A Note from LaTonyaA note from LaTonya I've been sitting with the idea of the Human Age for a while now. Every time I'd bring it up, I'd get skeptical looks or polite dismissal, so I'd pull back, and I stopped naming it out loud. But something shifted recently. A coffee conversation with someone I've known for years. Watching them become someone almost unrecognizable from who they were, and this was a good thing. I realized I was done waiting for permission to name what I'm actually seeing. This issue is the result of that. It's time that we all name it. To meaningful work and real connection, LaTonya This Issue's ReflectionThe Shift Nobody Has Named Yet — And What It Means for How You Lead and Coach The other day, I had coffee with someone from my past. Someone I've known across many chapters of life, but don't see often. For most of those chapters, this person was defined by their work. Competitive. Structured to the point that some would say rigid. Very corporate, very achievement-oriented, deeply invested in meritocracy. Work wasn't just what they did. It was who they were. They worked hard to get where they were and expected the same of others. In Leading Below the Surface, I call this the dominant leadership standard. It’s steamrolling all of the things that make us human to achieve “success.” This is exactly what they valued. Then they lost their job. And over the last couple of years, I've watched something unexpected happen. This person feels like a different version of themselves. Some people call it the "soft person era." But I think it's something more significant than that. They are more inclusive now. Calmer. Constantly questioning what came before: the values they operated from, the assumptions they never examined, the way they led and lived. I've been genuinely surprised by some of the things they now say. Do you know someone like this? I'm certain you do. Because I'm seeing it everywhere: in clients, in colleagues, in leaders who have “done everything right” and are still arriving at the same question: Who am I now? And what do I actually stand for? Not who your company or organization wants you to be? Not who you feel pressured to be to conform. But who am I really? If this is something you find yourself asking, keep reading as this is exactly what this article will cover: where we are, how we got here, and how to move with intention into what's coming next. This isn't about the trend or flavor of the month. It's about reading the signs of what's around us, aligning ourselves, and being part of the ecosystem that is shifting around us. The Ages — What We Centered and What We Lost The last few years in the workplace have been exhausting, to say the least. Burnout and loneliness are still at the highest levels. Socially, and as a society, we have not recovered from COVID. People are still struggling to find real connections. To understand where we are, it helps to look at where we've been. Every decade of work has had a theme, something we collectively organized around. I would argue that most of the ages were chosen, except the COVID age. I will explain this more in the next section. The Social Age Does anyone remember MySpace? I’m probably dating myself by asking this question. But, seriously. I remember loving MySpace so much that I would lose track of time spending hours reconnecting with people from my adolescent years. The Social Age started with reconnection: finding people we'd lost touch with, building communities around shared interests. Then something shifted. It became about amassing followers, building personal brands, and achieving visibility. We gained reach. We lost depth. Movements emerged, some of the most important social movements of our time happened in this era. But, at the same time, the loss of depth was real. The COVID Age COVID forced a reckoning. Overnight, every assumption about how we work, lead, and connect was dismantled. One day, we were all thrown into survival mode. Many people thought of success as simply making it through a full day of work in a makeshift home office. Some of us were even forced to balance all of this with children at home. The AI Age We are still in this one. I think we can all agree that AI isn’t exactly living up to its promises. We were told we would be more efficient and productive. But, not only are we busier than ever, AI has created a lot of uncertainty. And for the gains we have made, the cost of efficiency is playing out in real time. We lost presence. We lost the ability to sit with someone, to truly listen, and just be in conversation. We now lay people off in the most inhumane ways. And while having these skills seems like a luxury in these times, they are steadily becoming even more valuable and critical. The Human Age — The One We're Entering I’m naming the age we are entering as the human age because of what it centers: people, community, and identity. And I know what people are craving inside of it. Here are a few characteristics I’m seeing:
A few things I’ll say about these, all three are in Gallup’s 4 Needs of Followers in one way or another. So this isn’t just me speculating; it has been validated by decades of research. We've Known This. We Just Haven't Named It. Recently, during a mentor coaching session, we somehow got on the subject of leaders also being in their cohort. And in that moment, I had an epiphany. I finally could clearly name why leaders are so drawn to this work. When you review the ICF core competencies, they read like a leadership competency model:
There are more, but I think you get the gist. These aren't just coaching skills. They are the skills the human age is demanding from every leader right now. Most leaders who come to me are struggling to connect with their teams or feeling like something in their leadership is too surface and misaligned. And the answer to both is the same. The competencies that make a great coach make a great leader. We've always known this. We just haven't named it out loud. And the human age is making it impossible to ignore any longer. What This Has to Do With Leading Below the Surface: Relational Coach Training I want to be honest about why I'm writing this. It's to invite you to be part of something that will build the skills you need for this age. I built Leading Below the Surface: Relational Coach Training (also known as Coaching Below the Surface) because I saw this gap. I also recognized the era we are entering. Where was the gap? Well, it included the following:
LBS RCT is not a framework. It's a container. A practice. A 38-hour ICF-approved experience where coaches and leaders do the below the surface work. Curated community + networking, peer coaching, self-discovery, and the kind of learning that builds lifelong confidence and clarity. What I watch happen in these cohorts goes beyond skill. People understand themselves differently. They find alignment between who they are and how they show up. Some form friendships and professional relationships that last years beyond the program. In the age we're entering, that is not a nice-to-have. These are the experiences we are all craving. This is part of the human age. If you're curious, there are two ways to get started: the Starting Sprint, or you can request an invitation to the next cohort. And if you lead or work within an organization, Leading Below the Surface: Relational Coach Training for Leaders is coming. More soon. Closing Back to the person I had coffee with recently? They didn't find a new framework. They didn't take another course. They just finally stopped running from the questions they'd been avoiding for years. That's what this age is asking of all of us. I certainly hope we're ready.
