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    The Breakthrough is One “Touch” Away: Why Activity Always Defeats a Slump

    I’ve had a number of calls lately with clients who feel like they are caught in a “bad luck” streak. Between deals falling through at the eleventh hour and a sudden lack of momentum, I can hear it in their voices: the mindset is ripe for a tanking.

    When the scoreboard isn’t reflecting your effort, the natural human instinct is to pull back. We want to protect ourselves. We hunker down and over-analyze every mistake, trying to “think” our way back into a winning streak.

    But here is the truth about the real estate and lending business: Luck is a volume game.

    Stop Over-Analyzing, Start Moving

    You cannot think your way out of a slump. You have to work your way out of it. Activity isn’t just about hitting a raw number on a spreadsheet; it is the only way to break a cycle of stagnation. While strategy is the blueprint, activity is the engine.

    When you lean into activity during the hard times, you aren’t just “staying busy” – you are generating the data and friction necessary to sharpen your skills.

    Reframing the “Bad Luck”

    To win the mindset game, you have to change how you view the struggle:

    • “Bad Luck” is just Data: It’s a signal that you are in the middle of a cycle. Statistics dictate that if you keep moving, the numbers will eventually swing back in your favor.
    • Failed Deals are Real-World Friction: Every deal that falls through is a masterclass in closing. It’s the friction that sharpens your edge for the next one.
    • The Struggle is Muscle Soreness: In the gym, soreness is proof of growth. In business, the “uphill” feeling is proof that you are building the capacity for a higher level of success.

    Force the Luck to Change

    The “Best Practice” targets we aim for – whether it’s high appointment rates or closing ratios – aren’t reserved for the lucky. They are reserved for the persistent.

    Don’t wait for your luck to change before you decide to increase your activity. You must increase your activity to force the luck to change. Luck isn’t something that happens to you; it’s something you create by increasing your surface area for opportunity.

    The Challenge: Be Like Water

    As Bruce Lee famously said, “Be like water.” When water hits an obstacle, it doesn’t stop. It doesn’t get frustrated. It flows around it, finds a new path, and keeps moving toward its goal.

    The breakthrough you are looking for – that next recruit, that next loan, that next listing – is usually just one “touch” away.

    • One more new conversation.
    • One more appointment.
    • One more direct closing question.

    Who’s ready to change the narrative today?


    It's Not Over Until You Win
    It’s Not Over Until You Win

    What I’ve Been Practicing: The 72-Hour Reset

    I wanted to share something a little more personal today. I follow an Instagram account called psychologyposts_, and every so often, a concept hits me right when I need it. Lately, I’ve been trying to lean into a specific idea they shared about what to do when you wake up feeling “heavy” or directionless.

    With our family trip to Japan coming up this summer – we’re stopping there on our way to visit family in the Philippines – I’ve been especially curious about Japanese perspectives on work and life.

    Consider this: In our world of real estate, learning, lending, and services, we’re told that if we aren’t “grinding,” we’ve lost our motivation. But this concept suggests we haven’t lost our drive at all; we’ve just lost our meaning.

    Here is what I’ve been trying to practice to restore that drive in about 72 hours:


    1. Finding Meaning in the Specific (Ikki no Mei)

    I’ve been trying to move away from the “Big Why” for a moment. On a tough Tuesday, a massive life purpose feels too heavy to carry.

    The Japanese concept of Ikki no Mei teaches that meaning isn’t big; it’s specific. It’s one small, tangible reason to move. Lately, for me, that looks like:

    • That first perfect cup of coffee in the morning.
    • Watching the sunrise or sunset before the emails get in the way.
    • Texting a friend or a partner just to check in.
    • A quiet, small walk.

    The brain can’t wake up for a vague life; it needs a specific reason to move.

    2. Shifting from “Me” to “Useful”

    It’s easy to get stuck in our own heads: 

    “Am I hitting my recruitment goals? Is my volume where it needs to be?” 

