Over the past year, something began to stand out in my conversations with clients, colleagues, and friends.
Again and again, people shared something they had just discovered about themselves. Something they tried that surprised them. A deeper reservoir of courage than they realized they had.
I’ve experienced this myself. (more on that later)
It reminded me of something simple, and quietly powerful:
becoming doesn’t end when success begins.
For many leaders, success is something pursued over decades.
From the outside, it can look complete.
And yet, there is often a quieter moment—
A moment when achievement no longer answers everything.
That conversations and discoveries are what inspired:
Still Becoming
Stories of successful leaders discovering there is more
For many leaders, when you look from the outside in, everything looks complete, when internally it feels like something is off. Often, there is a quiter moment when you become aware that achievement no longer answers everything, and deeper questions begin to surface.
That moment inspired Still Becoming a new podcast series on Notable Leaders Radio, launching this month.
This series explores the inner evolution that continues long after success arrives. It’s not about starting over or leaving achievement behind. It’s about allowing success to expand into meaning, presence, and possibility.
Across six areas of focus, we explore:
- Beyond Achievement — what happens when success stops being the driver
- The Quiet Evolution — the subtle shifts that expand what’s possible
- I Didn’t See This Coming — when the unexpected becomes the doorway
- Untapped Courage — the bravery required to choose more
- The Inner Turn — choosing meaning over momentum
- More — living with openness, curiosity, and possibility
These conversations are for anyone who senses that more is unfolding, not because something is missing, but because something is ready.
- This is a space to listen.
And the good news is—you don’t have to go it alone.
Join us as our guests share their journeys and see what it sparks in you.
PS: These stories aren’t about what to do next, but about noticing what’s already stirring.