Executive Coaching
The evidence base for neuroscience-informed executive-level guidance is robust and growing. Valesi et al. (2023) in Behavioral Sciences demonstrated through EEG monitoring that the practitioner-client relationship produces distinct, measurable neural signatures — positive engagement activates the left lateral prefrontal cortex associated with approach motivation and visioning, while non-directive approaches boost alpha and theta wave activity linked to creative problem-solving and metacognition. Frisina (2024) in Frontiers in Health Services Management established that interactive, experiential engagement specifically activates prefrontal cortex circuits responsible for problem-solving, decision-making, and emotional regulation — producing stronger cognitive integration than passive or lecture-based formats. In my practice, I work with managing directors, hedge fund partners, and PE professionals whose compensation exceeds $1 million annually and whose cognitive performance directly determines the returns they generate. For these individuals, the distinction between conventional and neuroscience-based approaches is not philosophical — it is economic. The investment in restructuring neural circuitry is orders of magnitude smaller than the cost of operating with a chronically compromised prefrontal cortex.