You Have Achieved Everything You Set Out to Achieve. So Why Does It Feel Like Something Is Missing?

The company runs. Numbers are where they should be.

The team delivers. From the outside, everything looks exactly as it should. From the inside, a quieter question has been growing for longer than you have admitted to anyone: is this what it was all for?

That question does not make you ungrateful. It does not make you weak. It makes you the kind of leader who has outgrown the metrics that used to be enough. And it almost never gets asked out loud, because there is no one in your orbit with the distance to ask it and the operational experience to sit with the answer.

Loneliness
CEO Coaching & Sparring

CEO coaching and executive sparring built on 25+ years inside the industrial machine. ICF PCC certified. The agenda-free room where the real question gets asked. Remote. Confidential. Worldwide.

👉 Identify Your Blind Spots — 30-Minute Reality Check

„Thank you Andy. I know now what to do. And thanks again to finish here at 22 minutes. I will use the remaining time to write down all my thoughts.“

— Founder and CEO, three active companies | Anonymous by request

A months-long strategic challenge, resolved in 22 minutes.


The Room at the Top Has No Mirror.

There is a specific kind of silence that exists only at the very top of an organization. Not the silence of a meeting that has gone well. The silence that comes from everyone around you being either too dependent on your decisions, too invested in your approval, or too cautious about delivering the news that does not fit the narrative.

50% of CEOs report profound feelings of isolation in their role. Source: Harvard Business Review. | 61% of those leaders say the isolation directly impairs their decision quality. Source: Challenger, Gray & Christmas. | 71% of US CEOs experience symptoms of imposter syndrome. Source: Korn Ferry Workforce Report 2024. | In 2024, 55% of CEOs reported mental health issues including anxiety, depression, or burnout, a jump of 24 percentage points from the previous year. Source: LGT/management research, 2024.

That impairment is not a personal failing. It is a structural consequence of the position, and it has a P&L cost that most boards never explicitly measure. The most dangerous decisions you will make as a CEO are not the ones where you have too little information. They are the ones where you had no one who would tell you what they actually thought before you made them.

The Room Where Everyone Waits for You.

You walk into the building and the energy shifts. Not because they are afraid of you, but because they have learned that waiting for your judgment is faster and safer than offering their own. Every escalation ends with your name on it. Every ambiguity resolves into your calendar. The organization has made you its single point of failure. You know this. The question is how to change it while the machine is still running at full speed.

The Room Where the Numbers Are Green and Something Is Wrong.

Quarterly reviews look fine. Revenue is on track. The board is satisfied. And you sit in the car after the meeting and feel nothing in particular, which itself is the signal. The metrics that used to mean something have become a language you speak fluently without it saying anything that matters to you anymore. This is not burnout. Burnout is exhaustion. This is something more precise: cognitive depletion from the absence of a private processing space.

The Room Where the Decision Has No Sounding Board.

You are about to make a decision that will affect hundreds of people and years of work. All the data is there, the analysis complete, the experience yours. What is missing is the one conversation that cuts through the noise. Not a consultant delivering a framework. No board member with a position to protect. No direct report who needs you to project certainty. Someone who has been inside the machine and has no agenda except the precision of the next question.

„His insights on intercultural collaboration were valuable and directly actionable. An outstanding mentor and coach, especially for professionals who work across multiple geographies.“

— Vasanth Suratkal Kamath, President, Brose India Automotive Systems

👉 Identify Your Blind Spots – Book the 30-Minute Reality Check


I Have Been in That Room. Without a Title. With Full Accountability.

In most conversations about executive coaching, the coach describes the pressure from the outside. They have studied it, observed it, built frameworks around it. What they have not done is carry it.

Andy Balbus
Andy Balbus

I was placed into a taskforce leadership role with no formal authority over the people I was coordinating, during a production crisis with financial and reputational consequences across three countries. No title. Full accountability. In one session, a senior developer looked at me and said: I forgot. He had missed a critical deliverable in the crisis chain. I said: that happens. What do we need to do in the next two hours? Within days, everyone in that taskforce had internalized something no memo could produce: that honest acknowledgment of a problem was safer than hiding it.

That moment is not a story I tell to prove empathy. It describes the precise dynamic that CEO coaching addresses: the room where honest information is structurally expensive, and the specific leadership behavior that makes it structurally safe again.

The most important question a CEO advisor can ask is not the one that confirms the strategy. It is the one that surfaces the assumption nobody in the room had the structural independence to challenge. That question is only possible from someone with no stake in the answer.


January 15, 2024. The Day the Question Became Personal.

On January 15, 2024, I came close to dying. A blood clot. The kind of event that does not give you time to prepare a response, only to recognize what is actually important in the seconds after the doctor speaks.

I had been leading, building, and performing for 25 years. In that moment, none of it was what came to mind. What came to mind was a walk around a lake in Austria with my partner. Not a milestone. Not a metric. A walk.

Coaching based on Agreement
Purpose or Motivation – make your Agreement!

