Some decisions need more than time. They need a conversation. Someone to hold the space, ask the questions, and keep your thinking on track. That’s a Decision Audit. Below are the questions people ask before they book.
What happens in a Decision Audit?
One session, 45 minutes. We work on one specific decision until you see the path. Before we meet, you complete a short intake. You leave with your decision made, the pattern named, and your next step clear.
Who is this for?
Anyone sitting on a decision they haven’t made in two or more weeks. Career, business, relationships, money, personal direction. Any domain counts.
Who is this NOT for?
This isn’t for someone who wants a decision made for them. I hold the space and ask clarifying questions. I’m a sounding board. You discover what’s true for you.
What if it doesn't work?
Full refund. You complete the intake, show up on time, do the work with me. If you leave without resolution, your money comes back.
Can I book more than one session?
Yes. Each session solves one decision.
FelipeSenior Analyst, Tech
I had been going back and forth on a career decision for six months and I thought I was being thorough. In the session with Neyda I said something out loud that I had never actually said before, and it changed the whole thing. I sent an email I'd been sitting on for weeks the next day.
AlberBusiness Owner, Astrology and Coaching
I came in thinking my problem was a content strategy question, and by the end it had shifted into whether I was actually building what I wanted to build. That one question led to the clearest conversation I'd had with myself in a year, and I left with the decision made and a principle I could use to protect it going forward.
PriyaProfessional, Risk Management
On a scale of 1 to 10, going in I was at a 5 sure of what I wanted to do. I left at an 8. I had the conversation I'd been postponing for two months within the week. That's the whole thing.
VarunHead of Operations, Financial Services
I had spent three months on what I'd call rigorous analysis on a job decision, comparing options and building out scenarios. Neyda surfaced the real issue in about 20 minutes from something I'd mentioned almost in passing. I had been waiting for something I couldn't name, and once I could, the rest was easy.
MichaelStrategy Director, Consulting
I came in carrying a decision that had basically become background noise. In 45 minutes I understood why I kept finding reasons not to close it, and it had nothing to do with the decision itself. I left with the decision made and a rule I could use the next time I started doing the same thing.
NOT SURE YET?
Start with the Decision Kit
Five questions, your first principle back, takes five minutes.