
Have you ever wondered if you were meant for more? That you have unique talents and a burning desire to step up and make a difference, guided by your faith? Yet, perhaps something deep within holds you back – the voice of self-doubt or not knowing where to begin. If these thoughts resonate with you, you're in the right place.
I'm Dara Koenig, a Christian leadership coach, author, and speaker. Even though I am successful in many areas I know what it's like to wrestle with insecurities, to feel lost, and to question my ability to lead. Yet, through a profound understanding of my identity in Christ, I discovered a strength and calling I never thought possible. Now, my mission is to help women like you do the same. Together, we'll unlock the powerful leader within, guided by unwavering faith, and focused on leaving a lasting impact on the world.

As a Christian woman, your identity as a beloved daughter of God is the foundation for everything you do – including how you lead. When you know who you are in Christ, you gain the confidence and clarity you need to step into your calling.
Overcome Self-Doubt: Let's replace the voice of insecurity with the truth of who God says you are - capable, gifted, and worthy.
Discover Your Purpose: Your identity holds the key to unlocking the unique way God wants you to lead and make a difference in this world.
After spending years battling the lie that I wasn't good enough, God transformed my life. When I was filled with His truth about who He created me to be, I finally developed unshakable confidence. My identity was no longer tied to shifting feelings or the words of others, but anchored in the promises of God's Word. That's the kind of confidence I'm here to help you discover.

As a Christian leader, your integrity is essential. When you live in alignment with your faith, your actions and words become a powerful beacon, inspiring others to follow.
Ethical Decision-Making: Navigating challenging situations can be daunting. Let's develop a framework for making God-honoring choices that align with your values. We'll cover practical strategies and Biblical principles to guide you on your leadership journey.
Influence Through Action: Leadership isn't just about what you say, but how you live. Discover how your actions can inspire, motivate, and earn the trust of those you lead. Together, we'll identify steps to ensure your behavior reflects your faith and has a positive impact on the world.
Integrity is the bridge between identity in Christ and the influence you desire. Once you know who you are, doing the right thing comes naturally. This builds trust – when others see your values in action, they're open to being influenced for good.

As a Christian woman leader, your influence extends far beyond titles or positions. It's woven into the fabric of your relationships and interactions, shaping the world around you.
Everyday Influence: We all have a sphere of influence, impacting those closest to us – our families, friends, and colleagues. Discover how your daily choices, words of encouragement, and Christ-like actions can inspire others and create a ripple effect of positivity.
Leadership Amplification: Whether you lead a team at work, a small group at church, or simply head your household, your influence takes center stage. We'll equip you with practical tools and strategies to leverage your leadership for good, fostering a spirit of collaboration, service, and excellence.
The question isn't whether you have influence, but how you'll choose to use it. Schedule your free Discovery Call today and let's explore how to turn your influence into a powerful force for God's Kingdom!
With over two decades of experience empowering women, I offer more than just coaching. My approach blends practical leadership strategies with the life-changing power of the 3 I's Framework (Identity, Integrity, Influence). Whether it's through one-on-one coaching, inspiring keynote addresses, conferences like Equipping Ambassadors, or the transformative Fill(ed) devotional series, I'm committed to equipping you with the tools and inspiration to unlock your full potential. Together, we'll craft a personalized plan to help you overcome obstacles, amplify your influence, and leave a lasting legacy as a Christian woman leader.

Let's discuss your leadership aspirations, identify areas where you lack confidence, and create a clear roadmap guided by your faith. Whether you're seeking guidance on specific leadership scenarios, or want to deepen your understanding of how faith applies to your work, this call is your starting point.

The newsletter was supposed to launch on December 2nd and I had a plan. I had the content ready. I even felt that particular kind of confidence that comes from checking every box ahead of schedule, the kind where you allow yourself a small, satisfied exhale because for once, you're not scrambling.
And then life happened.
It's December 10th now, and I'm writing this from the other side of a week that looked nothing like I expected. Not because I failed to prepare, but because preparation doesn't shield us from interruption. It never has.
It started with Pluto, our Great Dane. For three days, he didn't want to play. If you've ever loved a Great Dane, you know this is significant. Pluto is almost seven years old, but he still carries the energy of a puppy, jumping, fetching, bouncing through the house like he hasn't aged a day. Three days without play isn't a mood. It's a message. So when he stopped, we knew something was wrong.

