Our Team

Chris Coulter

CEO and Co-founder of The Mentor Well.

Chris is an entrepreneur, mental health advocate, and proud father driven by a deep and personal mission: to create a world where every young person feels seen, supported, and capable. After losing his 14-year-old daughter Maddie to suicide, Chris transformed unimaginable pain into purpose, dedicating his life to youth mental health and emotional well-being. He founded The Mentor Well, an online mentorship platform designed to help teens and young adults build confidence, resilience, and emotional intelligence. Chris believes that meaningful mentorship—especially from emotionally intelligent adults—can change the trajectory of a young life. With over 30 years of experience in business, including estate and legacy planning through The Finish Line Group, he now helps other business owners align wealth with purpose. Chris’s work bridges the gap between success and significance, honouring Maddie’s legacy by showing that one person’s story, shared honestly, can spark change in another’s life.

Alana Tart

COO, General Counsel and Co-Founder of The Mentor Well.

Alana combines her expertise as a lawyer with a passion coaching (CPCC, ICF-ACC) and mindfulness (CPCAB and BAMBA). She serves as MentorWell’s COO and General Counsel, is a youth mentor and also runs her own executive coaching practice.  Alana balances authority with compassion, inspiring clients to align ambition with well-being on their journey to meaningful success. She is Canadian and lives in Switzerland with her family (husband, two teens, a dog, cat and bunnies).

Zac Coulter

Marketing Coordinator for The Mentor Well.

With a background in youth mental health advocacy, Zac has always had a passion for helping young people. During his teenage to young adult years, Zac struggled with self-confidence, self-exploration, and emotional intelligence. After graduating from university, he realized the importance of thriving in those areas and wanted to ensure that resources to help improve in those areas were accessible to all.