Growth Notes

Growth Notes

Your Ego Prevents Delegation....and Results | Ep. 534

4 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Your Ego Prevents Delegation....and Results | Ep. 534

Descripción

How Ego Prevents Delegation and Creates a Ceiling in Your Business In this Growth Notes episode, Frazier explains that entrepreneurs often respond to business crossroads by working harder, but relying only on personal effort creates a ceiling that eventually limits results. He argues the core issue is ego, driven by the subconscious belief that no one can do the job as well as the founder, a mindset reinforced by early-stage success from long hours and close oversight. Frazier says keeping hands in every decision is not a guarantee of quality but a sign the business lacks systems that function without the owner, turning it into a stressful job dependent on physical presence. He encourages delegation despite fears of lower quality, noting that finding the right hires can achieve 70–80% of the owner’s performance and unlock growth, and he shares that high-producing loan officers often regret not building a team sooner.

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Portada del episodio Your Ego Prevents Delegation....and Results | Ep. 534

Your Ego Prevents Delegation....and Results | Ep. 534

How Ego Prevents Delegation and Creates a Ceiling in Your Business In this Growth Notes episode, Frazier explains that entrepreneurs often respond to business crossroads by working harder, but relying only on personal effort creates a ceiling that eventually limits results. He argues the core issue is ego, driven by the subconscious belief that no one can do the job as well as the founder, a mindset reinforced by early-stage success from long hours and close oversight. Frazier says keeping hands in every decision is not a guarantee of quality but a sign the business lacks systems that function without the owner, turning it into a stressful job dependent on physical presence. He encourages delegation despite fears of lower quality, noting that finding the right hires can achieve 70–80% of the owner’s performance and unlock growth, and he shares that high-producing loan officers often regret not building a team sooner.

2 de jun de 20264 min
Portada del episodio Transactional Vs. Professional...Which One Are You? | Ep. 533

Transactional Vs. Professional...Which One Are You? | Ep. 533

Professional Loan Officer vs. Just a Job in Mortgage On Growth Notes, Frazier challenges listeners to ask whether they are professional loan officers or simply have a job in mortgage, framing the difference as a mindset shift from transactional “mechanics” to mastering a craft. He outlines four standards of professionalism: deliberate practice (professionals role-play, refine talk tracks, and practice until they can’t get it wrong rather than learning on clients), continuous improvement (ongoing education beyond licensing through market and guideline expertise), absolute ownership (staying connected and building structured long-term strategies based on client goals instead of only getting to closing), and process over urgency (relying on repeatable systems, expectations, milestones, and proactive communication rather than constant firefighting). He invites feedback on whether the take is “spicy” and wishes listeners a great Monday.

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Portada del episodio This Is Why You Are Not Ready To Scale Your Business | Ep. 532

This Is Why You Are Not Ready To Scale Your Business | Ep. 532

If You Want to Scale, Act Like a Business Owner: Strategy, Training, and Expectations On a Sunday episode of Growth Notes, Frazier gives a blunt leadership message: most people trying to scale aren’t actually running a business because they lack a clear strategy, a hiring and development plan, and a focus on growing themselves. He argues that if you can’t define a new hire’s first 90 days or invest time in training and development, you aren’t ready to hire or build a team. Frazier says the mortgage industry has a disturbing lack of training and that leaders must decide whether they’re developing leaders or employees, understand different motivations, and set expectations accordingly. He emphasizes creating simple, transferable processes rather than relying on “unicorns,” warning that hiring without planning leads to frustration, failure, and lost profits, while ownership and development increase long-term success.

31 de may de 20264 min
Portada del episodio Your Circle Will Naturally Get Smaller As You Grow | Ep. 531

Your Circle Will Naturally Get Smaller As You Grow | Ep. 531

Why Your Circle Gets Smaller When You Grow From Tennessee, Frazier reflects on a Mortgage Mornings call with Anthony Casa about how making major changes—like quitting drinking, getting healthy, and focusing on growth—often leads to spending less time with old friends. Frazier shares that his own circle has naturally shrunk over time as his interests, responsibilities, and priorities changed, including distancing from a core industry group he spent time with from 2016 to 2020. He notes this shift can feel lonely or hurtful, but it isn’t about blame or becoming enemies—paths simply diverge. Frazier also discusses how envy or perceptions of bragging can surface when one person achieves more than others, further shrinking a circle. His key message is to accept this as normal and build a growth-oriented circle aligned with where you’re trying to go.

30 de may de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Decide Today: Are You a Brand or Are You Just a Logo? | Ep. 530

Decide Today: Are You a Brand or Are You Just a Logo? | Ep. 530

Frazier opens by wishing listeners a good morning and Happy Friday, and thanks Lantern beta testers for their daily use and feedback. He shares an idea sparked by another podcast discussion involving a broker owner on the MRED board and the Zillow–MRED dispute: housing professionals should ask whether they are a brand or merely a logo. Frazier argues that logos and design elements like fonts, colors, headshots, taglines, and templates are only packaging and collateral, while the true brand is the person—what people believe you can do, whether you solve problems, demonstrate expertise, earn trust, and build connection. A brand is built through every interaction and transaction, and he notes the point that many real estate agents are just “headshots and logos on a sign,” not memorable enough to generate repeat business. He emphasizes that while the company helps, the originator is the engine and reputation people buy.

29 de may de 20264 min