Growth Notes

Growth Notes

Are You As Good As You Say You Are? | Ep. 527

5 min · 26 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Are You As Good As You Say You Are? | Ep. 527

Descripción

No Margin for Sloppy: Win Trust With Fundamentals Frazier explains that in today’s market there is no room for sloppy execution because borrowers scrutinize everything: responsiveness, clarity, organization, confidence, follow-up, and how you handle pressure. Homebuyers are making a high-stakes decision and scan for reasons to feel safe while negative moments—missed calls, confusing emails, rushed or unprepared interactions, or a sloppy process—stand out and erode trust, regardless of good intentions. As doubt grows, borrowers question more, shop more, and may not choose you. He emphasizes focusing on fundamentals over flashy tactics: answer the phone, do what you promise, clearly explain next steps, set expectations early, document the process, be proactive, know guidelines and numbers, and communicate early, clearly, and calmly when problems arise. He urges an honest pipeline audit and process tightening to remove uncertainty.

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episode Are You As Good As You Say You Are? | Ep. 527 artwork

Are You As Good As You Say You Are? | Ep. 527

No Margin for Sloppy: Win Trust With Fundamentals Frazier explains that in today’s market there is no room for sloppy execution because borrowers scrutinize everything: responsiveness, clarity, organization, confidence, follow-up, and how you handle pressure. Homebuyers are making a high-stakes decision and scan for reasons to feel safe while negative moments—missed calls, confusing emails, rushed or unprepared interactions, or a sloppy process—stand out and erode trust, regardless of good intentions. As doubt grows, borrowers question more, shop more, and may not choose you. He emphasizes focusing on fundamentals over flashy tactics: answer the phone, do what you promise, clearly explain next steps, set expectations early, document the process, be proactive, know guidelines and numbers, and communicate early, clearly, and calmly when problems arise. He urges an honest pipeline audit and process tightening to remove uncertainty.

26 de may de 20265 min
episode How Are You Spending Your Gift? | Ep. 526 artwork

How Are You Spending Your Gift? | Ep. 526

Memorial Day: Living and Spending the Gift of Freedom On a Memorial Day episode of Growth Notes, Frazier reflects on how saying “Happy Memorial Day” feels strange given the day’s purpose: honoring the men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice and did not come home. He emphasizes that the freedom to build businesses and pursue goals exists because someone else paid the price—someone’s son, daughter, spouse, parent. Instead of business tactics, he asks listeners to honestly consider whether they are living like that gift is real, noting how people often waste opportunity by complaining or scrolling on things that don’t matter. He challenges them to think about how they are spending the gift—showing up daily, making effort, and using their time to help others through mentoring, coaching, or volunteering—while remembering and honoring the fallen. 00:00 Memorial Day Reflection 00:24 Honoring the Fallen 01:04 Freedom to Build 01:45 Live the Gift 01:53 Stop Wasting Opportunity 02:49 Spend It Wisely 03:05 Serve and Mentor Others 03:46 Closing Tribute

Ayer3 min
episode This Is The Law of the Land. Now Break It. | Ep. 525 artwork

This Is The Law of the Land. Now Break It. | Ep. 525

Parkinson’s Law: Use 15-Minute Focus Sprints to Stop Letting Work Expand Frazier explains Parkinson’s Law—work expands to fill the time you give it—and how it causes people to mismanage calendars and prospecting by assigning loose, all-day “containers” to small tasks like making 30 calls. He describes how open-ended blocks invite distractions (email, CRM, coffee, organizing) and lead to low output, frustration, and mental fatigue because calls require focus and handling rejection and discomfort. His challenge for the week is to replace long prospecting blocks with 15-minute high-intensity focus sprints, done three times in an hour, starting small and building up, to complete tasks in 45 minutes or less by tightening the time container and improving consistency, focus, and productivity.

24 de may de 20263 min
episode This Is How You Beat Your Worst Enemy | Ep. 524 artwork

This Is How You Beat Your Worst Enemy | Ep. 524

Work With Your Brain: Focus Blocks to Beat Distraction Frazier explains that distraction is not simply a discipline problem but a “worst enemy” problem because the brain is wired for novelty and dopamine, making repetitive revenue-generating tasks like follow-up calls, CRM updates, and client outreach feel boring. He notes that white-knuckling discipline only works temporarily before people drift into distractions and even procrastinate by consuming productivity content. Instead of fighting this nature, he recommends building a structured sales day that works with the brain: use shorter timed focus blocks for prospecting and follow-up, take real breaks (not phone scrolling), reset, and return to the next sprint. He also advises removing obvious environmental distractions, protecting prime selling time, and creating a system that repeatedly pulls you back to the work that matters. He briefly mentions the “Green Zone” book he co-wrote. Get The Green Zone [https://a.co/d/0awzzStP]

23 de may de 20266 min
episode This One Number Will Give You New Perspective...Hopefully | Ep. 523 artwork

This One Number Will Give You New Perspective...Hopefully | Ep. 523

Protect Your Prime Selling Time: Stop Losing Hours to Distractions In this Growth Notes episode, Frazier warns that most sales professionals lose two to three hours of prime selling time each day to trivial distractions like notifications, emails, texts, DMs, and internet detours. He highlights that the average person stays on task only 11 minutes before getting distracted, and it can take 25–26 minutes to regain focus, creating the illusion of productivity without real progress. Frazier distinguishes being responsive from being constantly available and notes that distraction can be a hiding place from uncomfortable revenue-generating work. He urges listeners to treat attention as money, take control of their focus, and protect 60–90 minute blocks for calls, follow-up, agent outreach, client touches, content, and conversations to improve production.

22 de may de 20265 min