Gurus, coaches, and teachers in the spirituality business do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking spiritual and consciousness languages that frame their claims as fidelity to awakening, loyalty to higher vibration, or responsibility for sustaining the movement’s integrity inside a hyper-competitive, post-2000s wellness market. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, online academies, mastermind groups, certification programs, retreats, book deals, speaking circuits, and the invisible networks of affiliate commissions and launch funnels. The key language is not only metaphysical. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Doing the inner work. Raising your vibration. Holding sacred space. Aligning with source. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of spirituality the business can sustain, how demanding that consciousness should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The coach who stays up until 3 a.m. channeling a new transmission is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of spiritual life she genuinely values. The core values, liberation, non-attachment, abundance consciousness, heart-centered living, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in the spirituality business. It is not the whole picture.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.
The spirituality business is a hero system that deliberately targets people at the moment when their previous hero systems have failed them. Divorce, illness, career collapse, existential crisis: these are not incidental to the market. They are the market. The summons mechanism works most powerfully on people who are most exposed, which makes the replacement hero system extraordinarily sticky. Leaving is experienced not as a consumer decision but as a spiritual crisis, which is precisely what the system requires to maintain retention. Every transmission delivered with absolute presence, every high-ticket mastermind where shadows are named, every refusal to chase the latest hot trend: these are experienced as acts of fidelity to a post-1960s heritage that has sustained elite spirituality through conditions far worse than the current era of social-media metrics and wellness capitalism. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of short-term metrics can fully dissolve.
What makes the spirituality business the most revealing case in this series is not its size but its structural purity. The signal layer, liberation, awakening, non-attachment, abundance consciousness, can be deployed with complete freedom because there is no external accrediting body, no peer review, no fiduciary duty, no bar exam. The cue layer, course revenue, list size, affiliate commissions, mastermind pricing, launch strategy, is purely commercial. The gap between the two is not a failure of the system. It is the system. Every other institution examined in this series maintains some partial alignment between stated values and operational reality. The spirituality business as a commercial sector has shed that constraint entirely.
This makes Alliance Theory especially sharp as an analytical tool here. The moral vocabulary of awakening does not merely recruit allies and define legitimacy. It actively neutralizes criticism. To question a teacher’s claims is to reveal your own resistance. To audit their revenue is to be trapped in scarcity consciousness. To demand evidence is to operate from the limited three-dimensional mind rather than higher dimensional awareness. The epistemological closure is more complete than in any other domain because the framework pre-emptively pathologizes the tools of scrutiny. This is not incidental. It is the system’s primary defensive architecture.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons, developed in Summoned: Identification and Religious Life in a Jewish Neighborhood, explains how this architecture sustains itself. The spirituality business is not simply a place where teachers happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as true lightworkers through live events, online masterminds, mentorship chains, and ordinary DM-side recognitions. Every email blast, every push notification from a meditation app, every emergency transmission on Telegram is a micro-interruption of existential drift. The spirituality business has mastered the continuous summons. By keeping the individual in a state of constant inner work, the system ensures she rarely has the quiet moment of reflection where the hero system might be seen as a construction. The battle for power in this business is, at its root, a battle for the right to be the one who interrupts the silence.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or spiritual failure. The community that summons its members reliably is the community whose hero system remains operative. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The teacher who questions a colleague’s high-ticket launch or begins softening non-dual rigor to hit revenue targets when her circle holds firm is not merely making a business adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true embodiment was built to contain.
The system operates at three distinct tiers. At the retail layer you have content creators, podcasters, and Instagram teachers selling low-ticket courses and building audiences. This is where slogans live and where the continuous summons is cheapest to produce. At the mid-tier you have established coaches and thought leaders running high-ticket masterminds, certification programs, and live events, typically in the ten-thousand to one-hundred-thousand dollar range per participant. This is where the most intense jurisdictional battles occur, because mid-tier practitioners are certified but not yet wholesale, making them most vulnerable to market fluctuations and therefore most aggressive in using Alliance Theory maneuvers. They must constantly prove they are more tapped in than retail creators while remaining in devotion to the wholesale figures above them. At the wholesale layer you have the handful of figures, Sadhguru, Eckhart Tolle, Joe Dispenza, Deepak Chopra, Marianne Williamson, Byron Katie, whose pedigree is so established that they no longer need moral clearance from anyone. They have the power to ignore. To answer a critic is to acknowledge the critic as a peer. By maintaining silence, they signal that they exist in a different dimensional reality. This is the ultimate signal of attainment: the ability to remain visibly unaffected by the cue layer of market competition.