    In Japan, they don’t tell children to just “find their purpose.” They tell them: “Find who you can be useful to today.” I’ve found that when I shift my focus from my own ego to being a resource for a past client, a referral partner, or a stranger, the “empty” feeling disappears. Meaning grows through connection.

    3. Clearing the Feed (Shiko no Seiri)

    I’m realizing more and more that my “feed” trains my brain.

    • If I scroll drama – my mind stays reactive.
    • If I choose useful ideas – I actually start to grow.

    By practicing Shiko no Seiri (the practice of clearing the mind), I’m trying to help my brain relearn what depth feels like. It stops craving the “noise” and starts searching for growth again.

    4. Nurturing the Garden

    I’ve had to remind myself that meaning is cultivated, not discovered. You don’t “find” it like a lost set of keys; you nurture it daily. You don’t wake up to purpose; you wake up to routine, contribution, and presence. Then, purpose finds you.


    My Takeaway

    If your mornings have felt heavy lately, maybe stop searching for a grand life mission. Instead, give your nervous system just three things: one ritual, one person, and one moment to look forward to.

    Meaning might not be a destination – it just could be what makes you feel alive today.


    A System Will Produce What A System Will Produce, Nothing Less and Nothing More!

    The “Boring” Path to Extraordinary Results

    We’ve all been there. You sit down at your desk, open the CRM, and the list is staring back at you: past clients, recruiting prospects, and referral partners. These are the people who actually drive your business.

    But then, that little voice creeps in. “I know I should make these follow-up calls today… but maybe I’ll just tweak my listing presentation graphics instead. Or maybe I’ll reorganize my folders.”

    The graphics are shiny. The graphics feel like “progress.” But let’s be real – the graphics aren’t what pays the bills. The connection is.

    Success in real estate – whether you’re running a brokerage, recruiting top talent, or closing MLO deals – isn’t found in a revolutionary “hack.” It’s found in the fundamentals. You know them, I know them, and our competitors know them. The difference? Most people find the fundamentals too boring to practice routinely. We chase the “finite” win, but the real game is much bigger than that.


    Stop Trying to “Finish” the Game

    I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how work is endless. Exercise is endless. Parenting, marriage, investing, and leadership? All endless.

    In our industry, we are often obsessed with “The Close.” We treat the transaction or the new hire like a finish line. But if you approach an endless game with a finite mindset, you’re going to burn out.

    The objective isn’t to be “done” with your lead gen or “finished” with follow-through. The objective is to settle into a sustainable daily lifestyle that allows you to make incremental progress on the areas that matter.

    The Shift: From Task to Practice

    If you’re feeling the weight of the “endless” nature of follow-up, try shifting your perspective:

    • Embrace the Mundane: The highest-performing agents and recruiters aren’t necessarily more talented; they are just better at being “bored.” They’ve accepted that the daily ritual of outreach is the price of entry for an extraordinary life.
    • Sustainability over Intensity: You can’t sprint a marathon. Instead of a massive recruiting push once a quarter, find a rhythm of three meaningful follow-up calls a day that you can maintain for a decade.
    • Enjoy the Practice: Since the work is never truly “finished,” look for ways to enjoy the daily practice. Find the joy in the conversation, the nuance in the relationship, and the satisfaction in the routine.

    The Bottom Line

    Don’t get distracted by the “new and shiny” because you’re tired of the “basic.” Your past clients, your prospects, and your partners are waiting to hear from you. The basics are where the legacy is built.

    Let’s stop trying to reach the end and start mastering the middle.


    What's Possible?
    What’s Possible?

    How to Stay Sane When the World Feels Like a Mess

    You’ve felt it. The cashier who won’t make eye contact. The family group chat that’s gone silent after someone shared the “wrong” article. The coworker who used to chat by the coffee maker now just nods and walks past.

    It’s not just that people disagree anymore. It’s that we’ve stopped knowing how to be around each other at all.

