Monday, July 20, 2026

Is Motivation Missing or Is Your Activity Plan Missing?



1. Motivation can start the work, but only a plan can sustain it

Motivation is useful, but it is unreliable.

Some days, an advisor feels energetic, confident, and ready to prospect. On other days, rejection, slow results, personal concerns, or simple fatigue can weaken that enthusiasm.

A good activity plan removes the need to wait for the right mood.

Instead of asking, “Do I feel motivated today?” the advisor already knows what must be done:

    • How many prospects to contact.
    • How many appointments to set.
    • How many follow-ups to complete.
    • How many client reviews to conduct.
    • How many referrals to request.

The strongest advisors do not depend on daily inspiration. They depend on a routine that continues even when motivation is low.

Motivation makes you begin. Structure helps you continue.


2. When the activity is vague, procrastination becomes easy

Many advisors say they want to “work harder,” “prospect more,” or “improve production.”

But these are intentions, not plans.

A vague goal gives the mind too many opportunities to delay. The advisor may spend time preparing, checking messages, designing posts, attending meetings, or organizing files while avoiding the more uncomfortable work of talking to prospects.

A better activity plan is specific.

Instead of saying, “I will prospect today,” say:

    • “I will contact 15 people before lunch.”
    • “I will secure three appointments this week.”
    • “I will follow up on every pending proposal by Friday.”

Specific activity creates accountability. At the end of the day, you can clearly determine whether the work was completed.

The problem is not always lack of motivation.

Sometimes, the advisor simply has not defined what productive work looks like.


3. A better activity plan focuses on actions you can control

Advisors cannot fully control who will say yes, who will postpone, or who will decline.

But they can control how many conversations they initiate, how consistently they follow up, how well they prepare, and how often they ask for referrals.

This distinction is important because advisors often become discouraged when they focus only on results.

A week with no closed case may feel like failure. But if the advisor completed the right number of quality appointments, proposals, and follow-ups, the week may still have strengthened the pipeline.

A good activity plan shifts attention from anxiety about outcomes to discipline over inputs.

You may not control today’s decision.

But you can control whether you create enough opportunities for future decisions.

Results are delayed indicators. Activity is the part you can manage today.


4. The plan must be reviewed, not merely followed

Even a disciplined activity plan can fail if it is built on the wrong assumptions.

An advisor may be contacting many people but securing few appointments. He may be conducting appointments but presenting too few proposals. He may be presenting proposals but failing to close because the recommendation is unclear or the follow-up is weak.

That is why activity should not only be counted. It should be evaluated.

Ask:

    • Which activities produced appointments?
    • Which markets gave the best response?
    • Where did prospects drop out?
    • Which conversations led to referrals?
    • Which activities consumed time but created little business?

A better plan is not simply busier. It is more intelligent.

The goal is to stop repeating unproductive activity with greater intensity. The goal is to identify what works, improve what is weak, and redirect effort toward activities that produce meaningful progress.


The Better Question

When performance is slow, it is easy to say:

“I need to feel motivated again.”

But the more useful question may be:

“Do I have a clear, measurable, and repeatable activity plan?”

Motivation can give you a strong day.

A good activity plan can give you a strong year.

Do not wait to feel ready. Build a routine that tells you what to do next.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice

Friday, July 17, 2026

Did I Reach the Goal—or Did the Goal Change Me?


 

1. Achieving a Goal Builds Trust in Yourself

An annual goal is not merely a number written on a planning sheet. It is a commitment you make to yourself.

Every time you follow through on that commitment, you strengthen self-trust. You prove that you can remain disciplined even when motivation fades, continue after rejection, and finish what you started.

This matters because an advisor who does not trust himself will often hesitate in front of prospects. He may doubt his recommendation, avoid difficult conversations, or give up too quickly when results are slow.

But when you repeatedly achieve the goals you set, something changes internally.

You begin to say:

    • “I have faced difficult periods before.”
    • “I know how to recover.”
    • “I can depend on my own discipline.”

That confidence is not arrogance. It is earned confidence—the kind that comes from keeping promises to yourself.

The financial reward may eventually be spent. But the belief that you can set a difficult target and achieve it becomes part of who you are.


2. Achieving a Goal Means More People Were Helped

For a financial advisor, production should never be viewed only as a sales figure.

Behind every completed case is a real person.

There may be a parent who can now provide financial protection for the family. There may be a young professional who has started saving for retirement. There may be a business owner who now has a contingency plan. There may be a family that will not need to sell assets or borrow money during a crisis.

When an advisor reaches an annual goal, it means more conversations took place, more financial needs were identified, and more families were encouraged to prepare.

This gives the goal a deeper meaning.

You are not simply trying to reach a quota. You are measuring how far your advice has travelled.

A missed goal may therefore represent more than lost income. It may also represent people you could have approached, conversations you could have started, and families you could have helped—but did not reach.

The more meaningful question is not only:

How much business did I produce?

It is:

How many people are financially better prepared because I did my work?


3. Achieving a Goal Develops the Person Required for Bigger Responsibilities

The most important outcome of a goal is not always the goal itself.

It is the person you must become to achieve it.

To reach an annual target, an advisor may need to become more disciplined, more organized, more courageous, and more consistent. He may need to improve his communication, manage his time better, ask better questions, and handle rejection with greater maturity.

These qualities are valuable far beyond one production year.

    • A disciplined advisor can manage a larger client base.
    • A dependable advisor can be trusted with leadership.
    • A skilled advisor can handle more complex client situations.
    • A resilient advisor can survive difficult markets and personal setbacks.

Goals expose weaknesses that comfort can hide. They show us where we procrastinate, where we lack focus, and where our skills need improvement.

That is why falling short can still be valuable—provided we are willing to learn from it.

The goal gives direction, but the process builds character.

And often, the greater achievement is not that you reached the target. It is that you became capable of carrying a bigger one.


4. Achieving a Goal Establishes a Standard for Your Life and Profession

Every goal achieved sends a message about what you are willing to accept from yourself.

When you consistently meet your commitments, excellence begins to feel normal. Preparation becomes a habit. Follow-up becomes part of your professional discipline. Client service becomes a standard rather than an occasional effort.

This creates momentum.

You start the next year with stronger habits, a larger client base, more referrals, greater experience, and better judgment. You are no longer beginning from zero.

Your performance also affects the people around you.

    • Your family sees perseverance.
    • Your clients see reliability.
    • Your colleagues see professionalism.
    • Younger advisors see what disciplined work looks like.

In this way, achieving an annual goal becomes more than a personal accomplishment. It becomes an example.

People may forget the exact production figure you achieved. But they may remember that you were dependable, that you kept working during difficult periods, and that you conducted yourself professionally while pursuing success.

The real value of an annual goal is not simply that it rewards you.

It helps define your standard.


The Deeper Meaning of Reaching the Goal

Money is important. It supports the family, pays obligations, and provides security.

But the lasting rewards of achieving a goal are often invisible.

    • You build trust in yourself.
    • You help more people prepare for the future.
    • You develop the character required for greater responsibilities.
    • You establish a higher standard for your life and profession.

The annual target may be written in numbers.

But its deepest value is measured by the person you become and the lives you are able to influence along the way.

The reward is not only reaching the goal. The reward is becoming someone who can be trusted to pursue a meaningful goal—and finish it.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice