Here is our 1-day intensive course on Values, Value Elicitation, and Values-Based Transformation, a practical coaching workshop. It blends NLP-style elicitation, ACT (Acceptance & Commitment Therapy), and leadership coaching principles so it’s usable for both personal transformation and client work.
1-Day Course: Values-Based Transformation
From unconscious behaviour → conscious alignment
Outcome of the training
By the end, participants will:
Know their core values hierarchy (top 5)
Understand how values drive behaviour, emotion, and identity
Identify values conflicts causing stress or sabotage
Learn how to use values to make decisions, set goals, and change habits
Leave with a Values-Based Life Plan
MODULE 1 — What Are Values
Core Teaching
Values are:
Deep emotional drivers of behaviour
Filters for decision-making
The answer to: “What is most important to me in this moment?”
Key Insight
People don’t lack discipline — they are following a different value hierarchy than they think they are
Example:
“Health is important” (stated value)
But behaviour shows: comfort, pleasure, avoidance (real values in action)
Exercise 1: “Values Awareness Scan”
Ask participants to write:
What frustrates me most in life right now?
What energises me?
What do I judge other people for?
What do I spend money on consistently?
👉 Then extract hidden values:
Frustration = violated values
Energy = fulfilled values
Judgement = projected values
Spending = revealed values
MODULE 2 — Values Elicitation
Coaching Principle
We don’t “choose” values first — we uncover them through behaviour and emotion patterns
Exercise 2: Peak Experience Elicitation (NLP style)
Ask:
“Think of a moment when you felt fully alive, proud, or deeply fulfilled.”
Then explore:
What specifically was happening?
Who was there?
What were you expressing or doing?
What mattered most in that moment?
👉 Extract 3–5 values from language patterns:
Common examples:
Freedom
Growth
Contribution
Recognition
Love
Integrity
Power
Security
Exercise 3: Pain Pattern Elicitation
Ask:
“Think of a recent moment of stress, anger, or disappointment.”
Then explore:
What should have happened?
What was missing?
What felt violated?
👉 This reveals blocked or unmet values
Example:
Anger → respect / fairness violated
Anxiety → security / certainty missing
MODULE 3 — Values Hierarchy
Core Teaching
Values are not equal — they form a hierarchy
When values conflict, the higher value always wins behaviour
Example:
“Health” vs “Comfort”
“Wealth” vs “Security”
“Love” vs “Freedom”
Exercise 4: Forced Choice Ranking
Give participants 10–15 values.
They must repeatedly choose:
“If you could only keep ONE, which would you keep?”
Then repeat until top 5 remain.
Final output:
Top 5 Core Values
Ranked hierarchy (1–5)
Reflection:
Are my current life choices aligned with this hierarchy?
Where am I living someone else’s values?
MODULE 4 — Values Conflicts & Self-Sabotage
Core Teaching
Most “self-sabotage” = values conflict
Examples:
Growth vs Safety → procrastination
Freedom vs Commitment → relationship instability
Achievement vs Rest → burnout
Exercise 5: Conflict Mapping
Participants fill:
Situation
Behaviour
Competing Values
Procrastination
Avoid task
Comfort vs Achievement
Overworking
Burnout
Success vs Health
Then ask:
“Which value is currently winning your behaviour?”
Breakthrough Insight
You don’t remove a value — you reorganise hierarchy or find integration
MODULE 5 — Rewiring Behaviour Through Values
Core Teaching
Real change happens when:
Behaviour becomes the fastest route to fulfilling a higher value
Exercise 6: Reframing Behaviour
Pick one negative habit.
Then ask:
What value is this behaviour trying to satisfy?
How else can I satisfy that value in a healthier way?
Example:
Overeating → comfort
Alternative: rest, connection, relaxation rituals
Exercise 7: “If I lived my top 3 values fully…”
Write:
What would my day look like?
What would I stop doing?
What would I start doing?
MODULE 6 — Decision-Making Using Values
Tool: Values Filter Framework
For any decision ask:
Does this align with my top 3 values?
Does it strengthen or weaken my identity?
What value does this choice serve long-term?
Exercise 8: Real-Life Decision Simulation
Give participants 3 decisions:
Career move
Relationship issue
Financial choice
They must decide using only:
“Which option aligns most with my top values hierarchy?”
MODULE 7 — Integration: Values-Based Life Design
Final Exercise: Values-Based Life Blueprint
Participants design:
1. Identity Statement
“I am someone who values ___, ___, ___”
2. Non-Negotiables
What I will no longer tolerate
3. Daily Alignment Habits
3 behaviours that express top values daily
4. Warning Signals
How I know I am out of alignment
Final Insight
A fulfilled life is not about achieving more — it is about reducing the gap between your stated values and your lived behaviour.