    You can’t win your day if the world around you feels like it’s falling apart. Here’s some ideas to create enough stability to actually function.

    David Brooks recently wrote about philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre’s diagnosis of our fractured culture: we’ve lost any shared sense of what makes a good person or a good life. You don’t need a philosophy degree to see this. You just need to look at your own street.

    Here are four ways to push back against the chaos.

    1. Stop chasing “your truth” and start looking for “our good”

    When everyone retreats into private truth, we lose the ability to solve anything together. It’s like a neighborhood watch where one person thinks safety means Ring cameras on every porch and another thinks it means sage bundles and good intentions. Nobody’s lying about what makes them feel safe, but nothing actually gets protected because there’s no agreement on what safety even is.

    The shift: Stop asking “what feels right to me?” and start asking “what’s actually good for everyone involved?”

    The move: Next time there’s a disagreement, don’t open with “well, I feel that…” Open with “what would be fair for all of us here?” You’re looking for common ground, not common feelings.

    2. Don’t be the boss or the life coach. Be the neighbor.

    We’re drowning in two types of people: The Managers who treat every problem like a productivity issue, and The Therapists who validate your journey but never help you move the couch.

    What we actually need are neighbors. People who notice the work that needs doing and just do it.

    The shift: Don’t just manage people or affirm them. Show up and do the unglamorous work alongside them.

    The move: If the break room sink is full of dishes, don’t send a passive-aggressive email and don’t post an Instagram story about how capitalism has alienated us from communal care. Just wash the damn dishes. Doing the work often does more to restore order than talking about the work.

    3. Build thin bridges across the rivalry

    Everything feels like a rivalry now. We’ve turned politics, parenting styles, even grocery store choices into team sports. If someone’s on the other team, we assume they’re either stupid or evil.

    Here’s the thing: You don’t have to agree with someone to treat them like a human being. You don’t have to pretend their views are harmless. But you also don’t have to treat every political disagreement like a moral emergency that justifies cutting off all contact.

    The shift: Judge people by how they treat others in front of you, not just by their stated positions.

    The move: Grab coffee with that one neighbor whose bumper stickers make you want to scream. Don’t talk politics. Talk about your kids, your dogs, the best taco spot in town. Remind yourself they’re a three-dimensional person, not a Fox News or MSNBC character.

    Important caveat: This doesn’t mean “tolerate bigotry for the sake of civility.” If someone’s views actively dehumanize you or people you love, I’m not obligated to break bread with them. The goal is finding people who disagree with you on policy but still share basic commitments to decency.

    4. Fix the 50 feet around you

    We spend hours doomscrolling about disasters on the other side of the world while ignoring the fact that the park down the street is covered in trash or the elderly neighbor hasn’t had a visitor in two weeks.

    The shift: You can’t fix the whole world, but you can fix your street. Focus on the people you can actually touch and the places you actually walk.

    The move: Turn off the news for one weekend. Go outside. Paint the community fence that’s peeling. Host a potluck. Help the kid down the street with their math homework. Introduce two neighbors who don’t know each other yet.

    If everyone took care of the 50 feet around them, the world would feel a lot less broken.


    You can’t control the culture. But you can control your corner of it.

    Start there.

    What's Possible?
    What’s Possible?

    One Ancient Formula for Real Success

    I came across an article in The Atlantic recently that’s been rattling around in my head. It hit on something I see constantly, whether I’m standing in front of a classroom or sitting across from executives and top recruiters. We’re all chasing what we call the “good life.”

    Here’s the thing about real estate and closing services: the “good life” starts feeling like a treadmill pretty quickly. You know how it goes. You grind through the long hours, land that monster recruit, crush your production goals, or finally push through a nightmare deal. For a moment, you get that rush. “I made it.”

    And then, what, three days later? Gone.

    Our brains hit reset almost immediately. That massive win? It’s just your new normal. And there you are again, sprinting toward the next high. It’s exhausting. And honestly, it’s not sustainable.

