaining, or contributing every thought has made him a better coach, trainer, leader, and person. 3. Coaching changes how we carry responsibility Responsibility is a strength, but it can become unhealthy when we take responsibility for things that properly belong to other people. Coaching has helped Brian ask: What is genuinely my responsibility? What belongs to the other person? How can I support someone without taking over? Can my presence help them carry what is theirs to carry? Sometimes helping means solving a problem. At other times, it means listening, encouraging, remaining present, or allowing another person to make a difficult decision. Memorable Quotes "I am a better person because I am a coach." "The coach is the expert of the conversation, but you are the expert of the topic." "That awareness that I don't share doesn't go to waste. It actually piles up in me, and it works on me." "I don't tend to grow when I share everything I know. I grow when I don't share everything I know." "Coaching has changed how I carry responsibility." "Christianity brings something to my coaching, but I think coaching brings something to my Christianity." "Coaching has given me a better life." Reflection Questions How has coaching changed the way you understand relationships and community? What awareness are you tempted to share before another person is ready for it? Where might you be carrying responsibility that properly belongs to someone else? How could you support someone without solving the problem for them? Mentioned in This Episode Brian will teach CAM 501: Foundations of Christian Coaching, beginning August 6, 2026. The eight-week course introduces the foundations, practices, and mindset of Christian coaching. Learn more at coachapproachministries.org.
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516
Why People Don't Take Advice
Episode Summary Brian Miller records a solo episode on a common leadership frustration: people ask for advice, receive good advice, agree that it makes sense—and then do not follow it. Brian explores why advice often fails to create change. The issue is not always that the advice is wrong. The deeper problem is that advice often skips the internal process people need in order to act. Coaching offers a better kind of conversation by helping people come to their own awareness, develop stronger action steps, and take ownership of the result. Big Ideas & Takeaways Awareness: Advice gives people someone else's insight Advice usually starts with what the advice-giver sees: "Here's what I think you should do." The advice may be wise, but the awareness belongs to the person giving it. People change more deeply when they come to awareness themselves. A coach approach creates space for someone to notice assumptions, patterns, fears, desires, and possibilities they had not seen clearly before. Brian illustrates this through his diabetes diagnosis. Being told he was diabetic did not instantly create full awareness. Later, a simple comment from his brother about giving up diet drinks helped Brian realize he had not yet tried everything. The awareness had to become his own before he could act on it. Key implication: if people do not own the awareness, they are unlikely to own the change. Action: Advice often produces weak action Even when people accept advice, the action can be vague, minimal, or borrowed. They may nod, agree, and even try something—but without a clear plan, the action rarely holds. A coaching conversation helps the person build a stronger action step. The action becomes specific, realistic, timely, and connected to the awareness they just discovered. Brian contrasts merely telling someone what to do with helping them think through the next step: What will you do? When will you do it? Who needs to be involved? What resources do you need? What could get in the way? Key implication: people are more likely to follow through on action they helped design. Ownership: Advice creates compliance; coaching creates responsibility Advice can produce compliance, especially when the advice-giver has authority. But compliance is not the same as ownership. Compliance says, "I am doing this because you told me to." Ownership says, "This is my responsibility, and I choose to act." Brian connects this to leadership, parenting, ministry, board meetings, and personal growth. The goal is not merely to get people to behave correctly. The goal is to help people become mature, responsible, and transformed. This is where accountability comes in. Accountability is strongest when it grows out of ownership. The person names the action, owns the responsibility, and identifies what will help them follow through. The Coaching Framework Awareness People need to see something for themselves. Action People need a concrete, supported next step. Ownership People need to take responsibility for what they choose to do. Memorable Quotes / Moments "People don't take advice." "No one ever washes a rental car." "Advice gives people my awareness." "People do what they tell themselves to do." "What's going to ensure that you take this action?" Timestamped Highlights ● 0:17–1:27 Intro: why people don't take advice ● 1:27–2:40 Story: nonprofit employee quits despite good advice ● 3:17–4:16 Conversations can be transformational ● 4:16–5:35 Advice gives people someone else's awareness ● 5:56–9:33 Diabetes diagnosis + brother's comment about diet drinks ● 11:53–14:33 Advice often produces weak action ● 16:53–18:38 Advice creates compliance instead of ownership ● 18:38–21:17 Accountability, counting carbs, and owning the next step ● 22:21–23:19 CAM 501 invitation and closing Links Mentioned ● Coach Approach Ministries: coachapproachministries.org ● CAM 501: Foundations of Christian Coaching ● Course start date mentioned: August 6, 2026 ● Schedule mentioned: Thursdays at 2:00 Eastern for eight weeks
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515
Presidents, Pressure, and the Myth That Things Used to Be Simple
Podcast Notes: Presidents, Pressure, and the Myth That Things Used to Be Simple Episode Overview In this solo episode, Brian Miller reflects on America's 250th anniversary and his recent effort to memorize the presidents of the United States in order. What began as a personal history project became a reminder that American life has never been as simple, stable, or unified as we sometimes imagine. Rather than entering today's political debates, Brian uses presidential history as a lens for leadership, pressure, maturity, and perspective. The episode explores how history can help us become less reactive, less nostalgic, and more grounded as we lead through complicated times. Key Ideas & Takeaways History Is More Turbulent Than We Remember From a distance, history often looks cleaner than it actually was. We remember presidents as names, portraits, monuments, and eras. But they were real people leading in real time, often with incomplete information, competing pressures, personal limitations, and public criticism. The past was not as simple as we sometimes imagine. American history has always included conflict, ambition, division, compromise, courage, failure, and uncertainty. Remembering that does not minimize the challenges of the present, but it can help us hold them with greater perspective. Leadership Is Always Contextual Presidential history reminds us that leadership is never abstract. Every leader acts inside a particular moment, with particular pressures and constraints. Some presidents were prepared for the moment they inherited. Some were not. Some shaped their era. Others were overwhelmed by it. But each one had to carry responsibility inside circumstances they did not fully control. That matters for how we think about leadership today. It is easy to judge leaders only by personality, decisions, or outcomes. But a more mature view also asks: What pressure were they under? What limitations were they facing? What assumptions shaped their choices? What did the moment require of them? This does not excuse poor leadership. But it helps us understand that leadership always happens inside pressure. Perspective Helps Us Become Less Reactive One gift of history is that it lowers our shock. Not because the present is easy. Not because today's problems do not matter. But because history reminds us that conflict, uncertainty, and pressure are not new. Without perspective, every crisis can feel unprecedented. Every disagreement can feel like proof that everything is falling apart. Every leader can become either savior or villain. Historical perspective helps us become steadier. It allows us to care without being consumed, to act without merely reacting, and to tell the truth about the present without being swallowed by anxiety. This is also where the episode connects to coaching. Coaching helps people make meaning under pressure. It creates space for awareness, discernment, responsibility, and faithful action. Possible Coaching Questions What pressure are you carrying right now? What are you assuming about this moment? What are you afraid will happen? What responsibility is actually yours? What are you carrying that is not yours to carry? What would a less reactive version of you do next? What does faithfulness look like in this moment? Closing Thought As America turns 250, we do not need to pretend the story has been simple. It has not. It has been pressured, conflicted, unfinished, and often complicated. But that does not have to lead us to cynicism. It can lead us to maturity. History helps us tell the truth about the present without being swallowed by it. It reminds us that leadership has always required courage, humility, wisdom, and restraint. And it invites us to ask a question that is historical, spiritual, and deeply practical: What does faithfulness look like now?
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514
The Journey to a Successful Coaching Practice with Glenn Smith
In this episode, Glenn Smith and I explore the journey of building a successful coaching practice and what it really takes to sustain meaningful work over time. Glenn shares wisdom from his own coaching journey, including the challenges, mindset shifts, and personal growth required to create a practice that aligns with both purpose and impact. We discuss: What defines a successful coaching practice The difference between building a business and living a calling Why authenticity matters in coaching Trust, relationships, and long-term growth The importance of self-awareness and personal development Common struggles coaches face early in their journey Finding alignment between values, purpose, and work Coaching as transformation rather than performance How meaningful conversations create lasting impact This conversation offers encouragement and practical wisdom for coaches, leaders, and anyone seeking to build work that is both sustainable and deeply meaningful. #Coaching #Leadership #PersonalGrowth #GlennSmith #CoachingPractice #Transformation #Purpose #Podcast
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513
From Codependency to Compassion with Paul Burns
In this final conversation with Paul Burns, we explore the "Social" dimension of the GPS discipleship framework. Paul explains how a secure relationship with God and growing personal maturity free us to genuinely love and connect with others. We discuss: Why empathy is central to spiritual maturity The connection between security and healthy relationships Moving beyond codependency Loving others for their sake instead of our own needs The social implications of discipleship Sacrificial and unconditional love in the way of Jesus Emotional freedom and relational connection How discipleship transforms communities and relationships Paul unpacks how deepening discipleship ultimately leads to greater compassion, empathy, and the ability to love others more fully and authentically. #Empathy #Discipleship #Relationships #PaulBurns #SpiritualFormation #ChristianCoaching #Faith #Podcast
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512
The Journey from Insecurity to Freedom with Paul Burns
In this second conversation with Paul Burns, we focus on the "Personal" dimension of his GPS framework for discipleship. Paul explores how spiritual growth involves becoming the person God created us to be rather than remaining trapped in the patterns and insecurities shaped by the world. We discuss: The movement from worldly identity to God-centered identity Emotional maturity and spiritual formation Insecurity, fear, and personal growth What it means to become a child of God The importance of self-differentiation How attachment to God creates internal freedom Why discipleship includes emotional and psychological growth Letting go of unhealthy patterns and mindsets This episode connects discipleship with emotional health and explores how God transforms not only our beliefs, but our identity and way of being in the world. #Identity #Discipleship #SpiritualGrowth #PaulBurns #EmotionalHealth #ChristianLeadership #Faith #Podcast
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511
Deepening Discipleship Growing in Relationship with God with Paul Burns
In this episode, Paul Burns and I begin a month-long conversation on deepening discipleship. Paul shares his understanding of discipleship as a growing relationship with God rather than merely acquiring religious knowledge or behavior modification. We discuss: Why discipleship is fundamentally relational The difference between knowing about God and knowing God Attachment theory and spiritual formation Moving beyond performance-based spirituality How security in God changes personal growth The role of trust in spiritual maturity Why transformation happens through relationship The connection between discipleship and emotional health Paul introduces the foundational concepts behind his GPS framework — God, Personal, and Social — and explains why a secure attachment to God changes everything else in life. #Discipleship #SpiritualFormation #PaulBurns #ChristianCoaching #Faith #Transformation #AttachmentTheory #Podcast
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510
Walking the Camino Pilgrimage, Purpose, and Transformation With Rey Spadoni
Podcast Notes — CAP 519 with Rey Spadoni In this episode, Rey Spadoni and I explore the Camino de Santiago and the deeper human longing for pilgrimage, meaning, and transformation. Rey shares insights from his experiences walking the Camino and reflects on why ancient spiritual practices continue to resonate in modern life. We discuss: What draws people to the Camino de Santiago Pilgrimage as both an external and internal journey The role of uncertainty, solitude, and reflection in transformation How walking changes the pace of thinking and awareness The connection between coaching, spirituality, and personal growth Why meaningful conversations emerge differently on the road Ancient practices that still speak to modern challenges The difference between achievement and deeper fulfillment Community, vulnerability, and shared humanity along the Camino This conversation is reflective, practical, and deeply human — whether you've walked the Camino yourself or are simply searching for greater clarity and meaning in your own journey. #CaminoDeSantiago #Pilgrimage #PersonalGrowth #Coaching #Transformation #Spirituality #Meaning #Podcast #ReySpadoni #ConversationsThatMatter
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509
From Limiting Beliefs to New Identity: Coaching Through Story with Motoki Asai
🎧 Podcast Notes: Narrative Coaching with Motoki Asai Connect with Motoki Asai Find Motoki on LinkedIn to learn more about his work with CAM Japan. Episode Overview In this final conversation, Brian Miller and Motoki Asai explore narrative coaching—a collaborative approach that helps clients examine and rewrite the stories they are living. Rather than starting with goals, narrative coaching begins with story, identity, and meaning, creating space for deeper transformation. Key Ideas & Takeaways 1. What Is Narrative Coaching? A third-generation coaching approach focused on story and identity. Instead of starting with goals, it begins by exploring the client's narrative. Coaching helps clients rewrite the story they're living. 2. Start with Story, Not Goals Traditional coaching often begins with "What do you want to work on?" Narrative coaching asks: What's happening? What story are you living? Goals often emerge later—and are deeper and more meaningful. 3. Step One: Situate the Client in the Story Who are they in their story? The hero? The victim? A side character? This reveals how they interpret their situation and identity. 4. Step Two: Search the Story Explore what the story is saying—and what it might be missing. Identify limiting beliefs and hidden assumptions. Look for alternative interpretations and possibilities. 5. Step Three: Shift the Narrative Collaboratively create a new, more empowering story. Ask: What story do you want to live going forward? This becomes a pathway to transformation. 6. Embody the New Story Clients don't just think differently—they practice the new identity. Role-play and "serious play" help them step into the new narrative. Transformation becomes experiential, not just intellectual. 7. Awareness Changes Everything Many clients discover they are the ones reinforcing limiting stories. Seeing the gap between perception and reality creates breakthrough. Example: A client realizes others believe in her—she just doesn't believe in herself. 8. Coaching as Rewriting Identity Coaching helps people recognize the strength and beauty already in their story. Often, clients don't realize how meaningful their story already is. The coach helps them see—and step into—that truth. Memorable Moments Comparing life to a movie: "What character are you playing right now?" The shift from "I'm not good enough" to "I need to receive what others already see in me." Practicing a new identity in real time through role-play. The reminder: You don't know how great your story is. About the Guest Motoki Asai is the founder and director of CAM Japan, bringing thoughtful, innovative approaches like narrative coaching to leaders and coaches across cultures.
