Execute Every Single Time
Success isn't about massive, heroic efforts once a month. It's about executing the mundane processes flawlessly, every single day, until they become unbreakable habits.
The Backstory
In 1940, insurance executive Albert E. N. Gray spent months searching for the one secret trait shared by all top sales performers. He realized it wasn't natural talent, sheer luck, or even just general "hard work." The singular common denominator was their willingness to build habits around the exact same tedious, uncomfortable processes that failing reps actively avoided.
Calling the Unwilling
Gray noted that failing reps only wanted to call on prospects who were already interested. Top performers built the habit of calling on people who didn't want to see them.
Tough Conversations
Failures avoided pushing difficult topics to dodge rejection. Successes made a habit of leaning into uncomfortable, high-stakes conversations every single day.
Rigid Prospecting
Failures only prospected when they "felt" their pipeline was dry. Successes forced themselves into a strict, daily prospecting routine regardless of how they felt.
The Daily Process
Click the daily habits below to see the impact of trusting the process.
Results Tracker
Yields predictable, scalable results.
Yields erratic, unreliable results.
Sales & Service Operating Standards
"In Sales and Service, we don't 'pitch'—we prove, prioritize, and guide the next step."
1. Daily Execution
- Prepare before engaging. Know the story & next step.
- Be consistent. Same standards busy or slow. No mood-based selling.
- Run the cadence: Huddle → Plan → Outbound → Cleanup.
2. CRM Discipline
- Live in the task chain. Every lead gets a scheduled next action.
- Purposeful touches. Coordinated multi-channel efforts.
- Data hygiene. Clean info is our scoreboard & protection.
3. Customer Interaction
- Lead with trust. Transparent, calm, direct.
- Ask, then listen. Discovery is the foundation.
- End with a next step. Always lock in a specific time.
4. Save-A-Deal
- System problem, not personality. Identify stall reason fast.
- Escalate early. Prevent drift with manager involvement.
- Unshakable facts. Clean, factual, trackable notes.
5. Team Culture
- Coach in public, correct in private. Process > one rep.
- Win as a team. Shared language, follow-up, & accountability.
Why Do We Do The Hard Things?
Gray argues that your Purpose is the only thing strong enough to overcome the natural human dislike for tedious processes.
Driven by Purpose
Decision making is based on the Results we want to achieve for our clients, our families, and our team. The focus is on the outcome.
"I do it because the process works."
Driven by Pleasure
Decision making is based on whether the Method feels good in the moment. The focus is entirely on temporary comfort.
"I only do it when I feel motivated to."
Action Plan for March
Identify the Friction
Pinpoint the specific step in our sales process you naturally "dislike" doing.
Attach the Purpose
Connect that uncomfortable task directly to your biggest personal or professional goal.
Commit to the Habit
Execute it every single time. Remove "liking it" from the equation entirely.
Why This Book Fits Our Goal
We looked at three classics. Here is why Gray's philosophy is the perfect fit for our focus on process and habits this month.
The New Common Denominator of Success
Validates that the grind of a strict process is hard, but proves that building habits makes execution automatic. It removes excuses and forces us to trust the system over our feelings.
A Message to Garcia (Elbert Hubbard)
The Risk: Rowan is a lone wolf given no instructions. We want our team trusting our established CRM and sales processes, not just "figuring it out on their own."
As A Man Thinketh (James Allen)
The Risk: Beautiful philosophy, but too abstract. We need "boots on the ground" tactical execution and daily habit formation right now, not just mindset training.