Talk More Than You Think You Should

Overcommunication has a bad rap. People imagine inboxes flooded, meetings multiplying, chaos disguised as collaboration. But the truth is, when you do it right…when you frame it as a progress update instead of a plea for attention…it’s one of the most underrated forms of leadership.

Every time you share where you are, you create a sounding board. The silence between updates is where misalignment grows and ideas go stale. Say what’s on your mind, and you invite allies to emerge from the corners of the room you didn’t know were listening.

You get reassurance, too. Not in a needy way, but in a “we’re in this together” way. Because when people see the thread of your progress, they feel connected to it. They start to pull in the same direction.

Alignment doesn’t just happen. It’s earned through repetition, clarity, and yes, overcommunication. When you set the expectation that your updates are about progress, not perfection, you’ll find the only real risk of saying too much is being too clear. And that’s a risk worth taking.

Stay Positive & Tell Me More

Hidden Resources

Most people think “outside the box” means coming up with something shiny and new. They picture innovation like lightning striking a clean field. But when it comes to resources—time, people, money, ideas—the box is often where your most overlooked treasures are hiding.

Thinking outside it doesn’t mean ignoring what’s inside. It means asking what could be reimagined. The intern who sketches on napkins could storyboard your next campaign. The dusty data set from last quarter could spark a customer insight no one’s bothered to notice. The slow Tuesday shift could be your perfect training ground.

Resources aren’t just things you have. They’re things you see differently.

Stay Positive & Spot The Sideways

When Distraction Becomes A Religion

We’re master builders of distraction.

We pile podcasts on top of playlists, stack scrolling on top of snacking, and call it “taking a break.” The truth is, we’re often just trying to sand down the edges of some quiet pain we don’t want to face.

It starts small. You feel off, so you check your email. Then you tidy your desk. Then you decide your inbox needs folders, your kitchen needs reorganizing, and your soul apparently needs a new streaming subscription.

Distraction builds a cathedral around your pain until it feels holy.

But pain isn’t a villain. It’s a compass. A throbbing reminder that something inside you is still alive enough to care. When you stop decorating your discomfort with digital glitter and let it just be, you start hearing what it’s actually saying.

Maybe it’s telling you something needs to end. Maybe it’s whispering that you’ve been pretending to be okay for too long.

The work isn’t to banish pain. It’s to stop worshipping distraction long enough to meet it face-to-face.

Stay Positive & Serve Yourself Some Pittance

Inbox Alchemy: Turning Cold Outreach Into Human Connection

The best reps? They’re poets with a bit of outlaw in them. They don’t send more emails; they create collisions—small, surprising sparks that make a person pause, smile, and think, “Well, that’s different.”

Breaking through isn’t about louder fonts or cleverer puns. It’s about curiosity, humanity, and a pinch of theater. Try these:

1. Use the element of surprise.
Open with a line that doesn’t belong in a sales email: “This isn’t a sales pitch. It’s a confession.” or “If we met at a bar instead of your inbox, I’d buy you a drink before asking this.” You’re already off the well-trodden path.

2. Anchor to something personal and real.
Instead of saying, “I noticed your company does X,” try “I read your CEO’s interview about Y. It reminded me of the time I…” The bridge between insight and anecdote is where trust lives.

3. Create loops, not ladders.
Instead of climbing toward the close, make the prospect part of a story. Ask for their take, opinion, or curiosity. “I’m testing something weird—want in?” makes a reader a co-conspirator, not a target.

4. Use format as a playground.
Record a 20-second Loom with your face framed by absurdly good lighting. Add a GIF of you juggling oranges while summarizing ROI. Or send a plain-text note that feels like it came from a human with coffee breath, not a system.

5. Mix channels like a cocktail.
Email + a surprise LinkedIn comment. DM + a handwritten postcard. The best ABM isn’t omnichannel—it’s personal theater across mediums.

The rule isn’t be funny or be bold. The rule is be alive.

Stay Positive & People Can Smell The Difference Between Automation And Alchemy

The Gift Of Halving

If you want to become an alchemist of effort, start by assuming everything will be cut in half. Half the resources. Half the time. Half the help. Half the energy. It sounds grim until you realize it’s the best kind of prophecy—one that turns you into a magician of focus.

When you prepare for half, you sharpen your instincts. You learn which tasks actually matter. You notice the corners of your work that used to be decorative but not essential. You start trimming the ego from your plans, like fat off a steak.

And the beautiful twist? Life tends to meet you at your level of preparation. If you expect to thrive with half, you often find yourself surprisingly whole. The outcome improves because you’ve already accepted the squeeze and made peace with it. You’ve designed for scarcity, which makes abundance feel less like luck and more like a side effect of readiness.

Stay Positive & Humble Your Timeline

The Almost-Closed Mind

There’s a peculiar kind of magic that lives in the space between “done” and “done-done.” That whisper of possibility that tugs at you right before you hit send, export, or call it final.

Finishing edits? Sure, you’re closing the loop. Tightening commas and stitching up loose threads. Yet if your mind’s even a hair open, you might spot a rhythm that could sing louder, a line that could wink instead of yawn.

Building a deck for one person? Great. Deliver it sharp. But keep a crack in the door. Maybe that same deck could help someone else, or become the seed of something bigger.

An open mind doesn’t mean indecision. It means curiosity with good timing. The willingness to notice opportunity as it sneaks past the “completed” mark wearing a bowtie of what-ifs.

Stay Positive & Closed Minds Finish Tasks, Open Minds Evolve Them

When It’s Not One Thing, It’s Another

There’s a peculiar kind of peace that comes from shrugging your shoulders and saying, “If it’s not one thing, it’s another.”

Not the exhausted kind of shrug that means you’ve given up. The enlightened kind. The shrug of someone who realizes that the universe is an improvisational jazz piece, not a symphony with a tidy finale.

Because truly, it is always something. You fix the leaky toilet, and your motorcycle battery dies. You finish the big project at work, and suddenly your kid discovers gravity with the cereal bowl (milk and all). The treadmill of life doesn’t stop when one obstacle hops off…it just finds a new runner.

The trick isn’t to outrun it. It’s to own it. To see the chaos as part of your rhythm rather than a disruption of it. When you accept that “another thing” will always be waiting, you loosen your grip on control. You stop expecting serenity to arrive as a reward for fixing everything and instead start feeling it in the fixing itself.

Stay Positive & Another Thing Means You’re Still In The Race!