The vet confirmed he had an infection, one that, left untreated much longer, could have turned fatal. Thankfully we caught it in time. Treatment came, and with it, relief so profound it felt like grace made tangible. The newsletter deadline suddenly seemed very small compared to the gift of more time with our big, goofy, beloved lugnut.
Then came the plumbing. A clogged pipe we didn't know existed. The kind of discovery that makes your stomach drop, until the plumber tells you that the cap breaking off is actually what saved us. Without that small failure, both bathrooms would have flooded. Yes, we would have caught the problem sooner, but the damage would have been exponentially greater. What looked like a problem was protection we didn't know we needed.
I share this not to dramatize a difficult week, but because I suspect you've had weeks like this too. The ones where you had a plan, and the plan had other plans.
We place so much trust in our systems. Our routines. Our carefully constructed rhythms. And those things matter, they create the scaffolding that holds daily life together. But somewhere along the way, I think many of us start believing that if we plan well enough, nothing will derail us. That if we're disciplined enough, prepared enough, faithful enough to our calendars and checklists, we'll finally achieve the elusive state of "having it together."
It's a comforting illusion, yet it s still an illusion.
Preparation matters. It just isn't a shield. Faithfulness shows itself most clearly when plans fall apart.
Ironically, the story I originally planned to share in that inaugural newsletter already carried this lesson.
A few years ago, my life held a rhythm that worked beautifully. I had a steady, committed yoga practice. Same time each day. Consistent movement. I felt grounded, capable, and aligned in my own body, like I had finally figured out this one corner of my life.
Then life changed. I married my husband after three years of long-distance dating, merged households, shifted routines, moved across the country, changed jobs more than once, and eventually helped plant a church. All good things. All meaningful things. And yet, in the midst of building a new life, my once-solid practice quietly unraveled.
I would restart for a few weeks, sometimes a few months, and then life would interrupt again. Each time, I carried a quiet sense of failure, like consistency was something I should have mastered by now. Like everyone else had figured out how to hold their lives together, and I kept dropping mine.
Eventually, something shifted. This time, I didn't return to the mat with a rigid plan or an ambitious goal. I didn't decide how many days a week I should practice or which poses I needed to conquer.
I changed the measure.
Instead of aiming for perfection or progress on paper, my goal became much simpler: to show up today with just a little more intention than I did yesterday. That might look like holding a plank one second longer. Or staying present in savasana when my mind wandered the day before. Or choosing a shorter, gentler practice instead of doing nothing at all.
Not every step forward is dramatic. Not every path is linear. But every purposeful action, every moment of recommitment, is growth.
This is what "Better than Yesterday" really means to me. It's not about linear progress or flawless execution. It's about recognizing that worse-than-yesterday days still count. That progress measured by grace lasts longer than progress measured by pressure. That faithfulness isn't flashy, but it's sustainable. It's the kind of growth that doesn't demand applause, only presence.
Showing up again is leadership. Not the kind that demands attention, but the kind that quietly builds a life worth living.
Choosing faithfulness over pressure. Progress defined with grace.
There's a verse I return to often: "His mercies are new every morning" (Lamentations 3:23). I used to read that as a promise about God's forgiveness. I still do. But lately, I've also come to see it as an invitation, permission to begin again without carrying the weight of yesterday's shortcomings into today.
This week, I saw God's mercy in a Great Dane who's now back to his bouncy self. In a broken pipe cap that prevented something far worse. In the quiet reminder that interruption isn't the opposite of faithfulness, it's often the context for it.
God doesn't seem surprised by the interruptions. Maybe we shouldn't be either. Maybe grace has always been less about perfecting the plan and more about staying present when the plan unravels.
Maybe you're holding expectations of consistency that were never realistic. Maybe you've labeled as failure something that was actually just life being life. Maybe there's an area where you've been measuring progress by perfection instead of presence, and the weight of that measure has started to feel heavier than the thing you were trying to build.
If so, I want you to know: you're not behind. You're human. And showing up again, even late, even imperfectly, still counts.
This is why I started Better than Yesterday. Not to help women do more, but to remind us all that we are allowed to begin again. Each issue is a small offering, a reflection, a reframe, a gentle nudge toward grace-measured growth. No hustle. No pressure. Just faithfulness in small steps, and learning to measure progress with kindness toward ourselves.
If that sounds like something your inbox could use, I'd love to have you join me.
Click Here to Subscribe to the Better than Yesterday newsletter.
Starting late doesn't nullify the intention. The plan changed, but the purpose didn't. Today still matters, even if it looks nothing like yesterday. And the beautiful thing about grace? It doesn't keep score the way we do.
Today counts. And tomorrow, we can show up again.


Dara has been a huge support in this amazing way, her empathy, kindness, and patience along with her strong knowledge and dedication, made this journey an amazing experience.”