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508
Beyond Goals: The Rise of Third Generation Coaching with Motoki Asai
🎧 Podcast Notes: Third Generation Coaching with Motoki Asai Connect with Motoki Asai Find Motoki on LinkedIn to learn more about his work with CAM Japan. Episode Overview Brian Miller continues the conversation with Motoki Asai, diving into third generation coaching—a research-based, collaborative approach that shifts coaching from problem-solving to deeper exploration of identity, meaning, and relationship. In a rapidly changing world, this approach emphasizes who a person is becoming, not just what they are trying to achieve. Key Ideas & Takeaways 1. What Is Third Generation Coaching? A collaborative, co-creative coaching approach. Focuses on identity, values, and meaning-making—not just goals. Coach and client create the conversation together, rather than the coach leading it. 2. The Three "Generations" of Coaching First Generation: Goal-focused, problem-solving, linear (GROW model). Second Generation: Adds self-development and emotional intelligence. Third Generation: Centers on identity, narrative, and meaning in a complex world. 3. Coaching for a Complex (VUCA) World Today's world is volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous. There are fewer "right answers"—coaching must help people navigate identity and purpose. Anchoring in who you are becomes more important than solving any one problem. 4. Coaching as a Collaborative Space The coach is not just asking questions but co-creating insight. Meaning emerges between coach and client. Presence, energy, and relational dynamics matter in the conversation. 5. Beyond Coaching Sessions: A Way of Being Coaching shouldn't stay in formal sessions—it should shape everyday conversations. The goal is to empower people to have transformative dialogue in daily life. 6. Coaching the Person, Not the Problem Moves beyond fixing issues to understanding the individual. Emphasizes curiosity, care, and genuine interest in others. Reflects a deeper posture of listening and valuing people. 7. Presence and Overflow Effective coaching flows from a place of rest and alignment, not striving. Living from "overflow" allows coaches to bring calm, openness, and encouragement. Who you are matters as much as what you do in coaching. Memorable Moments Motoki connects with Reinhard Stelter (a leading voice in third generation coaching) via LinkedIn—and ends up hosting him in Japan. A shared experience (like attending sumo wrestling) becomes part of relational, meaningful dialogue. The emphasis shifts from "helping people achieve more" to "helping people become who they are." About the Guest Motoki Asai is the founder and director of CAM Japan, equipping leaders and coaches while exploring cutting-edge approaches like cognitive linguistics and third generation coaching.
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507
Why Language Matters: Unlocking Transformation Through Words
🎧 Podcast Notes: Cognitive Linguistics with Motoki Asai Webinar / CTA (if you want to add one later, place here) Learn more or connect with Motoki Asai via LinkedIn (Motoki Asai). Episode Overview In this conversation, Brian Miller sits down with Motoki Asai to explore cognitive linguistics—the study of how language both reflects and shapes the way we think. They unpack how the words clients use aren't just descriptive—they open a window into their inner world and can become a pathway for transformation. Key Ideas & Takeaways 1. Language Shapes Thought (and Vice Versa) The way people describe their experiences reveals how they interpret reality. Language is not neutral—it actively forms how we see situations and possibilities. 2. Metaphors Unlock Transformation Metaphors are more than illustrations—they create access to deeper meaning. When a client uses a metaphor, it often signals a moment ripe for change. The most powerful coaching move: use the client's metaphor, not your own. 3. The "Inner World" Between Experience and Words There's a gap between what happens and how we describe it. In that gap lies interpretation, belief, emotion, and meaning. Coaching explores this space to create insight and movement. 4. Reframing Creates New Possibilities Changing how a situation is framed can open entirely new outcomes. Example: "I've hit bottom" → "Now the only direction left is up." Reframing doesn't deny reality—it reshapes how we engage it. 5. Expanding Emotional Vocabulary Deepens Awareness Many people default to a few basic emotions (happy, sad, angry). Greater emotional precision leads to clearer thinking and better action. Naming emotions more accurately unlocks new responses. 6. Coaches Listen for Language, Not Just Problems Instead of focusing on fixing the issue, focus on how it's described. Words give access to the person's inner world in ways nothing else can. Observations about language can be more transformative than advice. 7. Language as a Tool for Transformation Language doesn't just create awareness—it can initiate change. Intentional use of metaphor, framing, and wording opens new futures. Coaching becomes less about technique and more about meaningful exploration. Memorable Quotes / Moments "It's hard to transform without a metaphor." "The most powerful use of language is to use the client's language." "When we change how we look at a situation, new possibilities open." "Words give us access to the inner world." About the Guest Motoki Asai is the founder and director of CAM Japan and a deep thinker in coaching, particularly in how language, neuroscience, and culture intersect to shape transformation.
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506
How Writing Clarifies Your Thinking (and Grows Your Influence) with Laura Stephens-Reed
Big Idea Writing isn't just content creation—it's a tool for clarity, growth, and impact. For coaches and leaders, writing helps you think better, communicate better, and ultimately serve people better. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why writing is a powerful tool for coaches and leaders How writing helps you clarify your thinking The connection between coaching conversations and content creation A simple system for generating endless writing topics Why short, consistent writing often beats writing a book How writing can grow your reach and influence organically Key Conversation Highlights 1. Writing Helps You Think Clearly Laura doesn't think by talking—she thinks by writing Writing is a way to: Process ideas Clarify beliefs Discover what you actually think Key Insight: You often don't know what you think until you write it. 2. Coaching Fuels Content Writing topics come directly from: Patterns across coaching conversations When something shows up repeatedly (like time management): It's worth writing about Practical Takeaway: Your best content is already in your coaching sessions. 3. Consistency Beats Inspiration Laura writes: At least once a week During scheduled time blocks (Tuesday + Thursday mornings) System: Routine + coffee + prepared topics = momentum Key Idea: Don't wait for inspiration—build a rhythm. 4. Short, Accessible Writing Wins Ideal length: ~750 words Why: Easy to read in ~5 minutes More likely to be consumed and shared Shift: From "write something big" → to write something useful 5. When to Turn One Idea Into a Series If a topic has depth → break it into parts Series often emerge: Before writing (planned) Or during writing (discovered) Example: A webinar becomes a multi-part Substack series 6. Writing Expands Your Reach (Without Marketing Tricks) Writing attracts: The right audience Future coaching clients Important Distinction: Don't write to get clients Write to be helpful 7. Writing as Identity (Not Just Output) Over time, writing becomes: Part of who you are Not just something you do Key Idea: "I write to learn—and to become." 8. The Craft of Writing Writing involves: Voice Structure Word choice Flow Important Question: Does this sound like you? 9. Progress Over Perfection Writing regularly helps break: Perfectionism You learn: It doesn't have to be perfect to be valuable Key Insight: Done and helpful beats perfect and unpublished. 10. Why Writing Matters for Coaches Writing helps you: Sharpen ideas Serve more people Extend your impact beyond conversations Key Takeaways Writing is one of the best tools for clarity and growth Your coaching conversations are your content strategy Consistency matters more than creativity bursts Short, helpful content builds trust and reach Writing helps you: Think better Coach better Lead better 🔗 Connect with Laura Stephens-Reed Website: laurastephensreed.com Substack: laurastephensreed.substack.com Laura is a pastor, consultant, and mentor coach helping leaders grow in clarity, coaching skill, and leadership development.
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505
From Good to Great: What Separates Professional Coaches with Laura Stephens-Reed
Big Idea Great coaching isn't about having the best answers—it's about creating the kind of space where clients discover their own. The difference between average and masterful coaching comes down to mindset, humility, and how deeply you engage the person—not just the problem. What You'll Learn in This Episode Why the coaching mindset requires intentional preparation The surprising role of humility in great coaching The difference between coaching the problem vs. coaching the person What separates ACC, PCC, and MCC-level coaching How to help clients create real ownership and action Why awareness (not advice) drives transformation Key Conversation Highlights 1. Coaching Is a Mindset—Not Just a Skill Coaching requires a deliberate shift in thinking Before each session: Step out of expert mode Step into curiosity and presence Core belief: The client is resourceful and capable 2. The Humility Behind Great Coaching Strong coaching starts with: "Maybe I don't know" Not a lack of knowledge—but a recognition that: The client knows their context best Key Insight: Coaching isn't about being right—it's about helping the client move forward. 3. Why Advice Doesn't Work (and Ownership Does) People rarely act on someone else's solution "No one washes a rental car" → people don't invest in what they don't own Shift: From giving answers → to creating ownership 4. Questions vs. Observations Two powerful coaching tools: Curious questions Neutral observations Goal: Not compliance—but new awareness 5. What Separates Good Coaches from Great Ones ACC-Level (Foundational Coaching) Focus on: The problem Action steps PCC-Level (Professional Coaching) More: Client-led direction Mid-session check-ins Learning awareness MCC-Level (Master Coaching) Focus shifts to: The person Beliefs, motivations, identity Internal transformation Key Shift: From "What should you do?" → to "Who are you becoming?" 6. The Power of Learning in Coaching Great coaches ask: "What did you learn about yourself?" "What did you learn about the situation?" Why it matters: Reinforces growth Builds confidence Fuels better action 7. Coaching the Whole Person (Not Just Words) Master-level coaching includes: Tone Pace Energy Body language Example: "I noticed your pace picked up—what's happening there?" 8. Coaching vs. Therapy (The Line) Coaching may touch the past—but: Doesn't stay there Uses it to move forward Key Idea: You don't ignore deeper issues—you acknowledge them so progress is possible 9. The Goal of Coaching Not: Being right Fixing everything But: Creating value Helping clients take meaningful, sustainable action Key Takeaways Great coaching is built on humility, curiosity, and trust The client must own the solution for it to stick Awareness is more powerful than advice Master coaches focus less on problems and more on people Transformation happens when clients: See clearly Think differently Act intentionally 🔗 Connect with Laura Stephens-Reed Website: laurastephensreed.com Substack: laurastephensreed.substack.com Laura is a pastor, consultant, and mentor coach helping leaders grow in clarity, coaching skill, and leadership development.
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504
Why Most Churches Feel Stuck (And How Coaching Changes Everything) with Laura Stephens-Reed
Big Idea Healthy churches are not defined by programs or personalities—but by clarity, culture, and conversations. Coaching provides the mindset and structure that helps churches rediscover purpose, develop leaders, and navigate change. Episode Flow & Key Themes 1. The State of the Church Today The church is a mixed bag: Thriving churches: Clear purpose and identity Spiritually grounded Balanced leadership (pastor + laity) Willing to experiment Struggling churches: Operate from scarcity, anxiety, nostalgia Avoid change Lack deep relationships Drift toward apathy or conflict Key Insight: Clarity + courage to adapt separates healthy churches from declining ones. 2. The Shift: From Center to Margin Church is no longer at the center of culture Now operating at the edges Reframe: This is not just a loss—it's an opportunity The church may actually function more faithfully at the margins 3. Why Churches Need Coaching Coaching helps churches move from: Reaction → Intention Maintenance → Development Activity → Clarity 4. Three Key Areas Coaching Transforms A. Leadership Development (Pipeline Thinking) Many churches rely on the same people in the same roles Coaching helps: Identify emerging leaders Develop people before they're "ready" Increase engagement and ownership Shift: From "holding roles" → to developing people B. Clarity of Identity (Purpose, Values, Vision) Most churches lack clarity on: Why they exist Who they're trying to reach What they uniquely offer Coaching Questions: What brought you here? What keeps you here? Deeper Insight: Surface answers: habit, family, invitation Deeper answers: "I recognized Jesus here" "My gifts were called out" "I connected faith with real life" Key Idea: Clarity fuels everything—leadership, outreach, decisions. C. Conflict & Healthy Conversations Conflict is inevitable because people are different Coaching provides tools to: Build trust and safety Listen deeply Surface real issues Disagree in healthy ways Important Distinction: Coaching ≠ mediation But coaching creates the environment where resolution is possible 5. The Power of Agreements (Culture Design) Every healthy team needs a clear agreement or covenant Includes: Expected behaviors Shared values Accountability Shift: From "unspoken expectations" → to shared ownership of culture 6. A Coaching Insight on Church Growth Many churches say: "We want young families" But that's vague and often unhelpful Better approach: Understand who you are first Then identify who you're uniquely called to reach Key Line: You can't find "the lost" if your definition is "anyone." 7. The Role of Self-Awareness Tools like Working Genius or Myers-Briggs reveal: Why people think differently Why conflict happens Awareness creates understanding instead of frustration 8. Final Hope for the Church To be a faithful witness to Jesus Not just about eternity—but about: Bringing heaven to earth Living out faith in real, tangible ways Vision: A church that reflects: Love Clarity Alignment Shared mission Key Takeaways Coaching helps churches move forward with clarity instead of fear Leadership development is essential—not optional Most churches don't need more people—they need better alignment Healthy culture is built intentionally, not accidentally The future church will thrive through: clarity adaptability meaningful conversations 🔗 Connect with Laura Stephens-Reed Website: laurastephensreed.com Substack: laurastephensreed.substack.com Laura is a pastor, consultant, and coach who works extensively with churches on pastoral search, leadership development, and congregational clarity.
