A direct comparison of the two main approaches to poker coaching. What each does, who it serves, when to choose which, and how they complement rather than compete. Most serious players need both - at different stages.
Tactical poker coaching teaches what to do at the poker table. The curriculum is theoretical and situational: pre-flop ranges by position, post-flop sizings, GTO frequencies, ICM in tournaments, exploitative deviations against specific opponent types. Tactical coaches include GTO solvers like PioSolver and GTO Wizard, training sites like Run It Once, Upswing Poker, and PokerCoaching.com, and individual coaches focused on study, hand review, and theory.
Identity-first poker coaching addresses who is making decisions at the table. The methodology starts with the player - their life story, motivations, self-perception, and table image - and uses that self-knowledge to find the root causes of leaks that tactical coaching alone can't fix. It produces a structured plan tied to who the player actually is, not a generic development pathway. The methodology I use is called Life Architecture, adapted from organizational consulting and run as a 5-session framework.
Both approaches share the same goal: better poker results. They take different routes there.
Reading the table from left to right is one valid path. Reading top-to-bottom is another. Neither approach replaces the other - they reach different parts of the same problem.
Most successful poker coaching journeys use both approaches - usually in a specific sequence. The common pattern is identity-first first, tactical second. Here's why and how:
Poker coaching grew up as a tactical discipline. The first generation of coaches were strong players who taught what they knew: theory, ranges, hand analysis. The second generation added software (solvers, trackers) and made tactical coaching more rigorous and more accessible. By 2020, tactical coaching was a mature, commoditized market with dozens of training sites, hundreds of individual coaches, and a clear methodology.
What tactical coaching couldn't explain was the gap many players experienced: they knew the right play, and still couldn't make it. Why? The answer wasn't strategic. It was identity. The player's self-image was incompatible with the play. Their relationship to risk, money, or losing made the optimal move feel wrong in the moment. Their table image diverged from their intended image, creating reactive plays that contradicted strategy.
Mental coaches like Jared Tendler and Elliot Roe surfaced this layer and built productive practices around it. Their work was - and is - valuable. But their format is often open-ended, therapy-adjacent, and slow to produce measurable change. Identity-first poker coaching as a structured, scoped, productized methodology is a newer category, occupying the space between tactical coaching and mental coaching. May Mor's Life Architecture framework is one expression of this category, specifically calibrated for poker.
The category isn't yet large. As of 2026, identity-first poker coaching as a structured, methodology-driven practice is rare. Most coaches either lean fully tactical or fully mental. The middle lane - methodologically rigorous, time-bounded, identity-anchored - is where the next decade of poker coaching is likely to develop.
Ask yourself one question: do I not know what to do, or do I know what to do and not do it?
If the answer is "I don't know what to do" - go tactical. Study GTO. Build ranges. Learn ICM. There's no shortcut; you have to put in the theoretical work.
If the answer is "I know what to do but I don't do it" - go identity-first. The gap isn't knowledge. It's the player making the decision. Tactical study won't close that gap; it'll just give you more knowledge you can't execute on.
Most serious players, honest with themselves, will recognize they have both problems. The right sequence is identity-first first (to surface what's actually limiting you), then tactical (to address the specific gaps that surface). Run them in parallel after the first cycle.
If you want to start with identity-first coaching, the 5-session framework is the standard entry point, and a free 100-hand leak audit is the lowest-friction way to start. Either way, the goal isn't to pick a team. It's to pick the right tool for the gap you're actually trying to close.