Dr. Elisa Hallerman
Dr. Hallerman's Story
The Hallerman Group is one-of-a-kind mental health, addiction and wellness concierge company—an innovative, high-touch practice that provides clients with a dedicated team of strategists to thoughtfully guide every step of the healing journey.
Before founding The Hallerman Group in 2011, I spent twelve years as a talent agent in Hollywood. My work centered on championing my clients’ visions and orchestrating the pathways that would bring those visions to life. I loved helping people realize their greatest potential. By 2008, however, I felt called toward a different frontier—one rooted in the profound complexities of addiction, mental health, and trauma.
Returning to school, I quickly discovered how overwhelming the mental-health landscape truly is. Genuine healing requires an integrated understanding of the brain, the body, and the human spirit. A person would need to sift through endless books, research, and clinical methodologies just to grasp the fundamentals—let alone determine which approach or practitioner would be the right fit.
But when you’re vulnerable, frightened, or in crisis, navigating that world alone feels impossible.
And yet, unlike legal or business matters—where one instinctively turns to an attorney or agent—there is no obvious guide for life-and-death moments, when symptoms feel uniquely personal and the options seem endless.
I created The Hallerman Group to change that.
Our role is to manage, educate, and advocate for each client and their family. We serve as trusted partners—strategic thinkers and steady anchors—ensuring no one has to sit with their head in their hands wondering, “What now?”
Soulbriety™ emerged as the next evolution.
During my doctoral research in depth psychology, I immersed myself in the study of soul as a vital source of meaning and purpose.I spent five years researching the phenomenological exploration of soul in recovery. I was fortunate enough to have Thomas Moore, the author of Care of the Soul and Dark Nights of the Soul, oversee my dissertation writing.
I wanted to examine the following: If we were to reframe addiction as a crisis of meaning with existential and spiritual implications, could soul inform the recovery process? The answer is a resounding YES, and far more.