    A Reality Check from the 13th Century

    The article referenced some philosophy from Thomas Aquinas that seemed to nail this exact problem. Back in the 1200s, Aquinas was asking why humans never feel satisfied. His answer? We spend our lives chasing four things that we think will make us happy, but they just leave us wanting more.

    Looking at our industry, from high-performing agents to closing pros, it’s wild how little has changed. Here’s what Aquinas said we chase:

    • Money: We treat wealth like it’s the endgame. But a commission check? That’s just fuel to keep working. It’s not a finish line.
    • Power: We want control. Control over the market, control over our territory, control over being the biggest name in the zip code. But power for its own sake doesn’t fill anything.
    • Pleasure: The weekend getaway, the expensive dinner, the “treat yourself” purchase after a brutal week. Aquinas called this a distraction. And he was right. It’s fleeting.
    • Honor: This one hits home in real estate. We chase awards, titles, recognition. But Aquinas argued that honor is just what other people think of us. If we’re more focused on the trophy than the person we’re actually serving, what are we doing?

    Flipping the Script

    The article also talked about something I love discussing with my students: the satisfaction equation. Most of us are taught to focus on getting more. But satisfaction isn’t about what you have. It’s about the ratio between what you have and what you want.

    Satisfaction = What You Have ÷ What You Want

    If your wants keep expanding faster than what you’re achieving, you’ll always feel behind. No matter how much you earn. No matter how many offices you open. Aquinas would probably say the trick isn’t just accumulating more. It’s learning to want less. To be content with what you’ve built while you keep building.

    Leading Differently

    There was one more idea from Aquinas that stuck with me. He defined love as “willing the good of the other.”

    Think about that in a business context. How often are we focused on what a recruit or client can do for our numbers? Aquinas is saying: flip it. When you genuinely care about someone’s growth and well-being, not as a means to an end, but as the actual goal, everything shifts. The energy changes. The trust builds. And that foundation doesn’t crack when the market turns.

    Final Thoughts

    We need to stop waiting for the next milestone to give ourselves permission to enjoy the work. The market’s going to do its thing. Rates will fluctuate. Deals will fall apart. That’s the business.

    But if we stop expecting our titles and bank accounts to deliver perfect happiness, we can actually breathe. We can enjoy the imperfect happiness that’s available right now. We can be the professionals who care more about the person than the profit.

    When you stop chasing that high so desperately, real success tends to stick around.


    What's Possible?
    What’s Possible?

    Beyond the Power of One: How to Build an Unshakeable Pipeline

    In this business, the most dangerous number is one.

    One lead source, one niche, one referral partner. If that single pillar crumbles due to a market shift, a policy change, or a competitor, your entire production floor collapses. We preach this to our agents, but as leaders, recruiters, and high-performance MLOs, we often fall into the same trap. We rely on one method of talent attraction or one “reliable” source of business until it dries up.

    The goal is six sources of leads. That is the system for a bulletproof business.

    But here is where the “Spirit is Willing, but the Schedule is Weak” dilemma kicks in. How do you manage six different channels without losing your mind?

    The All-or-Nothing Trap

    Most leaders fail to diversify because they try to launch all six sources at 100% intensity simultaneously. They treat it like a massive time investment that has to happen all at once.

    The result? They spend Monday planning, Tuesday gets hijacked by a closing crisis, and by Wednesday, they’ve abandoned the new channels to retreat back to what’s comfortable.

    Applying the MVD to the Six Sources

    To win, you have to lower the floor. You don’t need to master all six sources today. You just need to ensure the Minimum Viable Day (MVD) for each isn’t zero.

    Your MVD is the bare minimum you need to do to keep each channel alive. It’s the smallest action that maintains momentum and prevents any single pillar from going dark.

    What Does This Actually Look Like?