The wholesale layer maintains this position through what might be called transcendental passivity. At this level, the individual has become a platform that other teachers use to validate their own existence. The mid-tier and the certification economy act as a voluntary immune system for the wholesale figure. She does not need to pathologize a critic. The thousands of certified practitioners whose livelihoods depend on her sanctity will do it. If a journalist or a former student raises concerns about a wholesale leader, the mid-tier swarm interprets the critique as unprocessed shadow or unconscious projection. The wholesale figure remains pure while her subordinates handle the defense. This allows the top tier to maintain an appearance of non-attachment while enjoying the benefits of a highly attached and aggressive coalition.
The certification economy is the primary mechanism through which the mid-tier reproduces itself and generates revenue simultaneously. When a teacher certifies students to teach her method, she converts spiritual capital into recurring income while extending her jurisdictional reach. The certified practitioners then become a coalition with a material stake in defending the teacher’s authority, since their own credibility depends on hers. The system functions as a debt-based lineage. In a traditional apprenticeship, the student eventually gains independence. In the spirituality business, certification often requires ongoing licensing fees, continuing education in the teacher’s new transmissions, or a percentage of the student’s own revenue. This creates a structural incentive for the mid-tier to never truly outgrow the wholesale layer. The teacher is not just a mentor. She is a landlord of the student’s professional identity.
The transmission or channeling functions as a perfect informational monopoly. In law or medicine, authority is checked against a body of literature or a set of measurable outcomes. In the spirituality business, authority is located in the presence or frequency of the teacher during the transmission. Because this frequency is subjective and unmeasurable, it is the ultimate non-falsifiable asset. If Eckhart Tolle or Deepak Chopra says something that contradicts a previous statement, it is not a contradiction. It is a new transmission for a new collective frequency. The very subjectivity of the product insulates it from the accountability mechanisms that govern other elite domains.
The high-ticket sales call is where the signal layer is most precisely used to spring the trap of the cue layer. The salesperson, typically called an enrollment coach or alignment specialist, uses the prospect’s own spiritual vocabulary to dismantle financial resistance. The call begins by inviting the prospect to share her vision and the blocks preventing its manifestation. In Becker’s terms, the salesperson looks for the point where the prospect’s current hero system has failed. By the end of this diagnostic phase, the prospect is not merely looking for a course. She is looking for rescue from existential insignificance. When the price is revealed, the objection is handled not as a financial reality but as a spiritual test. To say I cannot afford this is diagnosed as playing small or operating from a scarcity frequency. The prospect is told that the universe responds to bold action and that investing in oneself is the ultimate act of sovereignty. The financial risk is rebranded as a spiritual initiation. If the prospect asks for time to think or consult a partner, the script neutralizes the tools of scrutiny. Taking time to think is framed as letting the ego-mind take the lead. Consulting a spouse is dismissed as giving away your power. The salesperson asks: is that your truth, or is that your fear speaking? The final move is the summons. The prospect is hailed as a leader, a wayshower, someone called to a higher mission. The transaction is no longer a purchase. It is an act of fidelity to the soul.
The high price tag of mid-tier and wholesale offerings functions as a commitment device for the hero system. To pay fifty thousand dollars for a certification is a massive act of faith that anchors the individual into the new framework. The expense itself makes the system feel more real and therefore more capable of containing the terror of insignificance. The 2026 top ten figures, Sadhguru at the clear summit through his Isha Foundation and Inner Engineering programs, followed by Tolle, Dispenza, Chopra, Vishen Lakhiani through Mindvalley, Jay Shetty, Williamson, Teal Swan, Esther Hicks through the Abraham-Hicks operation, and Gabby Bernstein, represent the most efficient managers of death anxiety in the digital marketplace. When Joe Dispenza sells a retreat, he is not selling a vacation. He is selling a biological upgrade that promises to move the participant out of the category of the perishing and into the category of the eternal. This is why the spirituality business is recession-proof. In times of personal crisis, the individual’s previous hero system has collapsed. The spirituality business is positioned precisely at that threshold.
