About the founder
Tracy Guidry
Armijo High School graduate. College graduate. Healthcare and Change Management leader. Founder of TAG² Synergy™

Coming home to serve.
Tracy Guidry grew up in Solano County and graduated from Armijo High School in Fairfield. She went on to build more than 15 years of leadership experience across healthcare revenue cycle management, operational leadership, and Change Management. Along the way she served as an adjunct instructor for Medical Billing and Coding and Career Development, designed volunteer pipeline initiatives for healthcare students, implemented workforce readiness programs, and led large scale organizational change initiatives. She knows what employers need because she has reviewed the resumes and watched the interviews. She knows what students are missing because she was one of them.
But the further she went, the clearer one truth became: too many bright students in her own community were being asked to navigate college, career, and funding decisions alone. Information existed. Access did not.
TAG² Synergy™ is her answer: a Transformation & Alignment Group built to bring the same rigor, strategy, and care she brought to boardrooms back to every student everywhere. Free. Community-rooted. Personal.
Everyone has an opportunity to participate and reach their level of genius.
Community rooted
Built by someone who walked these same halls. We serve the place we call home.
Every path counts
Four year, two year, trade, apprenticeship, work. Every next step is honored and supported.
No cost. No catch.
TAG² is free for students and families. Always.
The Problem We Are Solving
College and Career Readiness
of California high school graduates were not prepared for college or career by their school in 2025.
of Class of 2024 graduates nationally felt only moderately or not at all prepared for life after high school.
say they would have been more engaged if they had better understood their strengths and career options.
The Funding Gap
in Pell Grant funds went unclaimed by California students in 2024 — the highest of any state in the nation.
in CalKIDS scholarship funds remain unclaimed by eligible California students — money already deposited in their names.
in scholarships go unclaimed nationally every year due to lack of applicants, not lack of eligible students.
The Equity Gap
Only 14% of low-income California students meet college readiness benchmarks, compared to 30% of students who are not low-income.
Only 8% of Black California students and 13% of Latino students meet college readiness benchmarks.
This is not a motivation problem. It is an access problem. TAG² Synergy exists to close the gap.
Find your genius. Own your PATH. Fund your future.
The PATH Program is free, built for every student on every path, and designed to help you discover who you are before deciding where you are going.