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503
The Gap We Couldn't Cross (and How Jesus Did)
Episode Summary In this Maundy Thursday episode, Brian explores the meaning of the gospel through the lens of forsakenness and belonging. Reflecting on Jesus' cry from the cross—"Why have you forsaken me?"—he reframes the good news not as what we must do, but what Christ has already done. Through personal stories, coaching insights, and biblical reflection, this episode invites listeners to experience the gospel as restoration, not requirement. Key Themes & Takeaways 1. What It Means to Be a Christian Coach First: be a competent, professional coach Second: let your faith naturally shape how you show up The gospel is often seen before it's spoken 2. The Problem with How We Share the Gospel Many presentations focus on: Rules Tribal interpretations "Do this or you're out" But the real gospel is good news—not more pressure The good news isn't that I'm a sinner. That's still bad news. The good news is that Jesus has come. 3. A Story of Being "Left Behind" Brian shares a childhood story: His brother is accidentally left after a game Miscommunication leaves him stranded A stranger steps in and rescues him 👉 The takeaway: The hero isn't the responsible or the irresponsible The hero is the one who steps in and restores 4. Understanding "Forsakenness" Jesus experiences complete separation on the cross This is: Deeply human Deeply painful Spiritually ultimate Forsakenness = total disconnection From God From others From belonging 5. The Big Biblical Pattern: Lost Things Get Found Lost sheep → searched for Lost coin → turned everything upside down Lost son → should have been searched for 👉 The missing piece: Someone must go after the lost 6. Jesus as the True "Rescuer" Humanity lives in a state of low-grade forsakenness Jesus: Enters that experience Absorbs it fully Bridges the gap we couldn't cross He experienced forsakenness… and then filled it. 7. Heaven vs. Hell (Reframed) Heaven = complete belonging, restored relationship Hell = complete separation, no connection 👉 Not just pain—isolation 8. Why This Matters Today We live in a loneliness epidemic Technology hasn't solved it People feel: Left behind Disconnected Forgotten 👉 Coaching becomes a small picture of the gospel: "I'm here" "You're not alone" "Let's move forward together" 9. The Prodigal Son Revisited The point isn't the son's apology The point is the father's joyful restoration 👉 The gospel is: Not about earning your way back But being welcomed home 10. A Humbling Gospel Jesus: Leaves heaven Enters humanity Experiences abandonment Restores connection 👉 Maundy Thursday reminder: Love looks like humility and service (Even foot washing…) Final Reflection The gospel is not: "You're the problem—fix yourself" The gospel is: "You were lost—and I came to get you"
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502
Trust Jesus in a World That Trusts No One
Episode Summary Brian Miller reflects on a growing ache he feels in both the church and the wider culture: we do not seem to know who to trust anymore. Trust in politicians, pastors, institutions, even the police has eroded. In that setting, Brian turns to Jesus — not as an abstract doctrine, but as a real person whose life reveals why he can be trusted. Drawing especially from Matthew 4, Brian frames Jesus' temptations in the wilderness as a test of trustworthiness. Jesus is tempted through need, fear, and power — the very pressures that often cause leaders and ordinary people alike to betray their mission, their values, or the people who depend on them. But Jesus does not yield. He refuses to put his hunger above his calling, his fear above his trust in God, or his desire for kingship above the path of the cross. Brian connects this directly to coaching. Trust is the real currency of coaching relationships. Clients do not open up unless they believe they are safe. And coaches cannot become trustworthy people unless they themselves are grounded in something secure. Brian's central claim is simple but weighty: because Jesus can be trusted, my life is secure — and only then can I become someone who is trusted. Big Ideas & Takeaways 1) Brian wants to talk more directly about Jesus Brian opens with a personal longing: he hears people talk about God, the Bible, and Paul, but not enough about Jesus himself. He compares it to his wife's grandmother after her husband Hugh died — people avoided mentioning Hugh because it made her cry, but Brian sensed that what she really wanted was for someone to remember him. His point: there is something powerful about speaking of Jesus as if he is real, present, and worth remembering. 2) We are living through a crisis of trust Brian names trust as one of the defining problems of the present moment. In his view, trust in public life is at a lifetime low: people do not trust politicians people do not trust churches or pastors people do not know whether to trust the justice system even formerly stable sources of authority now feel suspect This loss of trust is not just political or institutional. It is personal and spiritual. People feel alone, uncertain, and abandoned. 3) Matthew wants us to know early: Jesus can be trusted Brian argues that Matthew's Gospel is intentionally anchored in trust. Before Jesus begins his public ministry in full, Matthew shows us who Jesus is and whether he can be trusted with our lives, our hearts, and our eternity. The wilderness temptation is not random. It is a revelation of Jesus' character. 4) Jesus was tempted by need — and did not abandon his mission The first temptation is hunger. After forty days of fasting, Jesus is in real physical vulnerability. Brian emphasizes that this is not symbolic discomfort; Jesus is nearing the limit of human survival. The temptation: meet your own need first. But Jesus refuses to place his hunger above his calling. Brian connects this to conflict and relationships: many people make decisions based on unmet needs, short-term relief, or self-protection. Jesus does not. He can be trusted because he will not put his need above his mission to reconcile people to God and to one another. 5) Jesus was tempted by fear — and did not let fear direct him The second temptation places Jesus in a position of danger. Brian imagines Jesus' human nervous system reacting like any other person's would: fear, survival instinct, the urge to escape. This matters because if Jesus did not really feel fear, the temptation loses its force. Brian's insight here is especially strong: Jesus can be trusted not because he never faced fear, but because fear did not move him away from his mission. He did not test God, take the shortcut to safety, or let panic govern his choices. 6) Jesus was tempted by power — and refused the shortcut Brian calls the final temptation "the one that ends all men." The devil offers Jesus power over the world, but without the cross. That is the real temptation: the crown without the cost. Brian suggests that many religious traditions major on fleshly temptations while underestimating the temptation of power. But power is the deeper danger. It is what undoes leaders, distorts motives, and creates illusions of security and control. Jesus refuses it. He will not grasp power in a way that violates God's will. That refusal reveals a kind of trustworthiness no human leader fully possesses. 7) Trust is the real currency — especially in coaching Brian brings the reflection back to coaching. No meaningful coaching happens without trust. Clients must believe: they are safe they will not be judged they will not be exposed the coach will not use their vulnerability against them And for the coach, trustworthiness begins with security. Brian's line here is central: I have to have trust in order to offer trust. Because Jesus can be trusted, Brian says, his life can become secure enough that he does not need to manipulate, protect, or elevate himself in the coaching relationship. 8) Because Jesus can be trusted, I can become someone who is trusted This is where the whole episode lands. Brian is not saying coaches become perfect or immune to temptation. He says the opposite: he knows he will often succumb to need, fear, and power. But Jesus does not. So the coach, leader, or Christian can rely on Jesus: to meet needs to steady fear to expose the illusion of power And only from that secure place can trustworthiness begin to grow. The Three Temptations Brian Names 1. Need Will Jesus put his own hunger above his mission? 2. Fear Will Jesus abandon trust when safety is threatened? 3. Power Will Jesus take the kingdom without the cross? Brian's answer to all three: No — and that is why Jesus can be trusted. Memorable Lines / Ideas "I just want to hear stories about Jesus." "Trust is at a lifetime low for me." "Jesus can be trusted not to put his needs above his mission." "Fear was not going to move his trust away from his mission." "The temptation was to rule without the cross, to take the crown without the cost." "Trust is the only real currency." "Because Jesus can be trusted, my life is secure." "I have to have trust in order to offer trust." Timestamped Highlights (based on your transcript) 0:00–1:18 Intro + Brian's desire to talk more directly about Jesus 1:18–4:56 Story of Imogene and Hugh → why remembering and naming someone matters 4:56–6:36 Trust as the core issue in coaching and counseling 6:36–9:39 Brian names the broader crisis of trust in politics, church, and public life 9:39–12:20 Matthew's Gospel and why the wilderness story matters for trust 12:20–16:24 Temptation 1: need / hunger / mission 16:24–20:58 Temptation 2: fear / danger / survival instinct 20:58–24:44 Temptation 3: power / shortcut / crown without the cross 24:44–27:18 Why trust is the real currency in faith and coaching 27:18–end Wrap-up + Brian's hope to keep telling stories about Jesus Core Theme Jesus can be trusted in the places where every other leader eventually fails: need, fear, and power. And that matters not only for faith, but for coaching, leadership, and becoming the kind of person others can trust. Links Mentioned Coach Approach Ministries: coachapproachministries.org
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501
The Missional Extension with Angie Ward
Episode Summary Brian Miller sits down with Dr. Angie Ward (Denver Seminary) for an honest, wide-angle conversation about what's happening to the Western church—and what might come next. Angie argues that "Christendom" (church as cultural establishment) is collapsing, and that COVID accelerated trends already underway: declining trust in institutions, shrinking attendance, and rising skepticism toward clergy and systems. But Angie doesn't treat this as only a crisis. She frames it as opportunity: the pressure is forcing the church to rediscover its identity and mission. Drawing on her book Beyond Church and Parachurch, Angie offers a framework shift—from institutions competing for dwindling resources to a kingdom "network" of missional extensions. Brian presses into the authority question (denominations vs. non-denominational independence), and Angie names the tension: agility is needed, but accountability can't be optional. Big Ideas & Takeaways 1) "Christendom" is fading—especially in the West Angie's claim: Christianity no longer holds the same cultural authority it once did. The church is not "the establishment" in the West, and that shift is showing up everywhere—from politics and cultural influence to local congregational life. Key implication: the old "we'll just keep doing Sunday better" strategy isn't a strategy. 2) COVID didn't start the change—it hit fast-forward They describe the pandemic as an accelerator, not the origin. Trends were already moving "down and to the left," and COVID made the decline visible and unavoidable. 3) Church planting "by that playbook" is dead Brian names the early-2000s church-planting surge and says bluntly: that model is dying. Angie agrees and reframes: when you focus on discipleship, church tends to emerge; when you focus on building the organization first, it often doesn't. 4) "Missional extensions" beats "parachurch" Angie pushes back on the old church/parachurch competition frame. Her alternative is a kingdom-network picture: Not siloed "cylinders" hoarding resources More like nodes on a web (or "lily pads") enabling the flow of mission Churches are best at "near-neighbor missionality" Nonprofits often move faster, focus tighter, and cross denominational lines more easily CAM gets a cameo here as an example of a nonprofit "missional extension." 5) The root problem: we don't know what the church is Angie points to a blurry (or missing) ecclesiology—basic understanding of what the church is supposed to be. Brian resonates hard: many churches functionally define "church" as songs + sermon + offering + programs—then wonder why it feels thin. 6) "Habitat is my church" …isn't church Brian tests a common modern claim. Angie's response: eyebrow-raising, but thoughtful. Her point: gathering with Christians for a good purpose is great—but it doesn't automatically equal ecclesia (church, as the New Testament writers meant it). Angie's Definition of the Church (Ecclesia) Angie reads her definition from her book: The church (biblical ecclesia) is a divinely established, called out and sent collection of all the people of God around the world—animated and united by the work of Christ and guided by the Holy Spirit—who gather regularly in locally embodied community to recenter their lives around God, and who seek to live out kingdom values in their relationships with one another and with the world. (That's the "PhD piled high" version… and it's solid.) The Authority Tension: Agility vs. Accountability Brian names what many leaders feel: "everyone's non-denominational" can sound less like freedom and more like rebellion—or at least an authority allergy. Angie agrees there's danger in independent startups with no communal discernment or accountability. She appreciates denominational structures that recognize, affirm, and send leaders (even while acknowledging some structures can become too heavy). A line that lands: "The only thing worse than being part of a denomination is not being part of a denomination." The Balance: Mission and Formation Near the end, Angie adds an important correction: if you focus only on mission you can drift into "scale for impact" without deep formation; if you focus only on formation you can become insular and forget mission. A faithful future church holds both: Missio Dei (God's mission) Discipleship and formation (becoming followers of Jesus) Community (not isolated spirituality) Timestamped Highlights (based on your transcript) 0:00–1:30 Intro + "What's the deal with the church?" 2:37–4:55 Christendom is fading; COVID accelerated decline 5:31–6:08 Church planting model "dead"; discipleship-first alternative 6:59–11:22 Beyond Church/Parachurch → "missional extensions" network model 12:02–13:15 Why nonprofits proliferate (speed, focus, cross-pollination) 15:17–16:51 "Habitat is my church?" → Nope, and why 16:07–16:51 Angie reads ecclesia definition 18:05–23:12 Authority/accountability: denominations, networks, plural leadership 24:18–26:13 Start with God's mission—but don't lose formation 26:26–28:10 Wrap + how to find Angie Links Mentioned Angie's site: angiewardphd.com CAM: coachapproachministries.org
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500
Speaking with Gravitas with Angie Ward
Episode Summary In this reflective and candid conversation, Brian Miller sits down with Angie Ward, Director of the Doctor of Ministry Program at Denver Seminary, to explore what it means to lead from gravitas rather than persona. Angie shares why she shifted her writing voice toward deeper transparency in her Substack, The Contemplative Leader, and how embracing her full story—including mistakes, introversion, perfectionism, and even complex PTSD—has strengthened rather than weakened her leadership. This episode explores substantial leadership, contemplative presence, authenticity in a performative culture, and why becoming a better person may be the most important credential a coach can earn. Key Themes & Takeaways 1. From Content to Contemplation Angie reflects on her evolution as a writer and leader. Early on, she felt pressure to produce "content-heavy," didactic leadership writing. Over time, she realized people are far less interested in polished expertise and far more drawn to authentic reflection. Her shift: Writing pastorally instead of performatively Sharing lessons learned from real mistakes Letting her voice emerge from who she is, not just what she knows Leadership influence flows from identity, not information. 2. The "Gravitas Era" Angie describes entering what she calls her gravitas era—a season of leadership marked by weight, depth, and grounded presence. Gravitas, in her words, isn't about dominance. It's about: Emotional and spiritual substance Measured speech Deep listening Carrying responsibility without needing applause As leaders mature, their authority shifts from "listen to me" to "there's something steady here." 3. Substantial vs. Performative Leadership Brian references The Great Divorce, noting Lewis' imagery of heaven as a place of increasing substance. The connection? True leadership is about becoming substantial—grounded, present, integrated. Substance does not happen automatically with age. It comes through: Reflection Excavation Honest self-examination Courage to confront woundedness Experience ≠ maturity. Integration = maturity. 4. Redefining Perfection As a self-described recovering perfectionist, Angie reframes perfection not as flawlessness, but as being perfectly present. This includes: Showing up fully Owning mistakes (like spilling communion in front of a church) Admitting introversion and the need to recharge Naming mental health realities The paradox: The more substantial you become, the freer you are with your flaws. 5. Persona vs. Presence Angie pushes back against the "leader mystique" culture—the polished bio, the highlight reel, the curated persona. She reminds listeners: Your bio hides the rhinestone-gluing nights in Indiana. Authority grows from stewarded wounds. People are starving for leaders who feel real. Authenticity cannot be manufactured through tactics. It emerges from integration. 6. Coaching and Becoming a Better Person Brian observes something many coaches discover: To earn a credential like PCC, you don't just learn techniques—you become more aware, more grounded, more emotionally integrated. You cannot ask powerful questions from the outside. You must do the work internally. Substantial leaders ask substantial questions. Memorable Quotes "We lead out of who we are, not just what we do." "I feel like I'm entering my gravitas era." "Experience does not equal maturity." "The more substantial you are, the more free you are with your flaws." "I've had to redefine perfect as perfectly present." Resources Mentioned Angie's Substack: The Contemplative Leader Angie's website: angiewardphd.com The Great Divorce by C. S. Lewis Who This Episode Is For Coaches seeking deeper integration, not just sharper tools Leaders tired of persona-driven leadership culture Christian leaders wrestling with authenticity and authority Anyone who senses they're entering a new season of gravitas Reflection Questions Where might you be leading from persona rather than presence? What wounds or experiences have shaped your gravitas? How would your leadership change if perfection meant "fully present"? What would it look like to steward your voice instead of perform it?
