Good People Help Good People

FOR MODERN
TIMES

MINDFUL
CONNECTIONS

At In Good Company, we walk alongside kind, growth-minded singles who’ve built rich, full lives—and are ready to welcome love that feels aligned, alive, and deeply mutual.

Through clarity work, connection coaching, and thoughtful matchmaking, we help you move with intention in your love life. No formulas. No games. Just real support, tailored to you.

Successful in life, but struggling in love?

You’re not alone.

We’re especially here for those who don’t “fit” the apps or the usual dating advice—the artists, introverts, late bloomers, deep feelers, career-changers, caretakers, entrepreneurs.

Because in a world full of endless options, it’s easy to feel stuck, disillusioned, or just tired. If you’re ready to try something different—something more human—we’d love to meet you.

Fill out a Profile

Step into our private rolodex of singles—it’s free to create your profile, and it’s the first place we look when scouting matches for our clients. If someone aligned comes along, we’ll reach out.

JOIN THE PRIVATE ROLODEX

DAN MERRITT, happily-matched client

“The quality of dates was better than any I’d gone on before working with Rachel — and that’s because of her matchmaking skills and her ability to vet people much better than a short online profile. Every single date left me more energized.”

HEAR DAN'S STORY →

Most people treat love like a puzzle to solve.
Rachel Joy Barehl treats it like an art form to practice.

As a matchmaker, photographer, and founder of In Good Company, she’s reimagining modern connection — creating intentional, human-centered alternatives to the burnout of dating apps. Her work lives at the intersection of intimacy, creativity, and care: helping people unlearn performance, deepen presence, and practice the daily rhythms of staying attuned in partnership.

Rachel’s approach blends psychology, hospitality, and intuition — part science, part soul — inviting people to slow down, listen closely, and build the kind of relationships that feel like home.

Because healthy relationships are a form of generational wealth — the kind that strengthens families, friendships, and entire communities.

Meet Rachel →