David Brooks writes about the Second Mountain: the recognition, often triggered by a moment of loss or crisis, that the first mountain, built on achievement, status, and external validation, was real and worth climbing, but it was not the final destination. The second mountain is built on something different: contribution, alignment, the question of what actually matters when the title is not in the room.

I now exercise every day without exception. Not because I am motivated to. Because I understand the difference between motivation and purpose. Motivation is what gets you to the gym when you feel like it. Purpose is what gets you there when you do not. I bring this into the CEO coaching work not as a lesson, but as a proof. I know that room from the inside.


Why Every Internal Sounding Board Fails at the Top.

A sounding board is useful only if the person holding the board has no stake in the outcome and enough context to ask a question that changes the frame. Both conditions are structurally impossible to satisfy inside your own organization.

Direct reports need your approval and continued investment in their careers. Board members carry fiduciary accountability that makes genuine challenge expensive. Peers are navigating their own versions of the same matrix. Advisors and consultants bring agendas attached to their recommendations.

CEO coaching positioned as executive sparring operates outside this structure entirely. No equity position, no board seat, no organizational reporting line, no agenda attached to the outcome. The only interest in the session is the precision of the next question. That structural independence is not a coaching style preference. It is the precondition for the conversation that actually changes something.

An ICF survey of 100 executives reported an average ROI of 6x the cost of coaching. Source: ICF/MetrixGlobal. | 77% of executives say coaching had a significant impact on at least one major business metric. Source: MetrixGlobal. | 71% of CEOs who sought peer support reported improved company performance as a direct result. Source: Harvard Business Review CEO survey.


The Questions That Change the Room.

At a certain point in a senior leader’s career, the conversations stop going deep. Not because the people around you are incapable of depth, but because everyone in your orbit is managing their relationship with you while they speak. That leaves a specific kind of question unasked.

The Ikigai framework surfaces four things simultaneously: what you genuinely love doing, what you are built for, what the people and organizations around you actually need from someone with your specific capabilities, and what sustains you economically. For a CEO or founder who has already proved competence and built security, the intersection of these four is not the beginning of a career. It is the map for the second mountain.

The session that tends to open the most is built around a deceptively simple question: the last time you completely lost track of time, not through exhaustion, not through distraction, but in the state where you were so fully inside what you were doing that an hour passed like ten minutes, what were you doing? For many CEOs, the honest answer is that it has been years. The work has become management of the work. Ultimately, the Flow State that once drove the hunger to build has been replaced by the discipline to sustain. That is not failure. It is information. And it points precisely to where the second mountain begins.


Structural Sovereignty: The Difference Between a Job and an Asset.

An organization that requires your daily presence to function is a job. In contrast, it becomes an asset when it produces results independent of whether you are in the building on a given Tuesday. The gap between those two definitions is not a management problem. It is a leadership architecture problem.

Succession planning is among the most searched and most avoided conversations in leadership. Leaders avoid it because it sounds like the end of something. Coaching reframes it as structural sovereignty: the point at which what you built no longer depends on you to keep running.

Three things are almost always required: leadership systems that operate without your judgment on every decision, cultural DNA that is documented and transferable rather than implicit and personal, and a successor developed through genuine coaching investment rather than observation. The coaching builds all three, deliberately and without stopping the machine while it runs.

👉 Identify Your Blind Spots – Book the 30-Minute Reality Check


Executive Clarity Diagnostic

Where Are You Right Now?

Five questions — two minutes — a clearer picture of what the actual gap is.

Question 1 of 5 0%

1 of 5 — When you sit in the car after the most recent board meeting or quarterly review, what is the dominant feeling?

2 of 5 — How often do you have a conversation where you can say what is actually true, without filtering for the relationship?

3 of 5 — When was the last time you completely lost track of time in your work — from genuine engagement, not exhaustion?

4 of 5 — If you were genuinely unreachable for three weeks, what would happen to your organization?

5 of 5 — How self-sustaining is your professional network and reputation, independent of your current title?


Three Situations. One Fundamental Question.

Situation 1: The Decision-Maker Without a Mirror.

At a certain level of seniority, honest feedback becomes structurally rare. The people around you have too much at stake to tell you what they actually think. The result is a slow, systemic narrowing of honest input at exactly the moment when the decisions get harder. CEO coaching is the room where honest input is structurally possible again, because the person asking the questions has nothing at stake in your answer.

Situation 2: The Metrics That Stopped Meaning Something.

The numbers are fine. The question that will not stay quiet is whether fine is enough. This is the signal that the first mountain has been climbed and the second one has not yet been named. Coaching at this level does not fix the business. It helps you find the question the business was always meant to answer.

Situation 3: The Succession That Cannot Be Said Out Loud.

The organization depends on you more than it should. Changing it requires building systems, developing people, and transferring culture in ways that feel slower than the operational pressure allows. Coaching builds the structural sovereignty architecture: the specific moves that shift an organization from leader-dependent to leader-produced, without stopping the machine while it runs.

