This is not an English course. This is a strategic communication system built for bilingual professionals who already speak English fluently — but are not yet being perceived as the decision-makers they truly are.
Developed by Alexandra Hurley, an executive communication specialist with a background in high-level professional environments, A Peça-Chave™ bridges the gap between knowing English and commanding it.
This is one drill set from a complete series of 35, featuring over 100 executive-level business phrases in this collection alone.
Included in your purchase is one private strategic session with Alexandra.
After enrollment, you will schedule a one-on-one meeting to define your professional goals, assess your current communication patterns, and identify how you position yourself in English within business environments.
This session is designed to:
Clarify your professional objectives and communication challenges
Evaluate your executive presence and oratory in English
Identify gaps in structure, authority, and cultural alignment
Outline a customized communication strategy aligned with your career goals
If desired, this conversation can evolve into a personalized development plan tailored specifically to your industry, role, and real-world scenarios.
This is a one-time purchase, and availability is limited — only 10 spots are currently open.
Through structured audio drills, cultural calibration, and real-world professional scenarios, you will learn to speak with the clarity, authority, and presence that American business environments demand.
You will learn how to:
Open meetings, lead negotiations, and deliver feedback with confidence and structure
Use the exact phrases American executives rely on — with the cultural context behind each one
Eliminate hesitation, over-explanation, and indirect communication patterns
Position yourself as a decision-maker from the very first sentence
Navigate American business cultural nuances that no grammar class ever teaches
Adapt your communication style across formal, informal, and high-stakes contexts