Most growth problems don’t announce themselves as mindset problems.
They show up as packed calendars, endless email, and a sense that you’re always behind—even when things look successful from the outside. Revenue increases, the team grows, and the workload somehow expands to match it all. The assumption is obvious: this is what growth feels like.
But that assumption is rarely questioned.
What struck me in my conversation with Brad Farris was how often agency owners confuse motion with leadership. When the pressure increases, so does the instinct to move faster—to answer everything, fix everything, and stay endlessly available. It feels responsible. It feels productive. And it quietly undermines the very growth you’re chasing.
Leadership begins when you stop reacting to everything.
Brad described leadership as an act of choosing. Not choosing tasks—but choosing what deserves your attention. Clearing an inbox isn’t leadership. Neither is racing from meeting to meeting. Leadership happens when you decide what matters most and allow everything else to wait—or disappear altogether.
This is uncomfortable work because it forces a reckoning. You can no longer hide behind volume. You have to decide.
Presence plays a critical role here. When you’re constantly rushed, you lose access to judgment. You respond instead of resolve. Slowing down isn’t laziness—it’s how you regain the ability to see clearly. That’s why reflection matters. Not as a productivity exercise, but as a leadership discipline.
At the end of the day, asking “What would I do differently if I could live this day again?” isn’t about self-criticism. It’s about pattern recognition. Over time, those patterns tell you where you’re leading—and where you’re merely managing noise.
Growth doesn’t demand more hours. It demands better attention.
And attention, unlike time, is something you actually get to choose.
