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.

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

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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..

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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







Plateaus tend to get blamed for things they did not actually do. We treat them like personal failures, motivation problems, or evidence that something has gone wrong, when in reality, they are usually doing their job quite well. A plateau is often feedback that you have outgrown a strategy that once worked perfectly.
The habits, mindset, and operating rhythm that brought you here were effective for that season. They are not designed to carry you into the next one.
You are not weak, and you are not unmotivated. You are operating a system that hasn't been updated to reflect who you are now.
A plateau is not a wall. It is a signal that tends to appear when responsibility, pressure, or complexity increase faster than your internal structure.
A plateau occurs when effort stops producing proportional results, not because you stopped caring, but because your system no longer matches your capacity. High performers experience career, leadership, and performance plateaus when external demand grows while internal structure remains the same.
The work increases. The pressure increases. The system does not.
That mismatch is the plateau.
When momentum slows, most people respond in predictable ways. They push harder, add discipline, tighten their schedule, and apply more pressure, hoping consistency will eventually prevail. This can work briefly, much like caffeine, even though rest would be the more honest solution.
Eventually, pushing harder stops producing progress and starts producing friction. Energy drops. Focus fragments. Self-trust erodes quietly when even your best efforts no longer deliver the results they once did.
The truth many high performers miss is simple. You are not stuck because you are not trying hard enough. You are stuck because the way you are trying to do things belongs to a previous version of you.
Effort without alignment does not make you admirable. It makes you inefficient.
Breaking a plateau without burning out begins with a better question. Instead of asking how to force more results, ask what part of your operating system is outdated. The rhythm that brought you here was designed for a different season, a different scope, and a different level of pressure.
New levels do not respond to recycled structures.
At this stage, progress depends on how you organize your energy, your focus, and your standards. When those remain unchanged, more effort feeds the same ceiling with better intentions.
Plateaus often feel dramatic, as if everything has stalled at once, but they are usually caused by one quiet constraint doing more damage than it looks capable of. It may be a boundary you keep renegotiating with yourself, a decision you keep postponing, a conversation you avoid because it feels inconvenient, or a habit that consumes energy while presenting itself as productivity.
When that single bottleneck is addressed honestly, momentum returns. Not because you suddenly became more disciplined, but because the system finally has room to move.
Progress rarely comes from fixing everything. It comes from removing the one thing quietly blocking everything else.
High achievers often try to escape plateaus by adding more to their calendar, but the issue is rarely workload. The problem is the standard underneath it. If the standard has not changed, all additional effort still flows through the same patterns.
You get more motion. You do not get more traction.
Raising the standard changes what is acceptable. It might mean deciding that scattered work is no longer regular, treating promises to yourself with the same seriousness as commitments to others, or refusing to operate in ways that leave you perpetually depleted while calling it ambition.
When the standard rises, behavior reorganizes naturally. Less forcing. Fewer resets. More consistency. That is when the plateau begins to loosen.
Under every plateau sits an identity lag. The story you tell yourself about who you are shapes what you believe is possible. If the narrative says you are stuck, every obstacle feels like confirmation. If the narrative says you are in transition, obstacles become information.
You are not stuck. You are between versions. Your habits have not yet caught up.
When you treat a plateau as feedback instead of a verdict, it stops saying you cannot and starts saying not like this.
Plateaus are not permanent. They are invitations to evolve. The real question is not whether you will move past this stage, but whether you are willing to update the system rather than exhaust the version of yourself that already carried you this far.
Handled well, a plateau becomes the moment you stop fighting yourself and start building the structure your next chapter actually requires.
To explore this further, you can followDr. Sarai Koo on LinkedIn for insights on leadership under pressure, and watch her content onDr. Sarai Koo’s YouTube Channel,Instagram, andTikToK for real-world leadership scenarios and practical solutions. You can also subscribe to theLinkedIn Newsletter: Integration Under Pressure for deeper system-level perspectives, and visitWinning PathwayLinkedIn Page and theLeadership Hub Blog to see how regulated, psychologically safe systems translate into measurable business outcomes.