The work that comes before the work.
“I am not in a slump. I am in a transition. And I have not recognised it yet.”
Most career advice tells you what to do. This work asks first: do you see what is actually happening? Everything here belongs to one method — the RISE Method™. You can start with a free five-minute diagnostic, or enter wherever you already are.
First — see what is happening.
Most women I work with describe the same Sunday evening. The week ahead is mapped. The team is briefed. And somewhere quieter than they would say out loud, something is asking to be looked at. The first work is naming it — and deciding whether the discomfort is about you, or about the room you are standing in.
The Three Blind Spots Diagnostic
A snapshot of the pattern doing the most work in your decisions right now.
Years of coaching African professional women surfaced three patterns that kept appearing in the women stalling on a move they had already decided to make: Competence Attachment, Security Illusion, Reputation Anchoring. The diagnostic identifies which one is currently steering you, and gives you seven AI prompts calibrated to your dominant pattern. This one looks inward. Anonymous. Eleven minutes.
The CultureCode™ Fit Diagnostic
Whether the problem is you — or the room you are standing in.
Where the Blind Spots diagnostic looks inward, this one looks at the fit between you and your environment. In a few minutes it reads your work style against the culture you are actually in, and names where the two are pulling against each other — and where a style like yours would genuinely thrive. Most women discover the discomfort they have been carrying is not a flaw in them. It is a mismatch they had not named.
The Slump That Isn’t a Slump
How to read the career signal you have been ignoring.
Where the diagnostics give you a snapshot, the book gives you the full architecture. Twelve chapters trace how high-performing women misread their own signals — mistaking the quiet discomfort of transition for the failure of slump. Includes two extended case studies (Ifeoma and Adaeze), the Translation Audit and Perceptual Range Statement as operational tools, and a writing invitation at the close of every chapter. Published under RISE Press.
Beyond these two, there is a small library of free tools — each a different doorway into the same work.
Explore all the free tools →Then — do the work yourself.
Recognition is necessary. It is not sufficient. Moving through a transition has its own architecture — ninety days, three sprints, a signed Decision Document at the end. This is the operational tier.
How to Use AI in Your Career Transition
A 90-Day Workbook with 41 calibrated AI prompts and a Decision Document at the end.
Structured for completion, not consumption. Three sprints — Foundation (30 days, naming what is true), Activation (30 days, sending the drafts and starting the conversations), Momentum (30 days, closing the loop) — each with calibrated AI prompts designed to produce a real artefact in a single conversation with ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or any platform you choose. The work closes with a signed Decision Document: one page, dated, naming the specific move you are committed to.
And then — if you want me in the room.
Most women do not need this; the workbook is built to be sufficient. But for some, the move is large enough, or the moment loaded enough, that structure and a witness make the difference. Three ways to work with me directly.
The RISE Method™ — four phases, one path.
Everything on this page belongs to one method. The diagnostics and the book sit in the first two phases; the workbook and the coaching tiers sit in the second two. Most women benefit from doing them in order — but you can enter where you are.
Built by a researcher-practitioner. The work is grounded in years of qualitative coaching with African professional women navigating career transitions in multinational corporate environments, and in the academic frame of media, communication, and strategic leadership. The patterns are not personality types. They are descriptions of how successful, accomplished women often work against themselves at career inflection points.
Quick answers before you begin.
The work is waiting.
Four doors. The same architecture behind each. You choose your entry point — and begin.
Ready for more structure? Work with me directly →