    Here are examples of what an MVD could be for different lead sources:

    • Referrals: One “thank you” text to a past client or partner.
    • Recruiting: One LinkedIn reach-out to a potential candidate.
    • Database: Two birthday or anniversary calls.
    • Social Media/Video: One 60-second raw update posted.
    • Networking Events: One email confirming attendance or one follow-up from a recent event.
    • Content Marketing: One comment on an industry post or one idea captured in your notes.

    On a day where your schedule is a train wreck, you don’t skip. You hit the MVD. You keep the neurological and professional momentum alive across all six pillars so that no single pillar is carrying the weight of your entire future.

    Habit Stacking Your Diversification

    Don’t look for a “six-source block” on your calendar. It doesn’t exist. Habit stack them into your existing workflow:

    • The “Inbox Tax”: You aren’t allowed to open your email until you’ve touched Source #1.
    • The “Red Light” Rule: Every time you’re stopped in traffic or waiting for a Zoom to start, you execute one MVD task for Source #2.
    • The “Coffee Commitment”: While your coffee brews or you’re waiting in line, knock out one quick database touch.

    The Bottom Line

    Consistency beats intensity every single time. If you do the work of prospecting and development at a 2/10 intensity every single day, you will outpace the person who goes 10/10 once a month.

    Stop betting your career on the number one. Build the system, lower the floor, and track the results.

    TCF+ (Track, Commit, Follow-through, Plus): This week, identify your six sources and define your MVD for each one. Track your daily completion rate to win the day.


    What's Possible?
    What’s Possible?

    The Spirit is Willing, but the Schedule is a Mess

    If you’re a Broker-Owner, a recruiter, or a high-performance agent, you’re wired for the “big win.” You’ve got the drive to hit massive production goals, but when it comes to the daily grind of prospecting and business development, the wheels usually fall off by Tuesday.

    It’s the classic dilemma: 

    The Spirit is Willing, but the Schedule is Weak.

    Trying to layer heavy prospecting, agent recruitment, and active lead follow-up onto a chaotic 55-hour work week is like spinning three plates while walking a tightrope. Without a system, something is going to shatter. Usually, it’s your pipeline.

    The problem isn’t your willpower. You have plenty of that. The problem is that your entry point is too big. You’re trying to treat growth like a major capital investment when you should be running it like a lean startup: start small, test fast, and scale what works.

    1. Lower the Floor (The MVD)

    In our world, we live and die by the Minimum Viable Product. It’s time to apply that to your prospecting. Most high-performers fail because they think if they can’t clear three hours for cold calls or a full afternoon for recruiting interviews, it doesn’t count. That “all or nothing” mentality kills momentum.

    Set a Minimum Viable Day (MVD). This is the floor you hit even when a deal is falling apart or a top producer threatens to walk:

    • Prospecting: 5 outbound dials. 10 minutes.
    • Recruiting: 1 reach-out to a competing agent.
    • Database: 2 “checking in” texts to past clients.

    On your worst, most chaotic day, you just hit the MVD. It keeps the momentum alive and prevents the start-stop cycle that kills businesses.

    2. Stop Looking for “Free Time”

    “Free time” is a myth in this industry. If it’s not on the calendar, it doesn’t exist. Instead of trying to find time, habit stack. Tie your business development to the non-negotiables already in your day:

    • The First-Cup Rule: No caffeine until you’ve sent three prospecting emails.
    • The Drive-Time Rule: Every time you’re in the car between appointments, you make one recruiting or follow-up call.
    • The “Inbox Zero” Tax: Before you allow yourself to clear your email, you must voice-note one referral partner.

    You’re not adding new time. You’re attaching new habits to existing triggers.

    3. Kill the Friction

    Willpower is a finite resource. Don’t waste it on “getting ready.” If you have to spend 20 minutes cleaning your CRM or hunting down a phone number, you’ve already lost the mental battle.

    Design your environment for zero resistance:

    • Keep your “Hot Lead” list physically on your desk.
    • Open your CRM tabs the night before.
    • Put your headset on the second you sit down.

