Lee Daly has a diverse background, starting as a software engineer, where he mastered the art of rapid career advancement in highly competitive environments. His ability to rise quickly led him into management early in his career, where he leveraged emotional intelligence to build influence and deliver results. It was during this time that Lee began developing The Mental Mastery Method™—a framework he now uses to guide leaders toward high performance and personal fulfillment. Lee further refined this method during his time volunteering on a crisis hotline, supporting those with the most need. Lee featured on national media speaking about the value of building strong mental fortitude and how to do it.
But Lee isn’t just a coach—he’s lived the transformation himself. After realizing he was in a role that wasn’t the right fit, he made the bold decision to pivot, securing his dream job as an Executive Leadership Coach at a Forbes Top 50 company. There, he become global owner of Leadership coaching programs and coached high-level leaders responsible for thousands of employees and multi-million-dollar budgets, deepening his expertise in leadership presence and strategic influence.
Lee’s Story
Today, Lee runs a thriving coaching and speaking business, having worked with exceptional leaders across the globe, with nearly 1,000 hours in coaching and leadership development. Lee’s clients are high achievers who are pillars in their communities, trusted in their careers, and dedicated partners and parents. From the outside, they seem to have it all, yet internally, they wrestle with self-doubt, questioning if they’re truly making the impact they desire. The pressure to be everything to everyone can leave even the strongest leaders feeling disconnected from their purpose.
Lee helps these leaders reclaim their confidence, secure career-defining positions, earn influence and respect at the tables where key decisions happen, and design a clear, actionable path toward financial success, fulfillment, and legacy.
Lee aims to start every morning with a cold plunge, but he says the hardest part about cold plunging is not telling people that you cold plunge. 😊