Weekly Theme: Mastering the ROI of Your Time
Look, we need to have a straight-talk conversation about "hustle." In the streets of Los Angeles and across Orange County, I see agents and business owners grinding 14 hours a day, yet their bank accounts and their growth don't reflect that effort. They’re exhausted, but they aren’t actually moving.
Jim Rohn used to say, “Don’t mistake movement for achievement. It’s easy to get faked out by being busy.”
Most entrepreneurs are caught in the "busy trap." They think doing more is the path to success. It’s not. Success is about doing what matters, focusing on ROI-driven activities that actually move the needle. This week, we’re breaking down how to stop "moving the piles" and start executing with precision.
If you feel like you’re constantly underwater, you’re not alone. Overwhelm is the unspoken epidemic in our industry. But here’s the strategic truth: Overwhelm isn’t caused by having too much to do; it’s caused by not knowing where to start and lacking the discipline to stay focused.
At Lighthouse Coaching, we use the 10 Drivers of Growth & Leadership™ framework to help leaders scale. Today, we’re leaning heavily into two of those drivers: Strategic Focus and Execution Discipline.
Strategic Focus is knowing which 20% of your activities produce 80% of your results. Execution Discipline is the grit to do those things even when you don’t feel like it. Productivity isn't a "hack" in the sense of a magic trick; it’s a system. Let’s build yours.
The first step to productivity is subtraction, not addition. As Marcus Aurelius wrote, "Ask yourself at every moment, 'Is this necessary?'" Most of what you do in a day probably isn't.
Stop working off a "To-Do" list. To-do lists are graveyards for good intentions. If it’s not on the calendar, it doesn’t exist.
Every time you manually perform a repetitive task, you are stealing time from your future self. Systems set you free, and in 2026, there is no excuse for manual data entry or basic follow-up.
Meetings are where productivity goes to die. If you’re a team lead in SoCal, you’re likely spending half your day in "check-ins" that could have been an email.
Post-it notes are the enemies of a strategic mind. You need a single source of truth for your projects.
As a solo agent or small business owner, you are often the bottleneck. You think you’re saving money by doing your own marketing or bookkeeping, but you’re actually losing thousands in opportunity cost.
Science shows that focus drops off significantly after 60–90 minutes. You aren't a machine; you’re a high-performance athlete in the business world.
To hit the ground running on Monday, you have to win Sunday.
The Mindset:
Most people think productivity is about discipline, but it’s actually about Self-Leadership. You cannot lead a team, a family, or a business if you cannot lead yourself first. Lead yourself first or nothing else will work. It’s about the promises you keep to yourself when no one is watching.
As David Goggins would say, you have to "calloused your mind." Discipline is the bridge between goals and accomplishment.
The Question:
If you were only allowed to work two hours a day, which tasks would you keep to ensure your business still grew?
Take a moment with that. Now, why are you spending the other six or eight hours on things that didn't make that list?
> "Either you run the day, or the day runs you." : Jim Rohn
Don’t let the "urgent" crowd out the "important" this week. You have the tools, you have the framework, and you have the vision. Now, go execute.
If you’re a solo agent or a small business owner in Southern California feeling stuck in the "busy trap," it’s time for an outside perspective. Strategy without execution is a hallucination. Execution without strategy is a nightmare.
Let’s get your business on the right track. I’m offering a 30-Min Executive Strategy Session where we will dive deep into your current bottlenecks and apply the 10 Drivers of Growth & Leadership™ to your specific situation.
Book Your 30-Min Executive Strategy Session Here
Stay Strategic,
Coach Don Jacks