The two dominant coalitions compete for the same anxious seeker through different vocabularies. The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that prize pure non-duality and rigorous shadow work, uses the language of depth, descent, and energetic standards. Its claim is that true authority is forged in crisis, darkness, and ego-dissolution. The hardline teacher claims her authority comes from having faced the void. She frames the pragmatic coalition’s focus on high vibration as a consumerist dilution of the path. Shadow work functions in this coalition not merely as a practice but as a jurisdictional weapon. By claiming that a competitor has unexamined shadow, a teacher can disqualify that competitor’s entire output without addressing her arguments or her business success. Any defense the target offers is immediately categorized as resistance or defensiveness, which are themselves symptoms of the shadow. The move is unfalsifiable by design. Shadow work also functions as a loyalty test within the mid-tier. To belong to the serious coalition, a practitioner must undergo shadow audits by the wholesale figure, confessing hidden agendas or egoic attachments. This ritual of submission reinforces the teacher’s jurisdiction. The practitioner who refuses to play is branded as unavailable for true transmission, which effectively excommunicates her from the elite circles of the hardline coalition.
The pragmatic-engagement coalition counters by shifting the jurisdictional ground from the psyche to the body. If hardline traditionalists use shadow to pathologize rivals, pragmatists use nervous system regulation to pathologize the hardliners. They frame the traditional model of breaking the ego as retraumatizing and dysregulating, invoking Polyvagal Theory and somatic experiencing to argue that the hardline approach violates the student’s window of tolerance. This allows the pragmatist to claim the higher moral ground of safety and inclusion while dismissing the hardliner as an outdated, potentially abusive relic of a pre-trauma-informed era. The pragmatist replaces the hardline concept of level of attainment with capacity. One does not reach a higher state. One expands one’s capacity to hold wealth and impact. This frames commercial success as the biological inevitability of a regulated system. The hardliner who lives more ascetically or less commercially is diagnosed as having contracted capacity or unhealed poverty consciousness. Revenue becomes the literal evidence of superior spiritual health.
The emerging synthesis in the 2026 market combines both. Figures like Thomas Hübl, who blends mystical language with the vocabulary of collective trauma and relational fields, and Nicole LePera, who moved from clinical psychology to a self-healer model that bypassed traditional licensing to create its own jurisdictional authority, represent a hybrid model that uses shadow work to maintain the signal of depth while using nervous system regulation to maintain the cue of safety and commercial scalability. This hybrid is the stickiest hero system in the current market because it pre-emptively answers both types of criticism. It promises the thrill of the descent with the safety of a trauma-informed container. Rupert Spira represents the hardline coalition’s successful commercialization: his direct path non-duality operates at the most austere end of the signal layer while his business model runs a high-frequency digital operation of webinars, retreats, and a sophisticated app. To be a student of Spira is a status marker that one is doing serious work, which then allows those students to charge higher prices in their own coaching practices.
Stephen Turner‘s critique of essentialism explains why the fight between these coalitions never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic spirituality being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. One faction reconstructs the business around energetic density and the primacy of the descent. Another reconstructs it around sustainable embodiment and the sovereignty of the nervous system. Both claim continuity with the tradition. Both select from the same dense world of teachings to support present needs. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages and emphases that authorize its current position.
Across all three tiers and both coalitions, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising adherence to the core values. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable conscious excellence under actual market conditions. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic awakening requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
The gap between the liberation they preach and the revenue they collect is not a contradiction. It is the structural necessity of a hero system that must operate within a capitalist framework. The spirituality business is the only domain where the signal of total non-attachment is the most effective cue for total market dominance. The winner of the jurisdictional war is the one who can most reliably hail the seeker as a lightworker, a starseed, or an evolved consciousness, because in doing so they provide the symbolic immortality that makes this the most resilient franchise in human history.
