Coaching

Does life seem to be passing you by? Do you have a long list of things to do but don’t have the “strength” to do them? Do you feel like things are holding you back? Life coaching can help you focus on your future.

Focus on your Future

Great Results. Fast.

New York Life Coach

Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional New York life and business coach.

At Organic Blueprints, we offer New York business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.

New York Business Coaching & Life Coaching From Organic Blueprints

  • Your New York Life Coach will help you identify the things that bring you joy in life
  • Once you discover your own personal path, you will find it easier to communicate with friends, family, and business colleagues
  • Your business and personal life are inexorably linked, a professional New York business coach can help you balance the two
  • Your New York life coach will help you with planning, perspective, and organization – essential qualities for success
  • Be excited about life, focus on your future, and live the life you want to live

If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional New York business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.

Do I Need A Professional New York Life Coach?

Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced New York life coach:

  • Do I want healthier relationships with family and friends?
  • Do I love life, or what will it take to start loving it?
  • Am I happy?

A qualified New York life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your New York life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.

Do I Need An Experienced New York Business Coach?

Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional New York business coach:

  • Do I have trouble visualizing future business goals?
  • Am I struggling to figure out what happens next in my career?
  • Would I benefit from a fresh business perspective?

The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a New York business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your New York business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader

Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.

New York Tidbits

The Algonquin Indian tribe known as the Lenape were the first inhabitants of what is currently known as New York City. These people farmed, fished, and hunted the region between the Hudson and the Delaware Rivers. In the early 1500’s white European pioneers started exploring the area. Among the first was a man an Italian who sailed the Atlantic coast searching for a route to Asia named was Giovanni da Verrazano. However, up until 1624, nobody settled there. The new governor General of the settlement named Peter Minuit, purchased Manhattan Island, which was much larger, from the native Indians for 60 guilders in trade goods such as cloth, shell beads, tools, and farming equipment in 1626. When the settlement relocated to Manhattan, fewer than 300 people lived in New Amsterdam. However, the settlement grew rapidly. The population of this new settlement was about 18,000 people by 1760, which surpassed Boston and was the second-largest city in the American colonies. The city became the largest community in the Western hemisphere some 50 years later, and had a population of 202,589 people. These days the population of New York City is over eight million people who live in the five boroughs of the city.

New Amsterdam was seized from the Dutch by the British in 1664, who named the community New York City. For the next 100 years the population of New York City grew more diverse and larger. There were African slaves, indentured servants, and immigrants from Germany France, England, and the Netherlands.

Between 1785 and 1790, New York City served as the capital of the US. The community was a center of anti-British activity while the British were trying to seize the city practically as soon as the Revolutionary War started, since it was so strategically important. In spite of the best efforts of the Continental Army, led by George Washington, in 1776, New York City fell to the British. Up until 1783, it served as a British military base.

However, the community recovered rapidly from the ravages war. It was one of the more important ports in the country by 1810. The city played an especially important role in the cotton economy. Planters from the South sent their cotton crops to the docks on the East River, where it was transported to the cotton mills of English industrial cities, such as Manchester. Then, the manufacturers of textile goods would ship their finished goods back to New York.

The problem was that there wasn’t any convenient method to transport goods back and forth from the ever expanding agricultural hinterlands to the north and west until 1817, which the year that work commenced on the Erie and the Hudson River. In 1825, the Erie Canal opened. At last, New York City was the trading capital of the nation.

As the city grew, it made other improvements to the infrastructure. An orderly grid of avenues and streets was established for the undeveloped portions of Manhattan north of Houston Street by the Commissioner’s Plan in 1811. Construction was started on the Croton Aqueduct in 1837 that provided clean water for the growing population of the community. The New York City Police Department was established in 1845.

In the meantime, the face of the community was changed between the 1840’s and the 1850’s, by an ever increasing number of immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe, Ireland, and Germany. They arrived in distinct ethnic neighborhoods, built social clubs and churches, joined political organizations and trade unions, and started businesses.

New York City became the community we know these days by the late 1800’s. In 1895, residents of Brooklyn Staten Island, the Bronx, and Queens, which, at that time, were independent communities, voted to consolidate with Manhattan in order to create a Greater New York, consisting a five separate boroughs. In 1897, this resulted in New York City having population of over two million people and an area of 60 square miles. The consolidation plan took effect in 1898 and New York City had a population of approximately 3.35 million people and an area of some 360 square miles.

The early 1900’s was a period of great struggles for New York City as well as it was across the nation. Following World War II, the construction of suburbs and interstate highways encouraged affluent people to leave the city, which combined with economic changes to reduce the tax base, such as deindustrialization and other economic changes to lower the tax base and diminished public services. This, resulted in additional people leaving the community.

New York City endured one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in the history of this country when some terrorists crashed two hijacked airliners into the twin towers of the World Trade Center. About 3,000 people were killed and the twin towers were both destroyed. However, the city remained a major tourist attraction and financial with more than 40 million tourists visiting the city every year in spite of the disaster.

These days, the five boroughs are home to over eight million people. Over one-third of these people were born outside this country. As the result of the vibrant intellectual life and diversity of the city, it remains the cultural capital of America.

Innovative Ideas Will Accomplish Goals

“Wow. In just six months of working every other week with Carroll, I have gained increasing power at work, found a real passion in my off-hours, and met people with whom I share interests. Carroll’s global approach to all the facets of my fine-but-boring life has been wonderful. Following my non-linear...