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499
AI Can Grade the Transcript—Humans Grow the Coach with Doug Foltz
Doug Foltz explains how he used AI to solve a real coach-development bottleneck: mentor coaching doesn't scale. By building a competency rubric and an AI "agent" that evaluates coaching transcripts, Doug's team reduced hours of expert analysis to minutes—then re-centered the human work where it matters most: reflection, agency, and a short mentor-coaching conversation. The bigger idea: "communal co-intelligence"—AI not just as a personal assistant, but as a tool that helps a whole coaching community preserve culture, build consistency, and scale development without losing what makes coaching human. Episode description How do you scale mentor coaching when you don't have the budget—or the hours? Doug Foltz (Content Engineering & Value Alignment Lead at Gloo, DMin candidate at Asbury, and longtime church-planting coach) shares how he built an AI-supported mentor-coaching loop: a detailed competency rubric + an AI evaluator that reviews transcripts in minutes. But Doug also warns about a hidden danger: AI can bypass reflection, which is essential for adult learning. So they intentionally added "friction" back into the process—reflection first, then AI feedback, then a short human coaching conversation. Along the way, Doug introduces a powerful concept: communal co-intelligence—AI that strengthens a community's shared language, values, and coaching culture. Key moments (timestamps) 0:02–1:20 – Who Doug is + why Brian calls him the "AI guy" 1:49–3:21 – The real problem: coaching training doesn't stick without mentor coaching 3:34–5:06 – Doug's solution: a rubric + AI agent that evaluates transcripts (levels 1–3) 6:44–8:15 – The twist: reflection is essential; AI can accidentally remove it 8:28–9:00 – The human loop: 15–20 minute mentor conversation after reflection + report 10:38–14:35 – Why AI matters: replaces 3–4 hours of expert analysis with minutes 15:04–16:15 – The church's role: protect what's uniquely human; set boundaries 16:27–19:16 – "Communal co-intelligence": AI + a coaching community's culture and standards 21:24–23:00 – What they observed: fast growth from Level 1 → Level 2; harder jump to Level 3 23:29–25:46 – Craft guild model: learn the fundamentals, then innovate without losing the core 28:57–31:14 – What's next: agentic systems, tools + data access, and AI as "work orchestrator" Key ideas AI can scale mentor coaching by doing the transcript evaluation quickly and consistently. Reflection is non-negotiable in adult learning; AI can "steal" it by doing the thinking for you. The solution is intentional friction: reflection → AI feedback → short human mentor coaching. Agency matters: don't make AI the all-knowing guru; keep the learner's authority intact. Communal co-intelligence: AI can reinforce a shared coaching culture across many coaches. Early gains can be rapid (novice → intermediate), but advanced mastery takes longer. The future is agentic systems that combine tools + data + context to orchestrate real work. Quotable lines (pull quotes) "We really can't scale coaching very well." "Mentor coaching is what makes the training stick." "My process actually bypasses [reflection] entirely." "We added a friction point… and we made them reflect." "You don't want the AI to be the all-knowing guru." "That's the part of the process that we said, we're going to replace." (re: 3–4 hours of evaluation) "Communal co-intelligence… it's the AI with our coaching community." "It becomes this orchestrator of work within an organization." Discussion questions (for Learning Lab / staff meeting) Where would AI help us scale without compromising what we value most? What part of our development process must remain human-only? Where might AI accidentally remove reflection, struggle, or ownership? What would a "reflection-first" workflow look like for our coaches or trainers? What are the risks of communal AI (shared culture) becoming static or overly controlling? If AI becomes an "orchestrator of work," what data is off-limits—and why? Practical takeaway AI is best used as a leverage tool—not a replacement for learning. Let it do the heavy lift of analysis and pattern recognition, then spend your human time where it counts: reflection, discernment, presence, and coaching conversations that build ownership and growth. If you design it well, AI doesn't dilute your culture—it can actually help you scale it.
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498
The Leaders Who Need Certainty Will Struggle Most with Dr Brent Sleasman
Dr. Brent Sleasman argues that leaders who cling to certainty—predictability, control, and stable cause-and-effect—are setting themselves up to fail in today's environment. In an uncertain age, organizations must separate mission from program, experiment without over-attaching to solutions, and build teams that balance visionaries and integrators. The goal isn't chaos; it's realism, adaptability, and a mission-driven posture that can keep moving even when the map keeps changing. Key moments (timestamps) 0:24–1:17 – The premise: clinging to certainty is a low-percentage path 1:34–2:47 – What "certainty" actually means: predictability → control 5:13–8:05 – Why the "insanity" quote breaks down in uncertain environments 8:42–9:43 – The blunt warning: stability-clingers are on a path toward organizational death 11:05–12:59 – Mission vs. program: stop conflating the two 13:18–15:11 – Discipleship analogy: start with mission, program follows 15:11–16:10 – "Love the problem more than you love the solution" 16:15–20:55 – Myers-Briggs J vs P: why the "organized" leaders can still drive off a cliff 21:01–24:27 – Balance matters: visionary + integrator, apostle + teacher 27:06–28:02 – Best practice: work shoulder-to-shoulder with trusted people 28:08–29:07 – Coaching frame: explore first, then act Key ideas Certainty is the belief that you can predict outcomes. Prediction quietly becomes a demand for control. Uncertainty isn't a temporary storm—it's the climate. Acting like it's 1999 is the real risk. The "insanity" quote gets flipped: In an unstable environment, doing the same thing and expecting the same result may be the truly insane move. Mission and program are not the same thing. Programs are time-bound expressions of mission. Healthy organizations balance roles: visionaries/curiosity with integrators/stability. Tools help, but people matter more. Working together—friction and all—beats perfect assessments on paper. Quotable lines "Those that cling to certainty are set on a path that has got a low percentage of success." "Following prediction is control." "I can control the immediate and the longer-term future—and that's just not the reality today." "In an uncertain environment… the insane thing would have been doing the same thing and expecting the same result." "Those that cling to stability, those that cling to certainty, are on a path toward organizational death." "Very rarely are specific programs the mission." "You've got to love the problem more than you love the solution." "Surround yourself with people that you trust… admit that it's going to be messy." Discussion questions Where are you still operating as if your environment is stable—even though it isn't? What "program" have you accidentally treated like it is the mission? What's one experiment you could run this month that serves the mission without defending old forms? Are you more "visionary curiosity" or "stability integrator"? Who balances you? What would it look like to "love the problem" without getting addicted to your favorite solution? Listener takeaway If you need certainty to lead, you're going to be miserable right now—and you might make your organization miserable too. The better path is to anchor in mission, loosen your grip on programs, and build a team that can both explore and execute. Uncertainty doesn't require panic; it requires humility, experimentation, and the willingness to trade control for learning.
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497
When Your Business Partner Is Your Spouse
Brian Miller (Coach Approach Ministries) is joined by Robert & Kaylee Fukui, authors of Tandem: The Married Entrepreneur's Guide for Greater Work-Life Balance, with special guest Danelle Miller (CAM Operations Director… and Brian's wife). They talk about what happens when marriage and business share the same kitchen table: role confusion, taking things personally, decision gridlock, risk tolerance gaps, and the surprisingly powerful value of prepping conversations so nobody gets blindsided. Along the way: performance reviews when you're married to the boss, why "we never argue" is not the flex people think it is, and the simple signals and boundaries that keep conflict messy-but-safe instead of messy-and-destructive. Key takeaways Name the hat you're wearing. "Husband vs boss vs coach" isn't semantics—it's the difference between teamwork and accidental emotional arson. Most conflict escalates because it gets personal fast. Entrepreneur couples take disagreement as distrust quicker than typical coworkers would. Decision-making is the #1 limiter. If you can't come to agreement, you can't move forward in business—and you might torch the marriage while trying. Risk tolerance differences are real (and predictable). One person wants to jump; the other wants a safety net. Healthy couples build the net together. No surprises. Healthy reviews and hard conversations work best when people get a heads-up and a chance to think and respond. "Guard your heart" (shot over the bow). A simple pre-signal + a few deep breaths helps the listener receive without reacting. DISC-style awareness lowers the temperature. When differences are expected, they stop feeling like betrayal and start feeling like design. Memorable moments (with timestamps) 00:01:30 – 00:04:10 — Brian describes working with Danelle: "On paper, I'm the boss…" (and then reality walks into the room). 00:04:11 – 00:06:34 — Performance reviews as a married team; why "changing hats purposefully" matters. 00:07:05 – 00:11:06 — Biggest obstacles: blurred lines, taking it personal, conflict resolution, and decision paralysis. 00:11:52 – 00:13:02 — "Opposites attract; once we say 'I do,' it's irritating." 00:14:11 – 00:15:13 — The myth of "we never argue" and why it can be a warning sign. 00:15:13 – 00:16:33 — Danelle's "six months of stuffing" → file cabinet dump (every spouse just felt that in their bones). 00:17:37 – 00:18:15 — "40,000 feet vs zero feet" leadership styles; how execution starts too early and vision changes too fast. 00:22:23 – 00:23:37 — Brian on the harder truth: telling Danelle difficult things and the need for "messy but safe." 00:23:48 – 00:24:23 — "Guard your heart" + deep breaths = better receiving. 00:31:42 – 00:33:36 — Resources: the book, assessment, and discovery call pathway. 00:33:47 – 00:35:16 — Danelle's takeaway: boundaries have types—time, giftedness, and roles—and naming them helps. Practical tools you can steal today 1) The "Hat Statement" Before a conversation, say: "I'm speaking as your spouse." "I'm speaking as your business partner." "I'm speaking as your boss/employee." Then agree on the goal: solve, decide, debrief, or just listen. 2) The "Shot Over the Bow" A pre-signal for hard truth: "Guard your heart." "This might sting; I love you; we're okay; we still need to talk." Then: two deep breaths before the content lands. 3) The "Is now a good time?" boundary Especially for the spaghetti/waffle clash: Ask permission to enter the other person's mental room. If not now, schedule it: lunch / weekly meeting / tonight. Discussion questions (great for couples, teams, or coach debrief) Where do work and home boundaries blur most for us—time, topic, tone, or role? When we disagree, what story do I tell myself about what it means? (e.g., "You don't trust me.") What's our risk tolerance gap—and how can we build "safe jumping" together? What pre-signal would help me receive hard truth without reacting? What would "messy but safe" look like as a norm in our relationship? Resources mentioned Book: Tandem: The Married Entrepreneur's Guide for Greater Work-Life Balance (available via Amazon; also mentioned: thetandembook.com) Assessment + CAM listener page: marriedentrepreneur.co/cam (includes assessment + discovery call link) Coach Approach Ministries: coachapproachministries.org
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496
How to Lead When Certainty is Gone with Brent Sleasman
Brian Miller (Coach Approach Ministries) sits down with Brent Sleasman (Winebrenner Seminary) to unpack a hard reality: important kingdom-focused organizations are disappearing—not because the mission isn't needed, but because leaders fail to see the bigger picture and adapt to a changed world. They explore how "little-kingdom thinking," nostalgia-driven decision-making, and fear of loss keep leaders stuck. The conversation lands on two mindset shifts—moving from deconstruction to construction, and from craving certainty to practicing curiosity—plus a practical lifeline: partnership and collaboration before it's too late. Big ideas & key takeaways 1) "Important organizations" can fail while the Kingdom doesn't Brent defines "important" as organizations advancing Jesus' kingdom mission—raising up and equipping workers. Some fail by closing completely; others "survive" by being absorbed and losing autonomy and original mission. 2) The "bigger perspective" starts with Kingdom clarity Brent's core framework: One King One Kingdom One Kingdom mission When organizations obsess over their own mission/brand distinctiveness and neglect the larger kingdom mission, they drift into "my little kingdom" thinking—and conflict with reality eventually wins. 3) Nonprofits get a weird superpower: they can ignore financial reality longer Because they're not serving shareholders or chasing profit, they can keep doing what "worked for my grandparents"… right up until the day they can't pay staff. 4) Leaders are loss-averse, so change feels like dying Brent names the psychology: we overweight what we might lose versus what we might gain. So even small workflow changes (a new system, new dashboard, a meeting rhythm) can get treated like a spiritual crisis. 5) Two mindset shifts for a VUCA world Brent's two shifts: Deconstruction → Construction (Jeremiah language: don't only tear down/uproot; also build and plant.) Certainty → Curiosity/comfort with uncertainty (the world is volatile, uncertain, complex, ambiguous—so "certainty" as a leadership strategy is basically a fossil.) 6) The practical rescue move: partnership Brent's blunt claim: organizations that failed had ready partners available, but didn't take the humility step early enough. If you think no partner exists, his response is essentially: test that—then admit you're wrong. 7) Before you "shut it down well," try one more creative loop He points to tools/resources (Business Model Canvas, The Startup Way, books/podcasts) to spark fresh thinking before leaders get enchanted with the shutdown process. Standout quotes (clean and punchy) "There's one king, one kingdom, one kingdom mission." "People would rather the church close than change the color of the carpet." "Nobody likes the person at a party that's constantly pointing out everything wrong." "You're going to feel worse about what you lose than what you gain—until you do it." "There were ready partners." Light outline (great for show notes) 00:00–01:35 Setup: "Human-to-human connection will matter more" + the bigger claim: orgs failing due to lack of perspective 01:36–04:31 What "important" means; what "failure" means (closure vs. absorption) 04:32–09:30 Bigger perspective = Kingdom-first clarity (Matthew 28; "one king…") 09:31–15:06 Why orgs get stuck: nostalgia, purity mindset, resistance to change, delayed financial consequences 15:07–20:07 Helping leaders embody mission; fear/loss aversion; journeying together 20:08–26:18 Mindset shifts: constructive thinking + comfort with uncertainty; VUCA 26:19–32:17 Direct advice: partnership/collaboration + use tools/resources to spur creativity; closing encouragement + CAM CTA Practical application prompts (for leaders listening) Where are we protecting our identity more than we're advancing the Kingdom mission? What's one change we keep calling "impossible" that is actually just "uncomfortable"? Who are the "ready partners" we've avoided because partnership would require humility? What decision are we delaying until "certainty" arrives (spoiler: it's not arriving)? What are we building and planting right now—not just critiquing? Links / resources mentioned (no links given in audio) Michael Porter, Competitive Advantage Business Model Canvas Eric Ries, The Startup Way VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, Ambiguous) Scriptural references/inferences: Matthew 28 (Great Commission), "harvest is plentiful/workers few," Jeremiah (tear down/uproot vs build/plant), "gates of hell shall not prevail"
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495
Human-to-Human: The Skill That's About to Get More Valuable
In this "presidential summit," Brian Miller talks with Brent Sleasman, president of Winebrenner Theological Seminary, about why human-to-human interaction is becoming more important—not less—in an age of remote work, economic pressure, and accelerating AI. They explore the surprising value of presence (even silent presence on Zoom), the tradeoffs between convenience and community, and why the future threat may not be "AI takes over," but "we accept a life where we don't have to show up." Brent offers practical "resistance" practices: choose the right communication medium for the message, and become aware of how environments (digital and physical) quietly shape relationships. Big Ideas & Takeaways Presence is doing more work than we can explain. Brian describes long silent pauses on Zoom with close friends—awkward on paper, deeply meaningful in reality. Remote work is rational…and still costly. Brent names the tension: economics, childcare, and flexibility push us away from in-person life, even though we're built for connection. "Soft skills" aren't soft. They're survival skills. Can you make a phone call? Handle conflict politely? Speak to a real human when it's uncomfortable? Employers increasingly care. AI's superpower is efficiency—our humanity includes limits. Brent warns that AI can outpace human pace, tempting us to treat limits as defects instead of features. The bigger danger may be delightful surrender. Brian pushes back on the fantasy that it would be "great" if AI removes the need for human responsibility, effort, and showing up. Fear sells. Pay attention to who benefits. Brent cautions that AI panic can become a marketing strategy: frighten people, then sell them the solution. The cultural fork: Orwell vs. Huxley. Brent references Neil Postman: the threat may not be suppressed truth (1984), but being anesthetized by pleasure and convenience (Brave New World). Memorable Moments / Quotes (paraphrased) "We're just sitting there…quiet…looking at each other…and it feels important." "It makes no sense financially to go in person… and yet I feel like I need to go." "AI is off-the-chart efficient. What if humans aren't designed to be highly efficient?" "You're still the one hitting send." Practices Brent Recommends Match the medium to the message. Ask: Is this a text? An email? A call? A visit? Don't force one tool to do another tool's job. Raise your awareness of your environments. Tech and space shape relationships. Rooms, furniture, screens, workflows—none are neutral. They were designed, so they can be redesigned. Conversation Outline (Timestamp-ish) 00:00–02:30 Why human-to-human interaction will matter more (remote work, AI, lived experience) 02:30–06:00 The strange value of silence and presence (Zoom pauses, men's group) 06:00–10:40 Remote work tension + economics as a force pulling us away from in-person 10:40–18:50 Seminary/community: what changes, what doesn't; hybrid connection and annual in-person "anchor" time 18:50–27:40 AI: efficiency vs. humanity; the temptation to avoid real people; "I don't want AI to write—I want to write" 27:40–30:00 Postman, Brave New World, and resisting "pleasant" dehumanization 30:00–34:05 Practical resistance: medium choices + environmental awareness; close and call to action Listener Reflection Questions Where have you traded presence for convenience—and what has it cost you? What relationships need a phone call or a coffee instead of one more email? What "environment" (phone, office layout, family rhythms, tech stack) is shaping you more than you're shaping it? Where are you letting efficiency define what "good" looks like?
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494
Coaching is the Missing Tool for Discipleship (Rebroadcast)
Coaching isn't just useful for discipleship—it may be the missing skill set for making disciple-makers. The conversation is candid, funny, and quietly sharp: COVID exposed shallow formation, and the church's "information-first" approach is often producing people who can pass the quiz but can't live the life. What this episode is really about How coaching skills turn discipleship from "content delivery" into "life transformation," and why that matters if you want disciples who can actually reproduce—aka spiritual grandchildren. The main arc COVID as an x-ray: Tracy says the pandemic revealed weakness and shallowness in churches—faith wasn't helping people through reality as much as we assumed. Disciples vs. disciple-makers: Lots of systems can "disciple" people. The breakdown comes when those people are supposed to disciple others…and don't. Coaching as the bridge: Listening, powerful questions, Holy Spirit awareness, concise observations, encouragement—these are the exact "soft skills" disciple-makers need. Ownership beats compliance: If a person doesn't own the next step, they won't do it. Coaching helps them name it, choose it, and commit to it. Gold analogies and quotable moments "Checkbox Christianity": Brian compares conversion to clicking "I agree" on software terms you didn't read…until life hits and you realize you never actually understood what you signed up for. David wearing Saul's armor: What works for the discipler isn't automatically the right "rule of life" for the disciple. Customization matters. Your gallbladder parable: ER doc assumed you wouldn't change ("you'll be back; let's take it out"). Family doctor assumed change is possible and coached you toward it—so you kept your gallbladder. That becomes the whole discipleship point: do we assume people can change? "Pastor, what should I do?" → "You should ask Jesus." (Brian notes how rare that response is—and how coaching questions push people into hearing God, not outsourcing their spiritual life to professionals.) Practical coaching skills applied to discipleship (the "how") Listen to locate, not to reload. Disciple-making isn't "me talking, you listening." It's listening to where someone actually is, then drawing them out. Ask questions that create awareness: Jesus-style questions show up ("Who do you say I am?"). Good disciple-makers ask, not just tell. Use observations (concise messages), not advice-dumps: "When you quoted that verse, something lit up in you." "It sounds like Scripture reading hasn't been life-giving lately." Observations invite reflection without taking over. Offer resources when the gap is real: You can't "pull out" what isn't there. Tracy's prayer example: discover she knows only one way to pray → offer a resource → let her choose what resonates → she owns it. The model Brian Tracy is building 10-month micro-group discipleship (max four people, weekly, relational, life-on-life). Participants lead segments early so development is "doing," not just learning. After 10 months, they go through CAM 501, then get released to disciple 2–3 people. Tracy continues coaching them monthly to review progress—very "Jesus: watch me → do it → debrief → do it again." The punchline challenge to the church The church often assumes discipleship = more information. But Scripture itself pushes toward transformation + obedience: "Teaching them to observe/do…" James: don't merely listen and deceive yourselves. D.L. Moody: Bible wasn't given to increase information, but to transform life. Coaching helps close the gap between knowing and doing. Where Tracy says this is going A disciple-making movement in his local church built on coaching-enabled disciple-makers. Cohorts of pastors in the fall to redesign discipleship in their contexts using coaching skills as the method, regardless of the curriculum. Ending vibe They land the plane with contact info (and more "Brian vs. Bryan" banter), then Brian ties it to Romans 12: transformation through renewed thinking—exactly the kind of change coaching is designed to catalyze.
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493
Masterclass in Coaching Leaders
Brian Miller and Rev. Dr. Brian Tracy keep the January theme rolling—escaping the tyranny of the urgent—but this episode zeroes in on leadership coaching: why leaders get stuck, what beliefs jam the gears, and how a coach helps a leader climb out of survival mode and back into purpose. It opens with some playful "Brian spelling reform" banter (the Y can repent), then turns into a surprisingly practical coaching framework for leaders who feel like every week is "sludging through the mud." Key Highlights Why leaders stall out: Many leaders know the hill they want to take… but their Monday–Friday reality feels like mud, and they can't translate vision into Tuesday afternoon. Triple-loop coaching lens: Brian frames the problem as actions → strategy → identity. Tracy agrees most leaders stay stuck at the surface level (tweaking actions) without addressing strategy or identity. Balcony view: They talk about moving leaders from minutiae to perspective using "psychological distancing" and future-oriented questions: "Where do you want this to be in 5 years?" "What would 10-years-from-now you tell you to focus on?" Unsticking the gear: Brian describes a coaching move that creates safety—"I'm not holding you to this"—to help a frozen leader name a first step and regain momentum. Beliefs that sabotage leaders: Scarcity vs. abundance (closed-handed vs. open-handed leadership) "If I'm the leader, I should know everything" (which kills curiosity and learning) "If I'm leading right, there won't be complaints" (spoiler: change creates complaints) Takeaways Coaching gives leaders a place where every sentence isn't a grenade. In leadership, words carry 10x weight; coaching offers a safe lab to think out loud without collateral damage. A good leader reviews and prunes. Tracy describes doing a regular "stop/start" review twice a year because clutter expands like glitter—once it's in the room, it's everywhere. Don't build everything around yourself. Brian reflects on leaving "holes" when he exited organizations earlier in life—and names that as a leadership mistake. Healthy leadership equips others until the organization can run without you. Empowerment is the job. Tracy grounds it in Ephesians 4: leaders equip others to do the work, not hoard the work to feel needed. Criticism isn't a sign you're failing—sometimes it's proof you're leading. If you're changing anything meaningful, pushback is part of the fee. Even Jesus had bad Yelp reviews. Memorable Lines & Moments "Survival" as a strategy is still a strategy… just a terrible one. "The more authority you give away, the more authority you have." "If I'm successful, it's not because I got the job done—it's because they got it done." Moneyball reference: "The first guy through the wall always gets beat up." (Accurate, and also why most people prefer to be the second guy.)