These are the big players in the spirituality business based on commercial footprint (course/mastermind revenue, certifications, retreats, apps, and platforms), social-media reach, book sales, and overall market influence.
Sadhguru (Jaggi Vasudev)
The clear #1. Massive global operation through Isha Foundation, Inner Engineering programs, Save Soil campaign, and digital content. One of the highest-earning and most-followed spiritual figures worldwide.
Eckhart Tolle
Enduring powerhouse. The Power of Now and A New Earth remain perennial bestsellers; his online courses, retreats, and teachings continue to generate huge revenue with a very loyal audience.
Dr. Joe Dispenza
Extremely commercial success story. High-ticket workshops, meditation programs, and “scientific spirituality” model dominate the mind-body space.
Deepak Chopra
Veteran empire-builder. Chopra Global, multiple product lines, books, apps, and wellness collaborations keep him at the top of the mind-body-spirit business.
Vishen Lakhiani (Mindvalley)
Runs one of the largest spirituality/personal-growth course platforms in the world. Sells courses from many teachers and has built a massive direct-to-consumer empire.
Jay Shetty
Podcast-to-empire model. Books, coaching certifications, events, and mainstream appeal make him a major player in the spirituality/self-help crossover.
Marianne Williamson
Long-time commercial force. Books, speaking tours, online courses, and public visibility (including her presidential run) keep her in the top tier.
Teal Swan
Influential (and polarizing) online teacher. Direct-to-consumer courses, masterminds, and a huge social following drive strong revenue.
Esther Hicks / Abraham-Hicks
Long-running Law of Attraction empire. Workshops, cruises, books, and recordings remain a steady commercial machine.
Gabby Bernstein
Manifestation/abundance-focused courses, events, and books keep her as a top female voice in the high-ticket spirituality market.
Dr. Nicole LePera (The Holistic Psychologist)
She is an example of the “Mid-Tier to Wholesale” transition through the Certification Economy. By moving from clinical psychology to a “Self-Healer” model, she bypassed the traditional medical bar exam to create her own jurisdictional authority. Her “SelfHealers Circle” is a high-volume, subscription-based membership that functions as a continuous summons, effectively hollowing out the need for traditional therapy for her millions of followers.
Rupert Spira
Spira represents the “Hardline-Traditional” coalition’s successful commercialization. While his brand is built on “Direct Path” non-duality—the most austere end of the signal layer—his business model is a high-frequency digital operation of webinars, retreats, and a sophisticated app. He provides the “Moral Clearance” for the elite mid-tier; to be a student of Spira is a status marker that one is doing “serious” work, which then allows those students to charge higher prices in their own coaching practices.
Thomas Hübl
Hübl is the architect of the “Collective Trauma” niche. He has successfully professionalized the “Transmission” by building a massive certification infrastructure that targets the PMC (Professional Managerial Class). By blending mystical language with the vocabulary of systemic trauma and “relational fields,” he has created a hero system that feels intellectually rigorous enough for therapists and corporate leaders. His “Academy of Inner Science” is a prime example of a wholesale platform that no longer needs external accreditation because it has become its own accrediting body.
Honorable mentions:
Acharya Prashant (enormous digital reach, especially in India)
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar (Art of Living Foundation)
Iyanla Vanzant
Byron Katie
Michael Singer: His “Untethered Soul” brand has moved into the “Automated Wholesale” layer, with a permanent digital platform that generates revenue with minimal active presence from Singer himself.
Vandana Shiva: While often seen as an activist, her “Navdanya” operation functions as a spiritual-ecological hero system, summoning followers into a sacred relationship with seeds and soil that operates as a powerful alternative to the “Abundance Consciousness” model.
Gabor Maté: Though he occupies a medical/scientific signal layer, his commercial footprint in the “Compassionate Inquiry” certification space makes him a structural pillar of the spiritual mid-tier.
The spirituality business rewards scale, digital leverage, and the ability to package “awakening” into repeatable, monetizable products. These names dominate that space right now.