Where conventional coaching optimizes the individual, Ubuntu Roots begins from a different premise: the self is a living node in a web of relationships.
A relational, community-centered framework rooted in African, Indigenous, Andean, and Celtic wisdom traditions, Ubuntu Roots understands a leader as connected backward through their ancestors, outward through their community, and forward through their legacy. It is Eugene's original methodology — for leaders who understand that their greatest work is not what they build, but what they leave.
Every engagement holds three parties — because no one becomes whole alone.
Holds the sacred container — with rigor, reverence, and radical impartiality.
Does the interior work of transformation, growth, and accountability.
Bears witness, provides accountability, and receives the fruit of change.
Five dimensions of relational leadership, each named through natural metaphor and anchored in an ancestral tradition.
"What did your people know that you've been taught to forget?"
"Who do you belong to — and who belongs to you?"
"What must you release so the next version of you can take root?"
"What does this land — this team, this organization, this generation — need from you right now?"
"What will the children of your children's children say you stood for?"
Every element nourishes the other — roots to canopy, ancestor to heir.
A single organism in which every part depends on every other — the shape of leadership that shelters those who come after.
Ubuntu Roots honors the Co-Active tradition, and extends coaching toward communal ways of knowing.
Rather than assuming the client is already whole, Ubuntu Roots affirms that wholeness is a communal achievement — constantly negotiated with and through relationship.
The community is present in every conversation — the silent third party, present even when physically absent, whose flourishing measures success.
The five dimensions move across time — from ancestral memory, through present relationship, to future inheritance. Identity is relational, and success is measured in legacy.
C-suite & senior executives navigating questions of purpose, impact, and succession.
Organizational culture architects & DEI leaders bridging identity and institutional change.
Community stewards, nonprofit executives & social entrepreneurs leading systemic change.
Diaspora professionals reconciling cultural heritage with Western institutional contexts.
Coaches & facilitators deepening their practice with ancestral epistemologies.
Not every leader needs the same doorway. Ubuntu Roots is one of the approaches Eugene draws on, brought into an engagement when a leader's growth is best served by a relational, whole-person, legacy-minded path.
For some it becomes the spine of the entire journey; for others, a season within a wider coaching relationship. Either way, it is offered as an invitation, shaped to the person in front of it.
The best way to find out is a conversation. We'll explore where you are, and whether this approach — or another — serves you best.