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492
Three Hard Truths About the Future of Coaching and the Church
🔑 Three Insights from the CAM Leaders Meeting Drawing from Coach Approach Ministries' first leaders meeting without any of its founders, Brian shares three convictions that will shape the future of coaching—and the church. 1️⃣ Human-to-Human Interaction Is Becoming More Valuable, Not Less As technology accelerates and polarization deepens, people aren't craving better performance—they're craving presence. Younger generations are increasingly skeptical of anything that feels artificial Coaching offers something rare: real attention, real listening, real agency Coaching doesn't drain energy—it often restores it In a world saturated with noise, presence is becoming a competitive advantage. 2️⃣ Institutions Are Failing Because They Can't See the Bigger Picture Organizations aren't collapsing primarily from outside pressure—but from narrow vision. The world has changed. Not incrementally. Fundamentally. Systems are no longer simple or even complicated—they're complex What worked yesterday may fail tomorrow, even if nothing "changed" The leaders who thrive are learners, not defenders of the past A consistent pattern has emerged: People open to coaching tend to flourish inside organizations. Those resistant to coaching almost always leave. That's not a theory. It's an observation. 3️⃣ The Greatest Need in Churches Isn't Strategy—It's Conflict Resolution After working with leaders overseeing large networks of churches, one issue rises above the rest: unresolved conflict. Unaddressed relational strain: Exhausts leaders Hollow outs communities Quietly dismantles trust Coaching skills—listening, curiosity, emotional regulation, shared understanding—are exactly what's missing. Brian argues that even a short investment in coach training can dramatically improve how leaders talk with one another—often more in two days than in years of meetings. And that opens a door. ⛪ A Vision for the Church The church may be one of the last places where people still know how to gather. That's not a liability. It's an opportunity. If reconciliation truly sits at the heart of the gospel, then coaching may be one of the most practical ways churches can live that out—internally and for the world. This conviction is shaping Brian's focus for 2026, with a renewed interest in on-site coach training for pastors, staff, and church leaders. ✈️ What's Next Continued excellence in online coach training More teaching from Brian in 2026 A growing emphasis on in-person presence where it matters most And yes—possibly more flights than courtrooms. 🙏 Thank You for Listening If you've listened to one episode or all five hundred—thank you. And if you're curious about coaching, coach training, or how to show up better in a complex world, you're in the right place. 👉 Learn more at coachapproachministries.org We'll see you next week.
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491
Benefits of Slow Productivity
In this episode, Brian Miller and Brian Tracy continue January's theme of resisting the tyranny of the urgent by exploring why "moving fast" isn't the same as "moving forward." They talk about Sabbath as a spiritual act of trust, Cal Newport's Slow Productivity, and how focus, rest, and even fun are not distractions—they're fuel. The conversation keeps circling one core idea: if you want to do better work, you may need to do less of it. Key Highlights Brian and Brian open with playful banter, then pivot quickly into a serious tension: January goal-setting in a world where the future feels harder to predict. They name a common trap: false urgency—working really hard without clarity about what you're actually trying to achieve. Sabbath gets reframed as a non-optional command (yes, it's in the same list as "don't murder," which is… awkwardly clarifying). They unpack principles from Cal Newport's Slow Productivity: do fewer things, work at a natural pace, and obsess over quality. A practical leadership moment: both share examples of delegating what you're not gifted for (pastoral care / follow-up calls) so others can shine—and people actually like the care they receive. Takeaways Speed is not a strategy. Clarity about where you're going beats frantic motion every time. Rest is a leadership discipline, not a reward. If you won't stop, you're basically telling God, "I got this," which is adorable… and wrong. Do less, better. Limit projects, double time estimates, and protect "recovery time" so your best work isn't squeezed out by your busiest work. Stay in your sweet spot. Stop trying to become "average" at what you're not built for—delegate it to someone who's a rock star. Quality makes you stand out. Whether it's a sermon, a weekly email, or coaching sessions—slower, more thoughtful work is often what creates real value.
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490
Learning About Setting Goals
In this episode, Brian Miller and Brian Tracy kick off January's theme—Escaping the Tyranny of the Urgent—by looking back at Brian's 2025 goal list (10 goals… 3 achieved… baseball Hall of Fame, real life: "ouch"). They explore what a "failed" goal year can teach you: you can't predict what's coming, God opens doors you didn't even know existed, and the real win isn't perfect outcomes—it's faithful work and healthy relationships. Key Highlights Brian admits he set 10 public goals for 2025 and hit 3, then uses that "miss" as a learning lab rather than a guilt trip. You can't predict the future: partnerships changed, a collarbone broke, and leadership responsibilities shifted—none of which were on the goal spreadsheet. Hold goals loosely: both Brians describe learning to release control and stay alert to God's unexpected openings. Focus on the work, not the scoreboard: habits and daily faithfulness matter more than lofty targets (with a nod to Atomic Habits and the "become the person" principle). Relationships are the real goal: productivity can quietly sabotage what matters most—community, family, prayer partners, and life-giving friendships. Takeaways Set fewer goals—and build "adaptability" into them. A smaller number of priorities leaves room for real life (and real leadership curveballs). Measure faithfulness by the work you do daily, not just the outcomes you can't control. Ask: "Does this goal strengthen relationships?" If it doesn't, it might be a shiny distraction wearing a halo. Stop trying to kick down locked doors. Pay attention to the doors God opens—and when they open, walk through them boldly. Schedule rest and life-giving time on purpose. If you never plan time off, the urgent will happily eat your entire year.
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497 Rebroadcast: Three Behaviors for Getting Clients
In this episode, Brian Miller and Chad Hall discuss three essential behaviors that help coaches build a thriving practice: Networking, Nurturing, and Negotiating. They explain how these behaviors create a natural flow from awareness to relationship to partnership—and why skipping steps leads to awkwardness and frustration. Using real examples from their own coaching businesses, Brian and Chad illustrate how to operationalize each behavior in ways that fit your personality, your clients, and your local or distributed context. Key Highlights The 3 N's Framework: Networking (they know you), Nurturing (you know them), and Negotiating (you work together)—a clear progression for building a client base. Fit your strengths: Networking doesn't mean schmoozy cocktail parties; it can be teaching, podcasting, or community events—whatever authentically connects you. Patience is vital: Like farming, you can't force growth; you can only create the conditions—plant, water, and cultivate relationships. Tools shift by context: A podcast might be networking for CAM but nurturing for a local firm; the purpose defines the behavior. Bring your team along: Involve your staff early so clients build trust with the organization, not just with you personally. Takeaways Map your client journey. Identify who's on your radar, who you're networking with, who you're nurturing, and who you're negotiating with. Track without strangling. Systems help—but don't overmanage relationships; stay organic and human. Do what you enjoy. Choose networking and nurturing methods that energize you so consistency feels natural. Partnership multiplies momentum. Pair with people whose strengths complement yours—networkers, nurturers, or closers. Relationships create readiness. The best clients often come from long-term nurturing; trust builds quietly before opportunity emerges.
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496 The Kingdom of God
In this episode, Brian Miller and Chad Hall revisit Matthew chapters 8 and 9 to explore the escalating revelation of Jesus' authority—from healing a leper and a centurion's servant to calming a storm and forgiving sins. They trace how each miracle expands the borders of inclusion, challenges human expectations, and demonstrates that nothing—disease, distance, nature, or even sin—can stand outside Jesus' transforming reach. The conversation turns deeply practical for Christian coaches, connecting forgiveness and reconciliation to the heart of transformational coaching. Key Highlights Inclusion as the heartbeat of the Kingdom. Jesus' first acts after the Sermon on the Mount—healing a leper and a Roman centurion's servant—reveal a radical openness that shocks religious boundaries. Escalating power and presence. Each story shows Jesus' authority expanding: from physical healing to calming creation to resolving the cosmic issue of sin. Opting out vs. opting in. Many reject Jesus not because He excludes them, but because inclusion offends their control, comfort, or sense of superiority. Forgiveness as spiritual power. Forgiving sins wasn't symbolic—it was a cataclysmic act that disrupted religious structures and revealed divine reconciliation. Coaching connection. Like Jesus, coaches help others see what's hidden beneath the surface—often an invisible need for forgiveness or reconciliation that keeps clients stuck. Takeaways Transformation begins with inclusion. God's kingdom reaches the excluded first—and invites everyone willing to step in. Forgiveness is deeper than fixing. In both faith and coaching, lasting change often starts with releasing resentment or guilt. Don't fear the storm. Growth requires following Jesus into chaos—where peace and clarity emerge. Invisible forces matter. Emotional and spiritual "black holes" like unforgiveness bend everything around them until they're addressed. Coaching is kingdom work. Helping clients reconcile—to God, themselves, and others—is a sacred act of restoration, not just problem-solving.
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495 Blending Neuroscience of co-regulation with coaching skills with Marcia Reynolds
Sign up for the free webinar on January 8, 2026 at 11am ET with Marcia Reynolds. In this episode, Brian Miller is joined by Dr. Marcia Reynolds, former president of the International Coaching Federation and globally recognized thought leader on emotional intelligence and coaching presence. Together, they explore how neuroscience explains co-regulation—the subtle emotional exchange between coach and client that determines trust, safety, and transformation. Marcia shares practical ways coaches can regulate their own emotions, influence the energy in the coaching space, and trigger the brain chemistry that opens clients to deeper insight and growth. Key Highlights Coaching presence is emotional, not just cognitive. True presence isn't about paying attention—it's about radiating curiosity, compassion, and care that the client feels. Energy precedes words. Before a coach says anything, the client's brain detects safety or threat based on the coach's tone, body, and emotional state. Co-regulation is constant. We always regulate to the person with the most emotional influence in the room—often the coach or leader. The brain's chemistry shapes trust. Compassionate connection releases oxytocin, serotonin, and dopamine, which calm anxiety and open creativity and insight. Judgment, fear, and impatience break presence. These emotions start in the body before the brain and must be noticed, released, and replaced intentionally. Takeaways Regulate yourself first. Your emotional state sets the tone. Enter sessions grounded, curious, and compassionate. Safety is felt, not declared. Saying "you're safe here" doesn't build trust—your calm presence does. Track with curiosity. Listen beyond the story for values, fears, and contradictions that reveal transformation points. Choose your energy intentionally. Notice where emotion shows up in your body, breathe, and return to curiosity and care. Lead with "big light." Like Marcia's mentor said, your job is to model presence and emotional maturity—even when others don't.
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494 Simple, Complicated, Complex
In this episode, Brian and Chad Hall unpack the "Simple–Complicated–Complex" lens for leaders and coaches—how to tell which kind of situation you're facing and how to respond differently so you stop over-analyzing the unknowable and start learning your way forward. Key Highlights Definitions with pictures: Simple = obvious cause/effect (dominoes). Complicated = cause/effect exists but requires expertise (car engine, medical diagnosis). Complex = patterns only clear in hindsight; outcomes shift as actors adapt (rainforest, economy, AI). The core mistake: Treating complex problems with complicated tools—endless analysis and confidence theater—when what's needed is experimentation and learning. Operate by domain: Simple → standardize and simplify; Complicated → analyze, measure, hire experts; Complex → place small bets, learn fast, adapt. Real-world examples: Hiring during COVID, SEO after algorithm shifts, tariffs and the economy, competition dynamics (new stores nearby), church growth models—each shows why yesterday's levers stop working. Beyond business: Parenting and long-range strategy are inherently complex—near-term is clearer, long-term requires humility, feedback loops, and patience. Takeaways Name the game first. Ask: Is this simple, complicated, or complex? Your tactics should match the domain. In complex spaces, act to learn. Don't wait for perfect clarity—run small experiments, gather feedback, iterate. Save analysis for the right problems. Use experts and diagnostics where cause/effect can genuinely be mapped. Bias toward simplicity. Wherever possible, reduce processes to the simplest reliable system (hello, E-Myth). Hold plans loosely. What worked may stop working; assume adaptation is part of the job, not a detour.