    Make it harder to avoid the work than to just do it.

    The Reality Check

    You wouldn’t try to open three new branch offices in the same month. Don’t try to overhaul your entire business development strategy in a week.

    Pick one Priority Growth Habit for the next two weeks. Focus on nailing that one at 100%, and let the others live in “MVD” status until the first one is automatic.

    In this game, consistency beats intensity every single time.

    Your Move

    This week, define your MVD for one business development activity. Write it down. Track it daily. Hit it even on your worst day.

    That’s how you build a business that doesn’t collapse when the market shifts or your top source dries up. One small action, every single day, no excuses.

    Let’s win the week.


    A System Will Produce What A System Will Produce, Nothing Less and Nothing More!

    The Ultimate Form of Preparation: Building a Mindset for the Unknown

    In our industry, we’re obsessed with the “Plan.”

    We spend weeks on annual forecasts, GCI targets, and recruitment quotas. These are useful, but they are often just guesses dressed up in spreadsheets. We script every objection and map out every touchpoint in the funnel – all necessary work, but it lacks the one ingredient that actually saves a business when things go sideways.

    The reality that every Broker-Owner, high-performing agent, or MLO eventually admits is this:

    The market doesn’t care about your plan.

    Interest rates don’t follow your calendar. Inventory doesn’t always respond to your marketing. And legal or technological shifts can rewrite the rules of the game while you’re mid-presentation. If your success is tied to a specific scenario playing out exactly as you envisioned, you aren’t prepared – you’re lucky.

    The ultimate form of preparation is not planning for a specific scenario, but a mindset that can handle uncertainty.

    The Trap of Specificity

    When we plan for a specific outcome, we develop tunnel vision. We become so committed to “the way it’s supposed to be” that we miss the signals that the world has changed.

    My fighter pilot trainer friends call this “target fixation.” It happens when a pilot becomes so locked onto a target that they lose situational awareness and fly straight into the ground. It is a lethal mistake in the air, and it’s dangerous in business.

    For a CEO or a top-tier agent, a rigid plan creates fragility. When the market shifts ten degrees to the left, a person stuck in target fixation panics because their map no longer matches the terrain. A leader with an uncertainty-ready mindset doesn’t need the map to be perfect. They have a compass, and they know how to navigate regardless of the weather.


    What “Mindset Preparation” Looks Like

    To move from “scenario planning” to “uncertainty readiness,” you have to shift your focus from outcomes to capabilities. Here is how that plays out across the office:

    1. For the Broker-Owner / CEO: Stress-Test Your Systems

    Instead of just forecasting growth based on last year’s numbers, build a business that is “anti-fragile.”

    • The Practical Move: Conduct a “Pre-Mortem.” Gather your leadership and ask: “It’s one year from today and our brokerage has failed. What happened?” If the answer is “rates hit 9%” or “a competitor cut splits to zero,” look at your current overhead. Preparation means having a “levers” list – specific expenses you can cut or new revenue streams you can activate within 30 days of a market dip.

    2. For the Recruiter: Hire for Coachability, Not Just Production

    If you only recruit based on an agent’s past volume, you are buying yesterday’s success. In an uncertain market, you need agents who can adapt.

    • The Practical Move: Shift your filter. Instead of just hiring for “production,” hire for “coachability.” If your top producer refuses to learn a new buyer-consultation framework because they are stuck in 2021, they are a liability in a shifting market. Look for the “pivoters” – people who view a market shift as a logic puzzle to solve rather than a catastrophe to endure.

    3. For the High-Performing Agent: Diversify Your “Lead Alpha”

    The most dangerous number in an agent’s business is the number one. One lead source, one niche, one referral partner.

