In the Media
Global Leader + Artist/Entertainer + Author + Researcher + And More
Dr. Sarai Koo is inimitable and a "force to be reckoned."
WELCOME

Sarai is an actress, writer, producer, and director. Although she does not dedicate all her time to the industry, she occasionally appears in commercials, interviews, TV shows and movies

Dr. Sarai Koo has appeared in local, national and global media due to her professional background.

Dr. Sarai Koo is dedicated to making significant impact. Witness her influence on individuals, companies, and cities. through her publications. Explore the breadth and depth of her contributions.


















small ripples can have a big impact
WHY US

Real Impact
We create meaningful, transformative impacts in people's lives. We focus on changing people from within.

Lasting Change
When some training programs offer only temporary outcomes, our work delivers lasting, sustainable change.

Realistic Challenge
Change is inevitable. When we challenge people, we ensure that it is both demanding and achievable.

Effective Leadership Development
As global leadership facilitators with real C-Suite experience, we possess the insights needed to help leaders at all levels be effective and create a lasting impact.

Powerful Messaging
We seamlessly integrate diverse disciplines and evidence-based messages, creating a powerful delivery that genuinely drives significant impact..

Effective Coaching Modalities
Opting for a single coaching approach is limiting. At Project SPICES, we offer a transformative combination that a brings the most impact.
ABOUT US
We a Problem-Solvers Who Make an Impact.
Dr. Sarai Koo is a dynamic speaker, coach, advisor, entrepreneur, and consultant who has impacted thousands of lives from the inside out.
If you are looking to enhance your life and improve your company culture with humor, power, and charm, connect with Project SPICES.
"WHAT ARE YOU LIVING FOR"
Podcast in a Car

Drummer, Rose Royce
Henry has played the drums with Rose Royce for 30+ years. He shares who he is, what he is living for and more.

Michael shares his life story and how his life became transformed. He is content and joyful despite having stage 4 cancer right now. He says he is blessed.
Global Leader & Facilitator
Always in Delivering the Best
Using our integrated approach, Dynamic Interplay™, we ensure that our
content is the best and profoundly impactful, leading to life-changing
transformations.

Powerful Art and Science of Delivery

Training does not have to be boring and superficial. We specialize in crafting messages that are impactful and humorous, while delving dep into the core of people's souls and spirits.

WE ARE ALL UNIQUE
OUR GALLERY

Making Ripples that Last

Seoul Food

Speaking Engagements
Dr. Sarai Koo has been on various stages.

Entertainment Projects

Mandarins

Dr. Sarai Koo plays Jenny Chu.
This film is about an emotional and compulsive black sheep Olivia Chu who reunites with her estranged family by crashing her mother's funeral. Determined to say something but ill-prepared, Olivia unintentionally delivers an offbeat eulogy that sends her two dutiful older siblings, Jenny and Michael, scrambling to save face in front of friends and family. Competing eulogies ensue, painting a larger picture of each of the siblings in relationship to each other and the complex woman they've come together to honor that day.

Sarai as Jessica Hasling
Sarai appeared on Kimi, directed by Steven Soderbergh, as Jessica Hasling.

Hyundai Global Commercials
Dr. Koo is featured as the Dr./Scientist who created the Hyundai Robotaxi.

Top 10, Launch Pad Prose Competition 5th Annual
Quarterfinalist, ScreenCraft Cinematic Book Competition 2022

International/National Article Appearances









Dr. Koo and Dean Whitla (Harvard)



Gather valuable information on choosing schools and scholarships







In many organizations, the same conflicts continue to resurface even as leaders and teams change. Different leaders step into roles. New team configurations are created. Fresh hires arrive with new skills and perspectives.
Yet the patterns remain familiar.
Deadlines are missed for the same reasons. The same tensions appear between functions. Collaboration breaks down in ways everyone recognizes.
It is easy to treat this as a coincidence or as talent problem. It is not. When the same issues persist with different people, the pattern lives in the system, not in the individuals.
Recurring conflict is held in how an organization is structured, how power and information move, and how disagreement is handled or avoided.
When these internal dynamics remain unexamined, new people quietly inherit old tensions. Restructuring may create new reporting lines, but familiar conflict simply reappears in a different configuration. Leaders often find themselves using styles they believed they had outgrown, not because they reverted, but because the system pulls them toward what it already knows how to hold.
Systems tend to prioritize what feels familiar over what is healthy.
This is why certain conflict styles repeat even after personnel changes. Trust erodes in predictable ways. Collaboration functions when conditions are easy and collapses when pressure increases. The organization gravitates back to well-worn relational patterns because they are known.
The familiar can feel safer than the uncertainty and effort required for real change, even when the cost of those patterns is high.
Most organizations can describe their challenges clearly.
They can name unhelpful dynamics, diagnose communication breakdowns, and explain how past decisions shaped the current reality. Awareness is rarely the limiting factor.
The constraint is interruption.
Without system-level regulation, explanations do not change behavior. The same meetings, the same tensions, and the same breakdowns continue, often wrapped in more refined or sophisticated language.
Integrated systems approach recurring conflict differently.
Rather than relying on new personalities to solve old problems, they focus on how the system responds in real time. Conflict is noticed and worked with rather than minimized, avoided, or delegated to individual resilience.
Relational authority becomes more stable, so leaders do not need distance or control to feel secure. Escalation is interrupted before it hardens into entrenched patterns. Over time, change becomes structural rather than dependent on who happens to occupy a particular role.
If an organization continues facing the same problems with different people, the core issue is unlikely to be hiring alone.
It is integration.
Until the system itself can hold tension differently, it will continue pulling new leaders and teams into familiar roles within the same script. Progress remains constrained not by lack of effort or competence, but by the system’s current capacity.
Breaking recurring leadership and team conflict cycles begins with seeing patterns as systemic rather than personal.
It requires building the capacity to respond differently under pressure. When systems are regulated, conflict becomes informative instead of repetitive. Energy shifts from managing tension to addressing real issues. Collaboration becomes more resilient because it is not dependent on perfect conditions.
Winning Pathway helps organizations identify and interrupt embedded conflict patterns so progress is no longer blocked by the past repeating itself in new forms. By strengthening system-level integration, leadership conflict becomes a source of clarity rather than a recurring drain on capacity.
To explore this further, you can follow Dr. Sarai Koo on LinkedIn for insights on leadership under pressure, and watch her content on Dr. Sarai Koo’s YouTube Channel, Instagram, and TikToK for real-world leadership scenarios and practical solutions. You can also subscribe to the LinkedIn Newsletter: Integration Under Pressure for deeper system-level perspectives, and visit Winning Pathway LinkedIn Page and the Leadership Hub Blog to see how regulated, psychologically safe systems translate into measurable business outcomes.