Move to Millions
Audiobook & Ebook

Move to Millions by Dr. Darnyelle Jervey Harmon | Free Audiobook

By Dr. Darnyelle Jervey Harmon

Narrated by Dr. Darnyelle Jervey Harmon

🎧 7 hrs and 49 mins 📅 March 27, 2023 🌐 English
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About This Audiobook

Welcome to the Move to Millions Podcast, the sanctuary for CEOs and legacy-led entrepreneurs navigating what happens when success is no longer the problem. I’m Dr. Darnyelle, CEO of Incredible One Enterprises, and this show exists for leaders who have built something real and are realizing that the next level requires a deeper relationship with leadership, identity, and capacity. This is not a podcast about hustle.It is a podcast about wholeness.Not about chasing more.But about becoming the leader who can hold it with grace, clarity, and alignment. Each week, we explore the intersection of business growth, money and wealth consciousness, leadership, and spiritual alignment so you can build a business that funds your legacy without fragmenting your life. Inside the show, you’ll find: Soul-grounded solo teachings that expand how you relate to money, responsibility, and success Candid conversations with leaders who have outgrown old ways of proving and performing Timeless rewinds designed to help you recalibrate, realign, and lead as a sanctuary Because the Move to Millions is not just about business growth.It is an evolution of who you are, how you lead, and what you are available to receive. You do not have to hustle for your inheritance.If you did not come from millions, millions must come from you.And to access them, you need only MOVE.

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Quick Take

  • Narration: Dr. Darnyelle Jervey Harmon narrates her own material with the conviction of a pulpit sermon and the precision of a business consultant, the cadence is deliberate, occasionally slow, but always purposeful.
  • Themes: legacy-building, spiritual alignment in business, identity-based leadership
  • Mood: Soul-grounded and expansive, like a long conversation with someone who genuinely believes you are capable of more
  • Verdict: A spiritually integrated business framework that speaks directly to entrepreneurs who have already tasted success and now need language for what comes next.

I came to Move to Millions on a Tuesday evening when I was in one of those transitional moods that the business section rarely knows how to address. Not struggling. Not exactly thriving. Just aware that the playbook I had been using was no longer producing the same results, and that something fundamental needed to shift. I pressed play mostly out of curiosity, and I found myself still listening two hours later, notebook open.

What Dr. Darnyelle Jervey Harmon has built here is not a standard audiobook in the conventional sense. The synopsis is transparent about this: what you are hearing originated as a podcast, and the format carries that DNA throughout. These are episodes of the Move to Millions Podcast repurposed for an Audible audience, and understanding that framing matters a great deal before you press play.

The Podcast-as-Audiobook Question

The experience of listening to curated podcast content in audiobook form is genuinely different from hearing a tightly structured, single-argument book. Harmon’s episodes are self-contained teaching moments. She will ground you in a concept during one track, then circle back to it through a different lens in the next. The throughline is consistent: the intersection of money consciousness, spiritual alignment, and identity-level leadership. But the listener accustomed to linear argument-building needs to recalibrate their expectations. This is more like attending a retreat than reading a book. The value accumulates in layers rather than building toward a single climactic chapter.

Once you accept that structure, the content itself is substantial. Harmon is particularly strong on what she calls the distinction between chasing more and becoming the leader who can hold more. Her framework argues that the ceiling most entrepreneurs hit is not a strategy problem but a capacity problem: the body and identity have not expanded to match the ambition. That is not a new idea, but Harmon articulates it with enough specificity, drawing from her own experience building Incredible One Enterprises to seven figures, that it lands with more force than the average mindset monologue.

Where the Spiritual Integration Earns Its Place

Some listeners will bristle at the blend of business tactics and spiritual vocabulary. Harmon uses phrases like “your inheritance” and talks openly about alignment as a prerequisite for financial expansion. I have read enough leadership literature to know that this territory is often where books lose the thread, retreating into vague affirmations that dissolve under any real scrutiny. Harmon mostly avoids that trap. Her spiritual framing is not decorative. It is structural. She argues that the behaviors and relational patterns that helped entrepreneurs survive the first phase of growth actively prevent them from entering the next phase. The hustle identity, the need to prove, the fear of being seen as too much: these are not character flaws to fix but survival adaptations to outgrow. That analysis is genuinely useful and would hold up in a secular leadership framework even if you stripped out the faith language entirely.

Her self-narration serves this material well. There is a directness in how she speaks that would be lost with a professional narrator. She knows exactly when to slow down, when to let a silence breathe, when to repeat a line for emphasis. The result is a listening experience that occasionally feels like being in the room with someone delivering a keynote that is also somehow personal.

What This Is Not

Move to Millions is not a tactical guide to scaling operations. It does not walk you through org charts, pricing strategies, or systems architecture. If you arrive expecting the audiobook equivalent of a consulting engagement, you will be frustrated. The content lives in the register of identity and leadership philosophy. It asks what kind of person you need to become, not what tools you need to acquire. That is a real distinction and worth naming clearly before committing nearly eight hours.

The short-form episode structure also means there is some redundancy across tracks. Harmon returns to certain formulations repeatedly, which works well in the podcast context where listeners may have missed previous episodes, but in a single listening session can feel like doubling back over familiar ground.

Who Should Listen, Who Should Skip

Listen to this if you are a founder or CEO who has moved past survival mode and found that the usual growth content no longer addresses the actual questions you are sitting with. The material is squarely aimed at that liminal space between early success and the kind of institutional leadership that demands a different self-concept entirely. Harmon’s integration of faith and business will resonate particularly with listeners for whom that intersection already feels natural.

Skip this if you want a structured, sequentially argued business book. The podcast format is a genuine structural limitation rather than a stylistic choice, and listeners who need that kind of scaffolding will find the experience diffuse. Also worth noting for listeners who are earlier in their business journey: this content is explicitly designed for people who have already built something real. The conversations Harmon says she is having are with leaders who have outgrown old ways of proving and performing. If that is not yet your situation, much of this may feel abstract.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Move to Millions a structured audiobook or a podcast compilation?

It originated as episodes of the Move to Millions Podcast. The content is curated and thematically consistent, but it follows a podcast-episode structure rather than a linear book argument. Each track is largely self-contained.

How much of the content is spiritually focused versus practical business strategy?

The spiritual and business elements are genuinely integrated throughout. Harmon’s framework holds that identity and alignment are prerequisites for revenue growth, so the two threads are rarely separate. Listeners uncomfortable with faith-adjacent language in business contexts should know this upfront.

Is this relevant for entrepreneurs who are not yet at a million-dollar revenue level?

Harmon is explicit that this material is designed for leaders who have already built something and are navigating what comes next. Early-stage founders will find some useful philosophy, but the direct audience is more established CEOs grappling with capacity and identity questions.

Does Dr. Harmon’s self-narration affect the listening experience?

Positively. Her delivery brings a conviction and intimacy to the material that a hired narrator would struggle to replicate. She narrates the way she clearly teaches, with deliberate pacing and purposeful repetition. Occasional slowness is a trade-off worth accepting.

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Alexandra Reed

Written by Alexandra Reed

Founder & Literary Critic