Wednesday, May 6, 2026

What's in front of you?


This month doesn’t need a reinvention. It needs execution. And sometimes the best way forward… is already in front of you.


The goal isn’t to do more. It’s to do what works — better.

Is New The Answer?

 


Years ago, I thought the secret to success was more new ideas.


New deals.
New projects.
New directions.

It felt productive.
It looked exciting.
It gave me something to chase.

But eventually, I realized I wasn’t building anything.
I was just busy.

What actually moved the needle?
Refining what already worked.
Tightening systems.
Doubling down on proven leverage.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Are you giving yourself subsconscious permission to delay success?


You can usually tell in minutes if someone's really on the path to success... or headed straight for a brick wall. Just from the words they use about their life and goals, like...


"I'm trying..."

"I hope this works..."

"I might do this..."

"I'm thinking about it.."


These aren't harmless catch phrases.


Every time you talk like that, you give yourself subconscious permission to delay success. You're letting fear and indecision take over. And your business will never be able to outperform the standards you set with your own words.


Your brain has millions of thoughts and ideas every day. Ideas don't matter. DECISIONS are what the brain acts on.


And there's nothing decisive going on when you use weak words.


Your success requires powerful language that identifies your clear end goal.


I'll make you a challenge right now that'll change your business forever, if you take it seriously:


Record yourself talking to someone about your business. Play it back and be brutally honest at what you hear. (And don't deliberately try to sound different. Talk how you normally do.)


If you speak with powerful, action-filled words and have a clear goal... congratulations. You're part of the minority and already on the path to success.


But if you're like most and your business needs more cashflow to allow your business to grow, then let's hop on a 10-minute call and go over some details.


People listen to how you speak.


Weak language builds weak businesses.

Period.


You don’t drift into success.

You decide into it.


When your language is foggy, your actions will be too.


Your team listens to how you speak.

So does your subconscious.

Monday, May 4, 2026

The way you talk about your business becomes the way you build it.


 “Try” is a shield for people who don’t want to be held accountable.

I don’t use it. Neither should you.


The most successful people speak with clarity, not confusion.

They don’t “hope.” They plan.


Every time you catch yourdelf self using soft language, it shows you where you are avoiding something.


The way you talk about your business becomes the way you build it.


"The words you speak become the house you live in." — Hafiz




If you’re wondering why your business isn’t moving…start by listening to yourself. Because success doesn’t come from what you say. It comes from how you say it.

Before you ever ask a business owner about revenue, margins, or their offer…

Listen to how they speak.

Because their words tell you everything.


"I’ll try..."

"I’m thinking about it..."

"I hope this works..."


They don’t realize it — but they’re already making excuses for failure.

You don’t grow when your language is soft.

You grow when your words reflect decisions.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

CFOs are suddenly feeling very confident.


CFO confidence climbed to a four-year high in Q4 of 2025, according to Deloitte’s released CFO Signals report. The latest confidence score, 6.6 on a scale of 1–10, was “substantially higher than the Q3 reading of 5.7,” and not much lower than the record score, 7.2, from Q3 2021, placing it “squarely in high confidence territory,” according to the report’s authors.

And just like anyone who’s listened to the aforementioned power pop breakup anthem playlist and then gone on an ill-advised date: CFOs are also feeling risky.

Nearly six out of 10 CFOs think it’s a good time to take more risk, a steep climb from just 36% who said the same in Q3. The report covers survey responses from 200 CFOs at North American companies with at least $1 billion in annual revenue, though you’d think it was a poll of extremely self-assured teenagers from the confidence results.

So, what gives? Short answer