Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Grow without posting every day.


You know that feeling when you've been "off" from content for a bit and getting back into it feels like climbing a mountain?

Whether it's coming back from a break, recovering from a busy week, or just feeling stuck in a creative rut... I've learned that the SECRET to rebuilding momentum isn't posting more.

It's doing these 5 tiny things every single day.

I know how easy it is to get caught up in the "content creation" part of being a business owner and forget about all the other little things that actually help us grow and stay inspired.

SO I'm sharing the exact checklist I use to get back in the groove. It takes less than 5 minutes but can make a HUGE difference in your growth and creativity!

Think of this as your daily "social media vitamins" ðŸ’Š

Your 5-Minute Daily Creator Routine:

1. Comment on 5 posts in your niche

Engage authentically with peope in your space. This helps the algorithm understand your niche better AND builds community. Plus, you never know who might check out your profile!


2. Follow 1 new account that inspires you

Whether it's someone crushing a format you want to try or a person in a similar niche, keep your feed fresh with inspiration.


3. Save 3 audios for future videos

Don't wait until you're ready to film to hunt for audio. Build a ready-to-rip audio library! When you hear something that fits your vibe, save it immediately.


4. Watch 5 videos in your niche (with intention)

Don't just scroll... analyze! What hooks are working? What formats are getting traction? This is basically free market research.


5. Drop a "value bomb" comment somewhere

Find a post where you can genuinely help someone in the comments. This positions you as an expert and drives curious people back to your profile.


💡 Pro Tip: Set a timer for 5 minutes and knock this out first thing in the morning or during your coffee break.

The best part? This routine keeps you engaged with the platform without requiring you to create content every single day. It's about staying present, staying inspired, and staying visible (even on your "off" days).

Give it a try this week and see how it goes! See which step you're most excited to add to your routine.






No Replies From Your Emails?

  


This is the “shouting into the void” phase.

You’re sending emails but getting absolutely nothing back (not even “no thanks” or “unsubscribe”).

Nine times out of ten, that’s a deliverability issue. Your emails might be hitting spam or not showing up at all.

But if your deliverability looks clean (your domains are warmed, your spam tests look solid, and your open rates are healthy), then your next move is to simplify your message.

In this phase, clarity always wins.

Strip it back to just three things:

  • Why you’re reaching out

  • What problem you solve

  • A soft CTA like, “Can I reach out from time to time if this ever becomes a priority?”

If you’ve done that and you’re still not hearing back, it’s almost certainly deliverability.

That’s where your time should go first (before you touch your copy, offer, or targeting).

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Most cold emails are not failing because the idea is bad.


They fail because the message triggers filters and the buyer has no reason to reply.

 

Before you rewrite your whole sequence, fix these 4 things:

  • Keep it plain. No heavy formatting, no extra links.

  • Slow down volume spikes. Pace like a human.

  • Clean the list. Bad data tanks engagement fast.

  • Make the ask easy. One clear question, not a pitch.

Most businesses don’t experience a moment where something “breaks.”


What happens instead is quieter.

Referrals still come in-  just slower.
Clients don’t disappear-  they hesitate.
Revenue doesn’t drop- it becomes inconsistent.

And that’s why this moment feels confusing because it doesn’t look like failure. What disappears first isn’t demand or capability. It’s predictability.

Predictability in:

  • Where the next role is coming from
  • How long a search will take
  • When revenue will land

This is the illusion of stability. Everything looks mostly fine until the pressure stacks. And the reason this is happening isn’t because you did anything wrong.

It’s because buying behavior changed.

We always talk about what strategies we need to adopt but I want to pause here to share the other side. The landscape has been leveled, you guys. Buyers are different and it happened within 2 years (ridiculously fast).

Here’s what’s happening. Decisions now start a lot earlier. They also are formed and happen publicly. And familiarity is built long before outreach. Busunesses BUILD. Before you could call and make a sale. Nowadays, familiarity HAS to lead. 

Referrals still work. But they no longer compound the way they used to.

Predictability today comes from visibility, not hope.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Momentum, Credibility & Market Ownership


Growth is not subtraction.

Expansion is not dilution.

When more producers operate under one strong platform:

  • Brand credibility increases

  • Funding volume increases

  • Negotiating power increases

  • Market awareness increases

Strong platforms attract strong partners.


You don’t need 100 people this week.

You need:

  • One real conversation

  • One local relationship strengthened

  • One serious recruit

Local ownership beats scattered effort.

Serve first.
Build secong.

Momentum is building.

Let’s go.

Today, we're giving you the edge at 2pm CST


Part 1 is all about the Tax Management System — the engine behind every deal you bring to GMG.


By the end of this training, you'll walk away knowing:
*Exactly how the TMS works — explained simply, so you can explain it simply
*The talking points that build instant client trust
*How to position the TMS as the reason your clients should act now — not later

This is the foundation. And Advisors who show up to Part 1 ready and engaged are the ones who make Part 2 click into place.

https://www.strydeadvisors.com/information/stryde.cfm?page=opportunity&id=143863

The Fear That Keeps You Stuck!

 


There was a season where I thought certain people were irreplaceable.

I told myself the same story every time.

“If I let them go, everything might fall apart.”

So I delayed.

I justified.

I tolerated.

And every time I finally made the move I should have made months earlier, the same thing happened.

The business did not collapse.

It improved.

Not because I’m ruthless.

Because clarity beats comfort.