The scope keeps expanding. The team still needs direction. Leadership wants more output. And the AI landscape is moving faster than anyone can fully keep up with. For a lot of technical leaders, somewhere along the way the job quietly shifted from leading to just keeping up. Decisions get made from whatever state you happen to be in when the next thing lands — and it's been costing you focus, clarity, and probably sleep.
Most leadership training addresses what to do. Less often does it address the skill of staying clear-headed while you're doing it — under real pressure, in real time, with a team and boss looking to you for answers. This full-day workshop is built around that gap. You'll work through real pressure situations — the kind you actually face — and develop practical skills for staying grounded when they spike, so you can lead with steadiness instead of reaction. You'll learn as much from the honest conversations in the room as from the content itself.
You'll leave with skills you can use in those moments — the ones you already know need them. More of your best thinking available when it matters most. The kind of leader you already know you can be, more of the time. Getting more done with less of the grind that's been wearing you down
Technical leaders and developers are under more pressure than ever — tighter deadlines, shifting priorities, and now an AI landscape that's moving faster than anyone can fully keep up with. When the pressure is constant, even sharp, experienced people start reacting instead of leading. That's where Hunter comes in.
As a former developer and Fortune 500 consultant turned performance coach, Hunter works with technical leaders and developers who are done running on fumes. For 15+ years he's helped analytically-minded professionals stay clear-headed under pressure, lead with steadiness instead of adrenaline, and actually get more done — without the grind that burns people out.
When not traveling the states or the rest of the world, Hunter enjoys mountain biking, snowboarding, and practicing tai chi—often in unexpected places.
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