👉 Identify Your Blind Spots — Book the 30-Minute Reality Check


An Executive Sparring Partner Who Has Been Inside the Machine.

ICF PCC certified, awarded 2025, valid through 2028. On the path to the Master Certified Coach designation. 250+ hours of accredited coach education. 1,000+ documented coaching hours with real leaders under real operational pressure.

ICF Certificate Andy Balbus
ICF Certificate Andy Balbus

Available: Remote, worldwide. English and German. All sessions under the ICF Code of Ethics. Nothing leaves the room.


Verified Results.

„Thank you Andy. I know now what to do. And thanks again to finish here at 22 minutes. I will use the remaining time to write down all my thoughts.“

— Founder and CEO, three active companies | Anonymous by request

„His insights on intercultural collaboration were valuable and directly actionable. An outstanding mentor and coach, especially for professionals who work across multiple geographies.“

— Vasanth Suratkal Kamath, President, Brose India Automotive Systems

"Strong engagement, genuine enthusiasm, and a truly proactive approach consistently create a positive atmosphere and inspire the team to find effective solutions."

— Andrei Andreev, Google Review

👉 Full case studies


Direct Answers.

FAQ
FAQ

Q1: What is CEO coaching and how is it different from a business advisor?

A business advisor brings recommendations with an agenda attached. CEO coaching brings questions. At the level of complexity a CEO operates in, the problem is rarely a deficit of information. It is a deficit of honest space to think. The coaching creates that space. The decisions remain entirely yours.

Q2: Why call it executive sparring rather than coaching?

In many European and industrial contexts, coaching carries connotations of deficit. Executive sparring is the accurate description: a structured, challenging, agenda-free conversation that sharpens thinking under pressure. Both terms describe the same engagement.

Q3: Is this relevant for founders as well as corporate CEOs?

Yes. Founders carry the additional weight of organizational identity, the fact that the company is an extension of themselves. Corporate CEOs carry the weight of inherited structures and board accountability. Both produce the same structural gap: the absence of an agenda-free room where the real question gets asked.

Q4: What is the Second Mountain and how does it apply?

David Brooks' concept describes the recognition that the first mountain, achievement, status, and external success, was real and worth climbing, but not the final destination. The second mountain is built on contribution, alignment, and purpose. Coaching helps map it: what does leadership look like when built on what actually matters.

Q5: What is structural sovereignty?

The state in which your organization produces results independently of your daily presence. Coaching builds the architecture for the transition: delegation systems, cultural transfer, leadership development, and succession preparation.

Q6: What is the ROI of CEO coaching?

The ICF documents a median ROI of 7:1 for structured executive coaching. For CEOs, the return materializes in decision quality and strategic time recovered. 71% of CEOs who sought peer support reported improved company performance as a direct result. Source: Harvard Business Review.

Q7: Does this address burnout?

Yes, with a specific distinction. What CEOs more commonly experience is cognitive depletion from the absence of a private processing space. The 2024 data is stark: 55% of CEOs reported mental health issues, a jump of 24 percentage points from the prior year. Coaching is that processing space, regularly and confidentially, with someone who has no stake in the outcome.

Q8: What happens in the 30-minute Reality Check?

A direct diagnostic conversation. Not a sales call, not a methodology presentation. By the end, you will have at least one question you have not been asked before. No commitment required.

Q9: Is everything confidential?

Fully and contractually. All sessions under the ICF Code of Ethics. Nothing discussed is shared without your explicit agreement.

Q10: What languages?

English and German. Remote. Worldwide.

Q11: Can you work with a CEO and their leadership team separately?

Individual coaching is fully confidential and structurally separate from any organizational work. For organizational interventions, the Accelerate Now programme and Team Charter Workshop are the appropriate formats.

Q12: How is this different from a board advisor or executive mentor?

A board advisor brings fiduciary accountability. A mentor brings experience and advice. An executive sparring partner brings structural independence: the precondition for asking the question nobody else in your orbit can ask without a cost attached.


The Question That Has Not Been Asked Yet.

There is one question underneath the operational picture that nobody in your organization has the structural independence to ask. The 30-minute Reality Check is where it gets asked. Confidential. No commitment. Remote. English or German.

Reality Check
Reality Check

👉 Identify Your Blind Spots — Book the 30-Minute Reality Check

Or directly: founder_andybalbus@boost-your-growth.com  |  WhatsApp: +49 151 4495 7099


Not the Right Fit?

If the challenge is the transition from technical expert to leader:

👉 Engineering Leadership Coaching — The Expert Paradox

If you are a female director navigating the structural visibility gap:

👉 Female Executive Coaching

For urgent stabilization in 3 sessions when the SOP crisis cannot wait for a standard coaching timeline:

👉 Accelerate Now

For founders approaching a leadership transition and needing to build structural independence:

👉 Legacy Program


Systemic leadership does not end after one call.

Follow for unfiltered insights and straight-talk strategies: