Sunday, April 26, 2026

They buy what they want.


People don't buy what they need. They buy what they want. Once they're in your world, that's when you give them what they need.

You already earned their trust. They like you and listen to you, otherwise they wouldn't have pulled out their wallet for you.

But after that first sale is where most of us (maybe even you) just let them drift away.

Meanwhile the smart biz owners build simple no-brainer monthly offers around the wants their customers already told them about… and deliver the needs that actually fix the real problems.

Once you really understand that, recurring revenue stops being some complicated mystery and becomes the easiest money in your business.

So here's my gut-check question for you:

If you went through your list of customers, could you build a recurring offer in under 48 hours based on what they wanted from you?

If the answer is yes but you still haven't done it... there's your leak.


Recurring revenue


If someone paid you once, they’ll pay you again

If you stay in the conversation, they’ll stay in your world.


Recurring revenue isn’t advanced, it’s overlooked

Most people don’t need more tools. They need better follow-up.


You’re already doing the hard part

Acquiring customers is the toughest game. Serving them again is where it gets simple.


People buy what they want — not what they need

Sell them what they want. Deliver what they need. That’s how you keep them.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Fund your freedom


Monthly offers don’t need to be fancy

Keep it simple. One promise. One transformation. One click to pay.


Rookie entrepreneurs chase. Pros retain.

Retention is the fastest path to scaling sustainably.


A single offer can fund your freedom

One dialed recurring product can make payroll, cover ads, or pay your mortgage.


Customers drift when you disappear

Stay present. Stay valuable. Stay top of mind.


Friday, April 24, 2026

Don’t overthink.


List 3 offers your past customers would buy again

What are they still struggling with? What would make their life easier?


Write an email to your current customers

Don’t pitch. Just check in. See what they need. You’ll be shocked who replies.


Sketch a recurring offer in 10 minutes

Don’t overthink it. Pick one thing and put a monthly wrapper around it.

Massive LinkedIn shift!!


Linkedin now rewards conversation over content.

And not any comments, specific types of comments that extend conversations, spark depth, and activate multiple interest clusters.

This isn’t speculation- it’s backed by the newest Algorithm Insights Report (Oct 2025).

Here’s what the data shows:

  1. Comments are now the #1 signal for post visibility.

LinkedIn weighs comment depth, comment diversity, comment quality more heavily than likes or reactions.


  1. A single thoughtful comment extends a post’s lifespan by days.

Comments spark “micro-threads,” which increase dwell time and push content back into feeds for 2–5 days, sometimes weeks.


  1. Commenting 8–12 times per day across 4–7 profiles protects your reach.

Creators who comment consistently experienced 14% less decline in reach even when posting the same amount. This means: Your comments are your insurance policy against algorithm declines.


  1. Comment quality now matters more than comment quantity.

LinkedIn downranks, “Great post!”, generic praise and AI-sounding comments. But it boosts comments that use personal examples, insights, questions and frameworks. 

So what does this mean for you as a recruiter?

Your commenting strategy is now part of your inbound lead strategy.
Most recruiters think they need to post more.
But the algorithm doesn’t reward more.

It rewards meaningful, consistent conversations.

And conversations start in the comments.

If you want your content to be seen again…
If you want your niche to discover you…
If you want LinkedIn to finally understand your expertise…

Start by becoming a top commenter in your niche.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Why don't those in accounting and finance explore the specialized tax incentives available for their business owner clients?


There are a few common (and mostly non-malicious) reasons you often don’t see accounting/finance folks proactively mining niche tax incentives for their clients:

*Focus and incentives are misaligned

Many accountants/bookkeepers are measured on compliance accuracy, bookkeeping timeliness, audit readiness, payroll/tax filing, and “don’t get sued.”

Tax-incentive hunting is more like tax planning/business strategy, which may not be how they’re compensated or evaluated.

*Specialized incentives require specialized expertise

Most credits/deductions/incentives have narrow eligibility rules, documentation standards, and sometimes filing schedules (or forms) that aren’t “default” knowledge.

If the incentive is state-specific, industry-specific, or depends on detailed facts (contracts, wages, R&D activities, energy projects, location, ownership structure), generalists often avoid it to reduce errors.

*Liability and “risk cost”

Pushing for an incentive they don’t fully understand can create:

compliance errors, disallowance risk, penalties/interest, and reputational risk with the client if something goes sideways.

Many professionals prefer to “stick to what they know” rather than take on uncertain technical risk—especially when the incentive’s benefit depends on future audit interpretations.

*Time and workflow constraints

Incentive discovery takes time: client interviews, documentation review, fact pattern mapping, and sometimes coordination with attorneys/CPAs who specialize in that area.

Busy firms often prioritize work that is already scoped, billable, and predictable.

*They may assume someone else already handles it

Owners often have a tax preparer, tax attorney, or tax strategist who “owns” tax planning.

In some firms, tax planning is intentionally separated from bookkeeping/cash-flow/reporting roles.

*Communication gaps

Incentive eligibility can hinge on operational details (hiring plans, capital projects, supplier relationships, research activities, software development, energy usage, etc.).

Accounting/finance teams may not be embedded enough in day-to-day operations to get those facts early—so they don’t know what to look for.

*Regulatory complexity and change

Incentives can change due to legislation, state budget cycles, and evolving guidance.

Keeping up is hard; firms may rely on specialists so they don’t have to maintain that knowledge internally.

*Client behavior and demand

If clients don’t ask, don’t provide operational detail, or resist proactive planning (“just file the return”), firms will default to reactive compliance.

Fortunately, a free online app (nothing to download) uses a two-step process: “screen for eligibility” first, then “deep diligence” only on the likely matches and prepares everything for the accountant/CPA,tax preparer to submit and in almost 25 years, nothing has been challenged by the IRS.

Let prospects sell themselves!


Here's a problem:


Are you asking questions to check boxes.

Not to understand what's really going on.

If so, you"ll get objections like:

I need to think it over.

Call me back next quarter.

Let me talk to my team.

Send me more information.

It's not a timing problem. It's not a budget problem.

It's a discovery problem.

The prospect never opened up. Never told you the truth.

Here's the shift:

Stop asking: "What's your budget?"

Start asking: "Because of [problem], what are the negative ripples effects you’re seeing it have on the business?"

Stop asking: "Are you the decision maker?"

Start asking: "Can you walk me through how decisions like this typically get made in your org?"

Stop asking: "Are you interested?"

Start asking: "If you don't solve this in the next 6-12 months, what happens?"

Same call. Different questions. Different outcome.

The psychology:

When they say it out loud, they believe it.

When you say it, they resist it.

Your job isn't to convince. It's to guide.