    • The Practical Move: Audit your business. If 80% of your closings come from one specific lead source, you are at the mercy of their plans. Mindset preparation means spending 20% of your time and budget on an “experimental” lead pillar (probate, geo-farming, or video content) that has nothing to do with your main source. You aren’t doing it for the immediate ROI; you’re doing it so that if your main pillar collapses, you aren’t starting from zero.

    4. For the MLO: Move from “Product Master” to “Problem Solver”

    When rates are low, everyone is a genius. When things get weird, the market moves toward the MLO who can handle complexity.

    • The Practical Move: Stop leading with rates and start leading with “scenarios.” Prepare your mindset by mastering three niche products you currently ignore (HELOCs, non-QM, or renovation loans). When a buyer gets cold feet because of a “what if” scenario, your value isn’t your rate sheet. It’s your ability to pivot them into a product they didn’t know existed.

    Uncertainty as Your Competitive Advantage

    Most people in real estate are waiting for “clarity.” They want to see what the Fed does, what the lawsuits do, or what the economy does before they make a move.

    That wait is your window.

    While your competitors are paralyzed by the lack of a clear plan, a mindset built for uncertainty allows you to keep moving. You don’t need to know exactly what the finish line looks like to take the next step. You just need to trust that you and your team have the skills to handle whatever is around the corner.

    The goal isn’t to be fearless. The goal is to be functional while the rest of the industry is waiting for permission to act.


    Accept, reflect, and redirect.
    Accept, reflect, and redirect.

    The “Slip” That Didn’t Result in a Fall: Why Your Current “No” is Your Next “Yes”

    In our industry, we’re taught to celebrate the closing. We ring the bell, post the photos, and toast the record month. But if you’re a Broker-Owner, recruiter, or top-tier agent, you know the truth: our careers are built on a mountain of rejections.

    The question isn’t whether you’ll face setbacks. It’s whether you have a system for what to do when they happen.

    Most people don’t. They treat failure as something to “get over” as quickly as possible. That’s a mistake. The best performers don’t just bounce back from losses. They extract value from them.

    The Lincoln Advantage

    Before Abraham Lincoln was President, he was a case study in professional failure:

    • Failed in business. Bankrupt. Spent 17 years paying off debt.
    • Defeated for State Legislature, Speaker, Congress, and Senate. Twice.

    After losing the brutal 1858 Senate race, Lincoln didn’t just “stay positive.” He compiled the debates from that race, analyzed what worked and what didn’t, and published them as a book. That book became his calling card. It got him noticed by the Republican Party and positioned him for the presidency in 1860.

    Lincoln didn’t wait for something good to happen. He engineered it.

    The Post-Setback Protocol

    Here’s what separates people who recover from failure and people who use it as fuel:

    Within 24 Hours: The Forensic Debrief

    Answer three questions without spin:

    1. What was the real reason this fell apart?
    2. What signal did I miss or ignore?
    3. If I could rewind 30 days, what’s the one thing I’d change?

    For a recruiter who just lost a top producer: maybe the real reason wasn’t their split. Maybe you hadn’t had a one-on-one in six months and someone else did.

    For an agent whose deal collapsed: maybe it wasn’t the appraisal. Maybe you didn’t pre-qualify the buyer’s job situation hard enough on day one.

    Write it down. Be honest. This is the data that changes your business.

    Within 48 Hours: The One-Thing Fix

    You don’t need to overhaul everything. Identify the single highest-leverage change you can make right now.

    Lincoln’s “one thing” wasn’t to run a better campaign. It was to control the narrative by publishing those debates.

    For you, it might be:

    • A 30/60/90-day check-in calendar for top producers
    • A “deal risk scorecard” that flags problems early
    • A weekly video series addressing objections

    Pick one. Start it this week.

    Within 7 Days: Test the New Approach

    Most people debrief, identify the fix, and then wait for the “right moment.” Lincoln didn’t wait. He started writing immediately.

    Take your “one thing” and run one test within seven days. Schedule three calls. Apply the scorecard to your current pipeline. Shoot one raw video on your phone.

