Living The Red Life
Top Leadership Coach: Transforming Potential Into Purpose-Driven Influence
14 Jan 2026
Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
So when you're gifted with the power of teaching, how does a teacher select the subject? What do you teach?
I teach basically how to develop leaders, leadership qualities to be, I'm not going to even say a good leader. Yes, there are good leaders everywhere, but impactful leaders.
leader we talk about legacy all the time leaders make legacy they build they develop they create legacies so what i do as a teacher is create the environment and the culture for a spirit of awareness for them to tap into their greatest potential to make impact in whoever they're influencing despite adversities and challenges
Chapter 2: What teaching methods does Deketa Tranae use to develop impactful leaders?
I was crazy enough, Ray, and I say crazy enough to have the delusion to believe that, oh, no, it didn't work today. It'll work tomorrow. Okay, it didn't work tomorrow. I'm going to do it again.
What do you say to folks that are in need of your services? How do you reach out to these folks?
So right now, I am...
My name is Rudy Moore, host of Living the Red Life podcast, and I'm here to change the way you see your life in your earpiece every single week. If you're ready to start living the red life, ditch the blue pill, take the red pill, join me in Wonderland and change your life.
Welcome to another powerful episode of Women in Power. Today joining me is Takeda Trenet, an amazing coach and consultant. How are you? You just are fresh off the episode.
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Chapter 3: How does Deketa Tranae define legacy in leadership?
How does it feel?
It feels very powerful, for lack of better words, very powerful, very enlightening. It's really exhilarating for me to hear and be in the moment of retelling my story.
Absolutely. Yeah. We found that after so many episodes that you can see the client, as we say, the woman in power or the legacy maker have that realization. I go, whoa, I've done a lot.
It happened in real time. In real time. Awesome. Very cool.
Yeah. So let's talk about who you are. We're just being rammed in the elevator. We're stuck there. What's your pitch? Who are you?
So Dakita Trinae, I would say is when I walk in a room, it shifts, it lights up, it brightens up. It's like, who is her? Who is her? Not just from a fashion perspective, but who is she when it comes to her energy? I'm a leadership coach. that happens to be a transformational speaker.
And in the development of what I do as a coach, it just so happens that you're going to have a spirit of faith, resilience, and being able to tap into, oh my gosh, I believe I can jump, just with having a conversation with me. And that's who I am and what makes my business of being able to empower and instill, whether it's leaders or entrepreneurs.
Where did you first discover your superpower? Was it as a child, a toddler, a teenager?
It had to be as a child.
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Chapter 4: What role do mentorship and community play in leadership development?
I was raised by my grandmother and she was just making sure that I was healthy. But it was my stepdad that discovered, you know, this boy is an artist. Who was the person that discovered you and discovered your art?
Oh, yeah. My mom. It was my mom and my aunt specifically with me just playing school and all of that. She realized how gifted or talented I was, you know, as a young child in that. But it really, me, you know, if you're living it, it's normal or natural to you. It was affirmed when you see other people or hear other people say, oh, this is a gift.
It's funny, I was stereotyping, oh, I don't want to be a teacher, even though I was a teacher literally all my life. My aunt said, I don't care where you go. What you do or what you say, you're always going to be a teacher because that's the gift that I had. And she shared that with me when I was like maybe six or seven years old. Of course, it didn't register the way.
And now as a 44 year old, I'm like, oh, my God, she really spoke that. Like I no matter I'm not in the four walls of a classroom, but I'm literally providing development and training and teaching and what I do every day. So.
So when you're gifted with the power of teaching, how does a teacher select the subject? What do you teach?
So I teach basically how to develop leaders, leadership qualities to be, I'm not going to even say a good leader. Yes, there are good leaders everywhere, but impactful leaders. We talk about legacy all the time. Leaders make legacy. They build, they develop, they create legacy.
So what I do as a teacher is create the environment and the culture for a spirit of awareness for them to tap into their greatest potential to make impact in whoever they're influencing.
How do you build the curriculum for something like this? Where do you start?
Yeah. So I actually am a sponge. Even though I'm a teacher, I enjoy learning. So I gravitate to learning. So I'm a credentialed John Maxwell member, which is like speaking, consulting, training, all the things. So. Over time, over the years, I have accumulated a plethora of education when it comes to credentialing.
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Chapter 5: How did Deketa Tranae discover her teaching superpower?
So when you say, where did I get this power? Yeah.
From the great divine.
Yeah.
Who do you call? What mentor do you speak to when you're facing challenges or questions?
Yes, I have several. It depends on... What bucket of challenge that is, life challenge, personal challenge, relationship challenge, business challenge. So I have a plethora contingent on that, and I definitely encourage anyone to at least have a mentor or two. I have a—we call ourselves the bosses, sorority sisters, that's two of us, that we—I can be safe. I have my safe space.
And so when I talk about mentorship or when you ask who mentors you, it could be people that— They may have common interests, right, but they have a different download than what you would have to offer, a different perspective. And you have to hear that because sometimes we look ourselves in the mirror and we see the same thing, but somebody else will see something different.
So I have a couple of line sorority sisters. I call them my line sisters. And then I also have a mentor sister as well that I looked up to. She was 13 years older than me. She's my sister. But from a personal experience perspective. So, yeah.
What's the Daquita Laser focused on now today? What's your current project?
So right now I am taking my leadership opportunities and translating that into speaking. So it just has happened authentically, right? Where I'm afforded the opportunity, like you said, I just do it naturally. Where I'm coaching and developing, I'm also kind of making impact.
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Chapter 6: What is the significance of being a certified John Maxwell Team member?
That concludes another amazing episode on a powerful episode. Again, Takita, thank you so much. And for Inside Success Network, I'm Ray Gutierrez.
Thank you so much.