You're more capable than you feel right now
Coaching for leaders who are ready for more and need a calm, honest space to get there.
Something isn't sitting right.
Maybe it's a relationship at work that's become complicated. Maybe you're ready for the next role but the confidence isn't quite there. Maybe you've come from a market where you had real authority - London, a major firm, a big team - and you're rebuilding in a new context.
Whatever it is, you haven't been able to talk it through properly with anyone who actually understands what it's like to lead.
This is what coaching is for.
This might be for you if:
You're stepping into more responsibility and finding it harder than you expected
You're a senior leader navigating a new market, a new culture, or a team that isn't quite gelling
You run your own business and leading people is the part no one prepared you for
You know you're ready for the next step and your confidence just hasn't caught up yet
What coaching looks like
Tania's approach is calm, direct, and completely free of jargon. No frameworks pushed at you. No advice that doesn't fit.
You talk. She listens and asks the questions that help you hear what you already know.
Most clients describe two things after the work: clarity and a feeling of being lighter.
Sessions are online, so it doesn't matter where you are.
Start with a free conversation.
Thirty minutes. No agenda, no pitch. It goes where it needs to go — sometimes you'll leave with a useful reframe, sometimes you'll just get a feel for whether this is right for you.
No pressure. No obligation.
Why work with me
Tania Davey has spent a decade developing leaders through change, complexity, and the messy reality of working with people.
She's calm and direct, you'll get honesty, not performance. She brings genuine warmth to the hard conversations, which makes them feel safe enough to actually have.
What sets her apart isn't a methodology. It's the quality of her attention and an ability to see what's really going on beneath the surface, even when clients can't quite name it themselves