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493 Rebroadcast: Seven Ways to Get Clients
In this episode, Brian Miller and Chad Hall share seven practical and relational ways to find new coaching clients. Their conversation blends mindset, strategy, and faith—reminding listeners that building a coaching practice is less about marketing gimmicks and more about authentic relationships, service, and attentiveness to where God is already at work. Whether you're just starting out or seeking to grow your client base, this episode offers actionable insights to help you move forward with confidence and purpose. Key Highlights Referrals from existing clients are the most natural and effective way to gain new clients—make it easy for them by describing who you want to work with. Referrals from non-clients (like community leaders or church contacts) can be equally valuable when you've built trust and credibility. Publishing—through blogs, podcasts, or ebooks—helps increase visibility but works best when it serves the client's needs, not your ego. Presenting at local events, workshops, or online gatherings positions you as a helpful expert and naturally draws interested clients. Prayerfulness grounds your efforts, helping you discern where God is opening doors and aligning your work with His purpose. Takeaways Serve before selling. The best marketing for coaching is genuine service—offering value and care to others. Ask directly. Many clients come simply because you invited them—don't assume people will approach you first. Stay active in your community. Participation builds trust, connection, and opportunities for meaningful engagement. Keep your posture humble and relational. Avoid transactional tactics like referral fees—focus on creating goodwill. Pray with expectation. Trust that God is already at work preparing opportunities; your role is to notice and join in.
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492 The Right Mindset to Grow Your Practice
In this episode, Brian Miller and Chad Hall explore the mindset behind growing a successful coaching practice. They argue that even the best systems, tools, and strategies won't help if a coach lacks the hunger, drive, and willingness to face discomfort. Drawing analogies from Chick-fil-A operators to church planting to personal sales experiences, Brian and Chad highlight that growth happens when you embrace the pain of doing hard, awkward things—like initiating conversations, facing rejection, and persisting through failure. Key Highlights Growth in your coaching practice starts with mindset, not methods or systems. Using Chick-fil-A operators as an example, Chad explains that success depends on people who bring energy, ownership, and drive—not just those who follow a system. Coaches often avoid the pain of outreach because of fear, overthinking, or perfectionism, but pain is the signal of what to do next. Mindset transformation includes shifting from avoidance to action: taking small, imperfect steps and learning from mistakes. The difference between stuck coaches and growing coaches often comes down to one thing—consistent conversations that build momentum. Takeaways Pain is the pathway. Don't avoid discomfort—lean into it. It's often the indicator of where you need to act. Conversations create clients. Websites and social media can't replace simply talking to people. Stop overthinking. Adopt a C-student mentality—take action, learn, adjust, and move forward. Fuel beats perfection. Motivation and movement matter more than having the perfect system. Failure strengthens you. Each awkward or unsuccessful attempt builds resilience and confidence for the next one.
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490 Framework for Growing Your Coaching Practice
In this episode, Brian Miller and Chad Hall unpack one of the most practical frameworks for growing a coaching practice — drawn from Acts 1:8 and the idea of starting in "Jerusalem" (the people who already know, like, and trust you) before moving outward to "Judea," "Samaria," and "the ends of the earth." Through stories, examples, and coaching wisdom, they explore why so many coaches try to start in Samaria — with websites and strangers — instead of the relationships that already surround them. The conversation blends biblical insight with business strategy, helping listeners reframe how they think about client development and confidence building. Key Highlights The "Jerusalem–Judea–Samaria–Ends of the Earth" model provides a spiritual and strategic roadmap for building a coaching practice. Many new coaches mistakenly try to market to strangers (Samaria) instead of starting with those who already know and trust them (Jerusalem). Confidence grows naturally when you start with low-hanging fruit — people ready and willing to engage — rather than high-hanging, resistant prospects. A handful of "champions" in your life want you to succeed and are eager to open doors, but you have to be willing to ask for help. Building a network takes time and humility — and knowing where you're starting is essential to making sustainable progress. Takeaways Start in your Jerusalem. Focus first on people who already know, like, and trust you. These are the relationships most ready to bear fruit. Ask for help. Don't rob your champions of the blessing of supporting you. They want to help — and connecting you is often their joy. Build confidence through success. Each small win strengthens your confidence and credibility, preparing you for larger opportunities. Be clear and courageous. Tell people you're getting started and invite them to partner with you — at least one will likely say yes. Expand outward intentionally. As your network and experience grow, let your influence move naturally from Jerusalem to Judea to Samaria, rather than leaping ahead.
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489 Three Myths about Charging for Coaching (Rebroadcast)
Podcast Notes Episode 489 Three Myths about Charging for Coaching (Rebroadcast) Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: October 30, 2025 In this episode, Brian and Chad unpack three common myths that hold coaches back from confidently charging for their services. Drawing from years of training and mentoring coaches, they discuss the internal beliefs and mindset barriers around money—especially within Christian coaching circles—and offer practical ways to build confidence, communicate value, and stop underselling the impact of coaching. Key Highlights The myth that "people can't afford coaching" often reflects a coach's own limiting beliefs rather than reality. Undervaluing yourself or the coaching process can prevent you from confidently seeking clients. Coaches often project their own financial limitations onto others, assuming clients can't or won't invest. Paying for your own coaching helps reinforce belief in its value and gives you firsthand credibility. Lowering prices rarely leads to better traction—it can confuse potential clients and devalue your offering. Takeaways Challenge your assumptions about what others can afford; avoid saying "no" on their behalf. Invest in your own coaching experience to build conviction and authenticity when selling. Recognize that coaching is about outcomes and transformation, not just the session time. Maintain pricing integrity—confidence and clarity communicate value better than discounts. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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488 Your First Conversation with AI, w/ Douglas Foltz
Podcast Notes Episode 488 Your First Conversation with AI, w/ Douglas Foltz Host: Brian Miller, PCC Guest: Doug Foltz Date: October 23, 2025 In this episode, Brian and return guest Douglas (Doug) Foltz, Head of Product at Church.tech, discuss practical steps for beginning to use artificial intelligence in your work or organization. They explore how to choose a reliable AI platform, protect your data privacy, and start experimenting with prompts. The conversation offers an accessible entry point for those curious about AI, breaking down complex concepts into simple, actionable advice for everyday users. *]:pointer-events-auto [content-visibility:auto] supports-[content-visibility:auto]:[contain-intrinsic-size:auto_100lvh] scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "1f1ac2bc-5936-4890-b4e4-dc867b4d63ef" data-testid= "conversation-turn-54" data-scroll-anchor="true" data-turn= "assistant"> Key Highlights The best first step with AI is to choose a paid platform to ensure data privacy and better functionality. Free AI tools often make you the product, collecting and using your data for training purposes. Start by experimenting conversationally—you don't need to understand technical jargon to use AI effectively. Learn to refine prompts over time, just as you would adjust your communication when getting to know someone. Understanding AI memory and context helps you manage how your conversations and data are stored or remembered. Takeaways Investing a small amount monthly in a paid AI subscription offers greater security and performance. You can use AI to simplify complex information—ask it to explain topics at your level of understanding. Don't overthink prompts; start with natural conversation and refine as you learn. Approach AI as a helpful conversation partner, not a technical system you must master immediately. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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487 Identity Focus and Exponential Change
Podcast Notes Episode 487 Identity Focus and Exponential Change Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: October 16, 2025 In this episode, Brian and Chad discuss the ideas behind 10x is Easier than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy, exploring how exponential growth often requires less effort than incremental progress—because it demands focus, simplicity, and internal transformation. They connect these principles to coaching, sharing personal insights about mindset shifts, self-perception, and giving oneself permission to grow beyond current limits. Key Highlights The "10x" mindset represents transformation, not a numeric goal—it's about thinking differently, not doing more. Exponential growth starts with simplification and focus, freeing you from the clutter of incremental progress. True change requires an identity shift before a strategy shift—you must first see yourself differently to act differently. The story of a stay-at-home mom turned top realtor captures how mindset and identity transformation drive lasting growth. Permission emerges as a key theme—letting go of old methods, embracing new approaches, and redefining success with freedom and purpose. Takeaways Real growth begins internally—with clarity of purpose and identity. Simplicity and focus often create more progress than constant effort. Transformation happens when identity shifts, not just strategy. Coaching invites both permission and courage to grow into what's next. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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486 The Wisdom Within Adaptation w/ Douglas Foltz
Podcast Notes Episode 486 The Wisdom Within Adaptation w/ Douglas Foltz Host: Brian Miller, PCC Guest: Doug Foltz Date: October 9, 2025 In this episode, Brian welcomes Douglas (Doug) Foltz, Head of Product at Church.tech, for a candid conversation about artificial intelligence and its impact on ministry, coaching, and human relationships. They explore the pace of AI innovation, ethical and theological implications for the Church, and how leaders can engage technology without losing the essence of humanity and connection. Key Highlights: Brian and Doug discuss the overwhelming speed of AI development and why even tech-savvy people feel left behind. Doug explains why organizations can't simply "wait out" AI trends, noting that innovation requires anticipating where the technology is heading. They examine how AI can enhance, not replace, human work—especially in coaching and ministry contexts. Doug shares how Church.tech is using AI tools to improve sermon clarity, logic, and trauma sensitivity without removing the human voice. The conversation turns to the importance of developing a "theology of humanity" to ensure technology strengthens relationships rather than deepening isolation. Takeaways: The Church must engage AI thoughtfully, grounding its use in a theology of work and human dignity. AI can be a valuable tool for refining and supporting ministry, but it should never substitute genuine human presence or spiritual connection. Leaders should discern ethical lines between using AI for assistance and outsourcing authenticity. True innovation in faith communities means designing technology that draws people closer—to one another and to God. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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485 A New Season Arrives
Podcast Notes Episode 485 A New Season Arrives Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: October 2, 2025 In this episode, Brian Miller and Chad Hall share the significant announcement that Chad will be stepping away from Coach Approach Ministries after nearly twenty years of leadership. Together, they reflect on the journey, the transition process, and what lies ahead for both CAM and its community. The conversation balances gratitude for the past with excitement for the future, offering insights on leadership, stewardship, and embracing new seasons. Key Highlights Chad Hall announces his transition out of his role after almost two decades as president and co-founder of Coach Approach Ministries. Reflections on the emotional mix of grief and excitement that comes with leadership transitions. Insights from William Bridges' transition model—recognizing loss while looking toward future opportunities. Growth of CAM from a small founding team to a large, thriving community of faculty, managers, and international students. Discussion on CAM's future, including Brian's leadership, expanded teaching, and possibilities for evolving the podcast format. Takeaways Transitions are best navigated by acknowledging both the grief of loss and the excitement of new beginnings. Healthy organizations thrive when leadership responsibilities are shared, developed, and eventually transitioned. Stewardship in leadership means knowing when to step aside for the organization's growth. New seasons provide opportunities for creativity, fresh direction, and renewed engagement with community. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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484 10,000 Hours of Coaching, 10,000 Hours of Learning w/ Laura-Catherine Etheridge
Podcast Notes Episode 484 10,000 Hours of Coaching, 10,000 Hours of Learning w/ Laura-Catherine Etheridge Host: Brian Miller, PCC Guest: Laura-Catherine Etheridge, MCC Date: September 25th, 2025 In this episode, Brian speaks with Laura-Catherine Etheridge, MCC, a founding partner at Stratos2 and a seasoned coach with over 10,000 coaching hours. Laura shares her journey into coaching at a young age, the lessons she's learned along the way, and what she wishes she could tell her younger self. The conversation highlights how presence, listening, and genuine care—not credentials—create the greatest impact in coaching. Key Highlights: Laura reached over 10,000 coaching hours and reflects on her early start in the field at age 24. She discovered coaching through hiring a coach while running her high school business. She emphasizes the importance of presence, listening, and caring deeply for clients over technical skills or credentials. Coaching success comes from creating safe, distraction-free spaces where clients can process and explore. Credentials matter less to clients than the sense that their coach cares and can genuinely help them. Takeaways: Coaching is most impactful when you focus on who you are as a person, not just what you know. Presence and deep listening create safety and trust, allowing clients to open up and move forward. Credentials and external markers have far less influence on clients than authentic care and practical support. Coaches should spend time working through their own distractions so they can be fully available for clients. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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483 The Promise and Pitfalls of ChatGPT
Podcast Notes Episode 483 The Promise and Pitfalls of ChatGPT Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: September 18th, 2025 In this episode, the hosts reflect on their early experiences experimenting with ChatGPT, exploring both its surprising strengths and its frustrating limitations. What began with hesitation and even skepticism turned into curiosity as they discovered that working with AI requires learning a "new language." They share examples of using ChatGPT for brainstorming, writing support, and planning, while also wrestling with issues of trust when the tool generated confident but false information. Key Highlights Early reluctance to adopt AI gave way to curiosity and intentional use, framed as learning a "new language." ChatGPT was tested as a professional thinking partner, helping with brainstorming, writing support, and planning. Trust issues emerged when AI confidently gave false or misleading information (e.g., fabricated movie scenes, podcasts, or emails). Iterative, back-and-forth prompting produced better results than one-shot requests. Teaching the model to mirror personal writing style improved authenticity and usefulness in content creation. Takeaways Treat AI as a collaborative partner, not a one-click solution. Be aware of AI's tendency to "hallucinate" information and verify claims independently. Strong prompts and iterative dialogue are key to getting useful, authentic-sounding results. AI can accelerate creativity and productivity, but final ownership of content must remain human. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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482 An Insight Into the Internal w/ Val Hastings