Let’s ReflectI'll be honest. I've had a feeling for a while that we were entering a human age. But people would react, mostly skeptically or dismissively, and I’d pull back. I felt tensions get high so I retreated. But, now I have a different approach, and here’s why. In a year of using AI regularly, I know its limitations. I also know what the world is asking of me right now. And I'm done rushing to every AI training to "optimize" my business. Some people hear me say this and respond with "I hope you're right." But it's not about being right. It's about paying attention and connecting with what's actually happening around us. Even if your organization is all in on AI, and many are, I'm asking you to take a step back. Connect with what's really going on below the surface. In your teams. In yourself. Will you stay stuck in a previous age? Or will you step into this one? Journal PromptsTake 10 minutes with one or all of these in your journal, notes app, or even voice recorder.
Book InsightIn Chapter 2 of Leading Below the Surface, I go deeper into two concepts I touched on in this article. The first is the dominant leadership standard, which are the unspoken rules about what leadership is supposed to look like. Competitive. Achievement-oriented. Efficient. Sound familiar? It's the standard my friend had built their entire identity around, and the one the human age is quietly dismantling. The second is KPEs: knowledge, perspectives, and experiences. My approach is that every person in any room brings a unique combination of these. When we lead and coach below the surface, we create space for KPEs to actually show up.If this issue resonated, Chapter 2 is your next step. Upcoming EventsA few places to be in conversation and practice this in real time. ICF Georgia Learning Series — Session 3 June 9 | 11:00 AM CT | Virtual Mutual psychological safety: what it actually looks like in coaching conversations, how both coach and client contribute to it, and how to stay present when it feels uncertain. Hosted by Change Coaches in partnership with ICF Georgia. A facilitated conversation, not a lecture. [Register here] Starting Sprint — Coaching Below the Surface July 9 | 11:00 AM CT | 90 minutes | Virtual Not sure if Leading Below the Surface: Relational Coach Training is your next step? The Starting Sprint is your introduction. You know those samples at the grocery store that make you want the whole thing? That's what this is. A live, interactive 90-minute experience where you'll get a felt sense of what below the surface coaching actually looks like in practice. The $197 investment applies in full towards tuition if you enroll in the full program. Interested? Email me directly and I'll send you the registration link: latonya@changecoaches.io, or simply hit reply. Before You Go Which age are you leading from right now? Hit reply and tell me. And if this issue resonated, pass it on to someone who needs to hear it. To meaningful work and real connection, LaTonya Find me on the Leading Below the Surface Podcast and YouTube for more below the surface conversations. |
Most leadership advice stays on the surface. This is where we go deeper. In this newsletter space, I share thoughts on grounded leadership, executive coaching, identity, and the below the surface work that drives meaningful shifts. If you’re navigating complexity, leading through change, or trying to show up more intentionally in your work, this is a space for you. Looking forward to seeing you there. - LaTonya
A Note from LaTonya This issue is personal. I've been sitting with relationships for a while now and haven’t really talked about this publicly. So, this month, I finally wrote about it. We are in a moment where relationships are being tested in ways most of us weren't prepared for. Identity shifts. Chaotic environments. The quiet erosion of belonging at work and in life. The internal loneliness of being surrounded by people who don't quite see you. This issue is about all of that. And what to...
A Note from LaTonya Welcome to the new Leading Below the Surface with LaTonya, reimagined as a practice. I got tired of newsletters that only exist to sell something. When I looked at my own, I had to be real with myself. It felt surface. So I shifted it. This is something different. A couple of times a month, you'll find a reflection, journal prompts, and book insights. This will comprise something to actually sit with, not just read and move on from. AI is overwhelming us with information....