    You’re not trying to perfect it. You’re proving the concept while the lesson is still burning.

    It’s a Slip, Not a Fall

    After that 1858 Senate loss, Lincoln was walking home in the rain. The path was mud. His feet slipped out from under him. He caught himself, straightened his hat, and kept walking.

    Later, he wrote: “It’s a slip and not a fall.”

    A slip is momentary. A fall is final. The difference is whether you catch yourself and keep moving, or stay down and let the moment define you.

    Your Move

    The next time something falls apart, run the protocol:

    1. Forensic Debrief within 24 hours.
    2. Identify the One-Thing Fix within 48 hours.
    3. Test the new approach within 7 days.

    Do this consistently, and a year from now you’ll look back at this moment as the turning point. Not because you avoided failure, but because you finally learned how to use it.

    That’s the Lincoln advantage.


    It's Not Over Until You Win
    It’s Not Over Until You Win

    Double Down or Cut in Half: The Proximity Principle for Real Estate Success

    You’ve seen it happen.

    A new agent joins your brokerage, sits next to your top producer for six months, and suddenly they’re closing deals like a veteran. Meanwhile, another agent (equally talented on paper) works remotely, attends the occasional sales meeting, and struggles to gain traction.

    What’s the difference? Proximity.

    The Fire and the Water

    Writer C.S. Lewis put it this way:

    “If you want to get warm you must stand near the fire. If you want to be wet you must get into the water. If you want joy, power, peace, eternal life, you must get close to, or even into, the thing that has them.”

    Lewis was talking about spiritual life, but the principle applies directly to business. You can’t learn a listing presentation by reading about it. You need to sit in the room while your top agent delivers one. MLOs don’t master difficult conversations through theory. They need proximity to deals, to underwriting challenges, to client anxiety in real time.

    But here’s what Lewis understood that most of us miss: proximity isn’t just about getting close to the right things. It’s also about creating distance from the wrong things.

    Which brings me to two questions that could reshape your business in the next 90 days.

    Two Questions That Change Everything

    Question one: Which activities, if doubled, would make your business meaningfully better?

    Question two: Which activities, if halved, would make your business meaningfully better?

    Sit with these for a minute. Your gut already knows the answers.

    If You’re a Broker Owner:

    What if you doubled your one-on-ones with your top 20% producers? What if you doubled the days you spend recruiting versus managing?

    And what if you halved the administrative tasks you should have delegated six months ago? What if you halved the transactions you’re still touching personally?

    If You’re a Recruiter:

    What if you doubled your conversations with passive candidates? What if you doubled your time at industry events where top talent gathers?

    And what if you halved the time you spend on agents who are never going to move? What if you halved the generic outreach messages?

    If You’re a High-Performing Agent or MLO:

    What if you doubled your prospecting hours? What if you doubled face time with your sphere and referral partners?

    And what if you halved the appointments you should be delegating? What if you halved your time on social media consumption versus creation?

    The answers are uncomfortable. And clarifying.

    The Proximity Principle in Action

    Here’s what this looks like practically: your business six months from now will be a direct reflection of what you doubled down on and what you cut in half this week.

    If you want the results your top producer has, you need proximity to how they think, how they handle objections, how they structure their day. Reading their scripts isn’t enough. You need to be in the room.

    If you want a breakthrough in recruiting, you need proximity to the conversations that convert, not just the theory of what should work.

    If you want to scale, you need distance from the low-value tasks drowning your calendar.

    Lewis was right. You become what you’re near. And you drift from what you avoid.

    Your Move

    This week, take 15 minutes and answer both questions for your role. Write down your top 5 activities by time spent. Run each one through the filter:

    If I doubled this, would my business meaningfully improve? If I halved this, would my business meaningfully improve?

    Then make one change. Double one thing. Halve one thing.

    The fire is burning. The question is whether you’ll have the discipline to stand near it and step away from the water that’s drowning you.

    What's Possible?
    What’s Possible?