Terrence Higgs
What is your approach to helping clients identify and solve key challenges? Diagnose the leak, then look one layer down. Every client arrives with a symptom — trust eroding, focus scattered, follow-through failing — and almost every consultant treats the symptom where it’s screaming. I don’t, because of a law I build everything on: corruption propagates upward. A visible systems problem is usually an identity problem wearing a costume. So we start with a diagnostic, find the leak, then walk down the four layers of what I call the Realm Methodology — identity, voice, rhythms, stewardship — until the question stops producing answers. That layer gets the repair. Most leaders have been patching the top floor for years while the foundation kept re-corrupting it.
How do you tailor your coaching or consulting style to different industries? I translate the language; I never dilute the architecture. The framework doesn’t change between a church staff and a corporate leadership team — a speaker, a pastor, and a CEO all run the same four layers, and they leak in the same five places. What changes is the encoding. I learned this from Paul at the Areopagus: same conviction, different vocabulary for the room. My integrity test is simple — every principle I teach in a boardroom has to trace back to its original without contradiction. If I have to say something different to a different industry, I haven’t translated. I’ve compromised.
What are the most common misconceptions about consulting? The client’s problem is information. It almost never is — leaders today know more about leadership than they practice. The gap isn’t education; it’s installation. A second misconception: that a consultant’s job is to be needed. Mine is the opposite — I build operating systems specifically so they run without me. If a client still requires my presence for the system to function a year later, I didn’t consult; I created a dependency and billed for it. And third: that motivation is a strategy. If it only happens when someone’s motivated, it isn’t a system yet — and I’m not in the motivation business.
How do you measure the success of your client engagements? By what exists when I leave, and what runs when they’re tired. Every engagement ships deliverables — an identity configuration, a message map, a rhythm stack, a stewardship audit — so success is never a feeling in the room; it’s infrastructure you can hold. Then we measure against baseline: clients take a diagnostic before we start and re-take it at thirty days and beyond, so the trend is visible, not anecdotal. But my honest north star is the worst-week test. Anyone’s system works when they’re inspired. Success is the client whose essential functions still ran during the hardest week of their quarter — because the system carried what motivation couldn’t.
What trends are influencing the future of consulting and coaching? Two, pulling in opposite directions. First, AI is collapsing the value of information — advice is becoming free, which means consultants who sell knowledge are selling a depreciating asset. What can’t be automated is installation: sitting with a leader until the system is actually built and running. Second, ownership is becoming a conviction, not just a preference. Leaders are waking up to how much of their business — their audience, their data, their platforms — they rent from vendors and algorithms. The consultants who matter next will help clients own their operating systems, not lease better ones. I’d summarize both trends in one sentence: the future belongs to builders, not explainers.
What’s the most rewarding part of your work? Watching a leader realize they were never broken — they were booted out of order. There’s a moment in almost every engagement when someone who’s carried years of quiet shame about burnout or inconsistency sees the real diagnosis: not an effort failure, a sequence failure. They’d been building systems on an unsettled identity, performing a voice they hadn’t configured. When the order gets corrected and the system starts carrying what willpower used to, you can see the weight leave. I’m a pastor before I’m a builder, so for me that moment isn’t a business outcome. It’s the point.
What skills do you think are essential for future consultants or coaches? Diagnosis over prescription — the discipline to keep asking what’s underneath the symptom, rather than selling the fix you brought in the door. Translation — the ability to carry one conviction into rooms that speak different languages without diluting it; range without translation is just noise in more places. Systems literacy — because clients increasingly need builders, and a coach who can’t help install anything is an expensive conversation. And the rarest one: the security to make yourself unnecessary. A consultant whose identity depends on the client will quietly build it. The ones worth hiring are settled enough to build their own exit into every engagement.
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