Podcast Notes Episode 482 An Insight Into the Internal w/ Val Hastings Host: Brian Miller, PCC Guest: Val Hastings Date: September 11th, 2025 In this episode, Master Certified Coach Val Hastings shares insights from his book Coaching from the Inside and decades of experience training leaders and coaches worldwide. He unpacks what makes internal coaching unique, how it differs from external coaching, and why every leader can and should integrate coaching into their leadership style. Val also introduces guiding principles for internal coaches, highlighting both opportunities and challenges of coaching within an organization. Key Highlights: Val's coaching journey began unexpectedly but led to a lifelong commitment to transforming leaders through an inside-out approach. Only 7% of coaches work as full-time external coaches—93% are internal leaders, supervisors, or professionals integrating coaching into their roles. Internal coaching presents unique challenges: existing relationships, vested interests in outcomes, confidentiality concerns, and "in-the-moment" hallway or workplace coaching. Three powerful principles from Val's Guiding Principles of Internal Coaching: Coaching Initiative: internal coaches can proactively engage with clients in real time. Demonstrating Worth: internal coaches must continually educate and show value within their organizations. Hat Switching: balancing multiple roles (leader, supervisor, peer, coach) fluidly without derailing conversations. Coaching is often better caught than taught—demonstrations and live experiences help people grasp its transformative power more than explanations. Takeaways: Internal coaching is the reality for most professionals, and learning its unique dynamics is essential for effective leadership. Being intentional about confidentiality, boundaries, and bias safeguards trust when coaching inside an organization. Demonstrating value and educating others about coaching is critical even for internal coaches—visibility and clarity sustain impact. Leaders who master "hat switching" can seamlessly balance authority with coaching presence, maximizing both trust and effectiveness. Coaching from the inside-out creates sustainable cultural transformation, equipping leaders to unlock potential at every level. Get more of Val at the following: Coaching4Today'sLeaders Coaching4Clergy Check out his book! And don't forget to join us as we welcome Val back to host a free, online webinar that will showcase the power and impact of internal coaching! www.coachapproachministries.org/val Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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481 Choosing What (and What Not) to Adapt To
Podcast Notes Episode 481 Choosing What (and What Not) to Adapt To Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: September 4th, 2025 In this episode, Brian and Chad explore the theme of adaptability. Prompted by Brian's personal story of recovering from a four-wheeler accident that left him with a broken collarbone, the conversation unpacks how we experiment, adjust, and decide when to adapt—or not—in both personal life and leadership. They also connect these ideas to broader challenges such as incorporating AI, navigating societal changes, and discerning when adaptation aligns with one's guiding principles. Key Highlights Brian shares his accident experience and how his recovery forced unexpected adaptations in everyday tasks. Adaptability often comes through experimentation—trial and error with temporary vs. permanent solutions. A catalyst (urgency or opportunity) usually pushes people to adapt; without it, many resist change. Adaptation is not always universal—leaders must discern what truly matters and align with a "North Star." The tension between adapting to everything vs. choosing intentional limits, especially around technology, AI, politics, or social media. Takeaways Adaptability is less about convenience and more about resilience: finding creative solutions when circumstances shift. Temporary adaptations can carry us through transition periods without needing to define a permanent "new normal" too quickly. A guiding principle (your "North Star") helps determine when to adapt and when to resist changes that distract or harm. Effective leaders adapt selectively—embracing necessary change while staying anchored to core values and priorities. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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480 Practicing a Relentless Empathy, w/ Dr. Brian Piccolo
Podcast Notes Episode 480 Practicing a Relentless Empathy, w/ Dr. Brian Piccolo Host: Brian Miller, PCC Guest: Dr. Brian Piccolo Date: August 28th, 2025 In this episode, Brian interviews Dr. Brian Piccolo, author of Relentless Empathy. They discuss the transformative power of empathy in relationships, ministry, and everyday life. Dr. Piccolo shares personal stories from his marriage, ministry, and family that illustrate how empathy—understood as connecting, understanding, relating, and empowering—can heal, restore, and deepen human connection. Key Highlights Kobe Bryant's influence: A quote from Bryant about regretting not having more empathy inspired Piccolo to research the concept in depth, discovering empathy's relatively new place in language and culture. The C.U.R.E. model of empathy: Connect, Understand, Relate, Empower—Piccolo's framework for applying empathy in practical, everyday settings. Biblical grounding: Scripture passages such as Hebrews 10:24, Philippians 2:4, and Romans 12:15 reinforce the call to empathy as central to discipleship and relational wholeness. Personal stories of transformation: Piccolo recounts connecting with his suicidal father through empathy, and how listening, mirroring emotions, and meeting needs can restore purpose and hope. Takeaways Empathy is an action: It goes beyond feelings of pity or sympathy to actively connect, listen, and respond to others' needs. Questions equal love: Asking thoughtful questions communicates care and often does more good than offering advice or solutions. Empathy restores relationships: Whether in marriage, ministry, or family, practicing empathy opens doors to healing and deeper connection. Biblical call to empathy: Loving our neighbor as ourselves requires taking genuine interest in others' lives, needs, and emotions. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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479 The Power (and Pressure) of Leading with Others
Podcast Notes Episode 479 The Power (and Pressure) of Leading with Others Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: August 21st, 2025 In this episode, Brian and Chad explore the dynamics of coaching through a live demonstration. Brian steps into the role of client, reflecting on his leadership venture, the departure of his business partner, and the challenges of discerning what kind of partnership he needs moving forward. The conversation unpacks the tension between high performance patterns, partnership dynamics, and clarity about next steps in leadership. Key Highlights: A behind-the-scenes look at Brian's real coaching session where he steps into the client role. The tension between being a high-performer alone vs. thriving when partnered with someone. How the departure of a trusted business partner can spark questions of identity, direction, and sustainability. The creative idea of "pseudo-partnerships" — alternatives to traditional 50/50 ownership models. The importance of accountability structures in leadership and how they influence success. Takeaways: Clarity comes not just from deciding whether you need a partner, but from defining what kind of partner best supports your vision. High performance patterns often reveal truths about how we work best, even when they feel limiting — accepting and working with them can prevent missteps. A partner doesn't always need to be an equal co-owner; sometimes accountability and tactical execution are the missing ingredients. Moving slowly and intentionally into a new partnership (rather than rushing) helps ensure alignment and long-term sustainability. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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478 Brushstrokes & Breakthroughs, with Mark Ross
Podcast Notes Episode 478 Brushstrokes & Breakthroughs with Mark Ross Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC Guest: Mark Ross Date: August 14th, 2025 In this episode, Brian Miller talks with Mark Ross — a coach, artist, and founder of Next Thing Group — about the parallels between painting and coaching, the value of curiosity, and the journey of navigating career transitions. Mark shares how art serves as a creative escape and a process of discovery, while coaching provides a similar space for exploration and growth. He recounts how burnout in his former career led him to seek coaching, eventually becoming a coach himself, and emphasizes the power of intentional relationships and openness to new opportunities. Key Highlights: Mark's art process mirrors coaching — both involve starting without knowing the exact outcome and staying curious throughout. Painting serves as a form of mental reset, drawing Mark into a world of focus, experimentation, and discovery. Mark's transition into coaching began during a period of burnout, sparked by guidance from influential mentors like Dan Miller. The International Coaching Federation's (ICF) competencies gave Mark a clear framework to assess and grow his coaching skills. Relationships and intentional conversations have been the driving force behind Mark's personal and professional growth. Takeaways: Creativity and coaching both thrive in environments of openness, exploration, and adaptability. Burnout can serve as a catalyst for reinvention when paired with intentional action and mentorship. Structured professional standards, like those from ICF, can provide valuable benchmarks for skill development. Building genuine relationships through curiosity-driven conversations can open unexpected doors and opportunities. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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477 Who's Really In Charge Here?
Podcast Notes Episode 477 Who's Really In Charge Here? Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: August 7th, 2025 In this episode, Brian and Chad explore how coaching principles can transform leadership within organizations. They discuss the tension leaders often feel between maintaining control and empowering others, and how adopting a coaching posture—rooted in humility, curiosity, and shared authority—can lead to more collaborative and impactful decision-making. The conversation draws on real experiences and offers insight into how coaching shapes not just conversations, but entire organizational cultures. Key Highlights: Coaching in leadership often involves navigating a tension between control and collaboration. Humility is central to a coaching posture and essential for effective leadership. Leaders frequently face pressure to have all the answers, but coaching invites shared exploration. The importance of slowing down in conversations to give space for others' thinking. Organizations may superficially embrace coaching while still defaulting to top-down, directive leadership styles. Takeaways: A true coaching posture prioritizes listening over telling and curiosity over certainty. Leadership is most transformative when it empowers others rather than asserting control. Shared authority doesn't mean giving up leadership—it means leading differently. Slowing down your responses and allowing others to process can create more meaningful and insightful conversations. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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476 The Most Important Question (Rebroadcast)
Podcast Notes Episode 476 The Most Important Question (Rebroadcast) Hosts: Brian Miller, PCC and Chad Hall, MCC Date: July 31, 2025 In this episode, the hosts dive into the deceptively powerful question: "What's the simplest way to do it?" Inspired by Pat Flynn and Tim Ferriss, the conversation explores how simplicity can lead to more effective systems, communication, coaching, and even business practices. They share personal anecdotes, client stories, and organizational examples to highlight how a bias toward complexity can hinder progress—and how simplicity often brings clarity, momentum, and better outcomes. Key Highlights: The Power of One Simple Question: The episode centers around the life-altering question from The 4-Hour Workweek—"What's the simplest way to do it?"—and its usefulness in nearly every domain. Simplicity as a Core Value: The hosts argue that while not everything is simple, simple usually beats complex in systems, relationships, communication, and business. Real-World Coaching Applications: They illustrate how overcomplicating coaching systems, like building frameworks or using advanced apps, can stall progress—sometimes it's better to just start and build as you go. Organizational and Institutional Over-Complexity: From school systems to churches to marketing strategies, the episode uncovers how institutions often lose sight of their core mission by adding unnecessary layers of complexity. Simplicity in Marketing and Sales: The discussion wraps with advice on making client acquisition simpler—often it's not about having the perfect website or funnel but about having real conversations and asking directly. Takeaways: Ask the Simplicity Question Often: "What's the simplest way?" is a powerful coaching and decision-making tool that can cut through clutter and increase effectiveness. Avoid the Sophistication Bias: Organizations and individuals often equate complexity with value—but simplicity often leads to better results. Manual is Okay (at First): Starting small, personal, and manual—like texting clients—is not just acceptable but often preferable until scale demands more. You Don't Need a Full Framework to Start: Just start coaching. You can build the structure as you go. Talk to People: In both coaching and fundraising, the simplest and often most effective path is direct communication—just ask. Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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475 Cracking the Code of Client Growth, with Adam Witmer
Podcast Notes Episode 475 Cracking the Code of Client Growth, with Adam Witmer Host: Brian Miller, PCC Guest: Adam Witmer Date: July 24, 2025 In this episode, Brian sits down with business strategist Adam Witmer to explore the foundations of creating a successful business strategy. From Adam's early roots in music and discovering a passion for business to the development of his "Buyer's Journey" framework (outlined in his upcoming book The Buyer-Centric Small Business), this conversation offers a thoughtful and highly practical breakdown of how small businesses can attract, convert, and retain customers. At the heart of the discussion is the FEEL Framework—Find it, Experience it, Engage it, Love it—which maps out the essential stages of turning a stranger into a raving fan. Key Highlights: Adam Witmer's Origin Story: Transitioned from a music major to a business strategist by discovering his love for the operational and strategic side of music and band promotion. Importance of Strategy: Many entrepreneurs launch businesses on passion alone, but Adam emphasizes the need for a clear, structured business strategy. The FEEL Framework: A four-stage model—Find It, Experience It, Engage It, Love It—to guide prospects through a buyer journey. Hope Marketing vs. Intentional Marketing: Businesses often rely on hope ("Hope people find us"), but Adam outlines six practical entry points for customer discovery. Customer Conversion & Loyalty: Offering experiences and small engagement products helps build trust and leads to long-term loyalty and advocacy. Takeaways: Find It – Discovery Is Everything If people can't find you, they can't buy from you. Adam breaks down six categories of entry points—from online and referrals to events and PR—encouraging business owners to stop relying on "hope marketing." Experience It – Give Them a Taste Just like food samples at a mall food court, giving potential customers a way to experience your offering (e.g., sample coaching sessions) helps them build trust and see your value firsthand. Engage It – Start Small to Go Big Early engagement doesn't need to be a big commitment. Entry-level products or services allow prospects to get comfortable before buying into larger offerings. Love It – Build Raving Fans Once trust is established, provide quality, perks, and consistent value to create loyal customers who not only return but also refer others. Strategy Over Serendipity Business success isn't just about being good at what you do—it's about designing the buyer journey intentionally so that prospects are guided every step of the way. Find out more about Adam and what he has to offer, including your FREE resources - visit https://www.businessstrategyschool.com/coach Stay Connected: Website: coachapproachministries.org Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/coach-approach-ministries Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coach.approach.ministries Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachapproachministries7538 Follow us on social media for updates and resources!
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Welcome to the Coach Approach Ministries Podcast! Coaching is a skillset and a mindset that helps people find focus, discover options and take action. At CAM, we train the very best Christian coaches in the world, and over the last decade, we've trained well over a thousand. Through this podcast, we want to share insights from the Coaching Community and help you to develop a broader understanding of coaching. You can find out more about us at www.coachapproachministries.org and sign up for our proven coach training.
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