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The Hard Question Most Producers Avoid

The Hard Question Most Producers Avoid

Are you actually producing — or just staying busy?

It’s not a comfortable question. Most producers don’t avoid it because they don’t know the answer. They avoid it because they do.

On the surface, the week looks full. Client calls, renewal reviews, service issues, internal meetings, and a constant stream of emails. You’re working hard. You’re responsive. You’re involved.

But step back for a second.

If we’re being honest, part of what makes this question uncomfortable isn’t just time. It’s that a lot of prospecting activity doesn’t feel all that meaningful. It can feel like going through the motions—another email, another call, another “touchpoint”—without a clear reason behind it.

 

The “Last Week” Test

Here’s a simple way to cut through the noise. Look at your calendar from last week and ask:

    • How many new conversations did I start with prospects?
    • How many times did I initiate outreach (not respond)?
    • How many situations did I create where a business owner said, “That’s interesting, tell me more”?
    • How many of those conversations were built around helping solve a real problem?

If the answer is “not many,” you’re not alone. 

Most producers aren’t lacking effort. They’re lacking intentional production time. They’re busy, but they’re not building. And when the conversations you are having aren't rooted in something valuable or relevant, they're even harder to start or sustain.

If you want to pressure test this more objectively, we’ve built a quick Producer Assessment around this exact idea: Check it out here.

 

Why Producers Drift Into Service Work

No one sets out to become reactive. It happens gradually.

A few client issues here. A renewal that needs extra attention there. A handful of internal requests that “only you can handle.” Over time, your calendar fills up with things that feel important but don’t actually move your book forward.

Service work has three dangerous traits. It’s urgent, it feels valuable, and it’s endless. There will always be another email, another request, another issue to solve.

Prospecting is different. It’s uncomfortable. It requires initiative. And the payoff isn’t immediate. So it gets pushed aside—until one day you realize your pipeline is thinner than it should be.

 

Busy vs. Building

There’s a difference between activity and production.

Busy work maintains your current book. Building work creates your future book.

The problem is that busy work always wins by default. It’s urgent, visible, and easy to justify. Building work requires intention.

Which is why the shift isn’t about doing more—it’s about protecting time for the work that actually creates opportunity.

 

 

Reclaiming Prospecting Time

If you wait for time to prospect, you won’t find it. You have to take it back.

Start with a few simple shifts.

1. Block non-negotiable production time

Set two to three blocks per week where no internal meetings are allowed, no service work is addressed, and no email is checked. Treat this like your most important client meeting.

2. Build a real target list

Prospecting isn’t a vague intention—it’s a system. Define 25–50 specific companies, why they’re a fit, and one relevant issue where you can genuinely help. This is where micro-engagements come into play: focused, relevant outreach tied to real business impact.

A strong list isn’t just about who you want to write; it’s about who you’re best positioned to bring value to.

3. Use micro-engagements to start conversations

You don’t need a perfect pitch. You need an opening. Instead of asking to quote, lead with insight:

    • “We’ve been seeing a lot of [specific issue] in companies your size... curious how you’re handling it.”
    • “Did you know [relevant insight]? I'd be happy to talk through how other businesses are addressing this risk/gap.”

Small, relevant, and low pressure is what gets conversations started. The goal isn't just to reach out, it's to show up with something worth talking about.

4. Track what actually moves the needle.

At the end of each week, look at outcomes:

    • Who did you actually help?
    • How many new conversations did you create?
    • How many follow-ups did you initiate?
    • What actually led to engagement?

Remember, results take time. Start by tracking your activities and staying consistent in your outreach. 

 

The Real Shift

This isn’t about working more. It’s about working on the right things. And doing it in a way that actually feels worth it, because you're bringing something real to the conversation.

The best producers aren’t the busiest; they’re the most intentional. They protect their time, create meaningful conversations, and consistently build pipeline before they need it.

It all starts with a simple (but uncomfortable) question: are you producing, or just staying busy?

 

Your Next Move

If you want to make this practical, start here:

    • Review last week’s calendar
    • Identify how much time was truly spent on production
    • Block two dedicated prospecting sessions for next week
    • Build a list of 25 target accounts
    • Plan one micro-engagement idea per account

That alone will put you ahead of most producers. Remember, the goal is to purposefully set aside time for prospecting every week, and even more so to do so in a way that actually creates opportunities and feels worth your time.

 

See Where You Actually Stand

Here’s the reality. Most people don’t see themselves clearly. They think they’re doing enough prospecting. They feel like they’re building pipeline. But when you actually break it down, the numbers often tell a different story.

We put together a simple Producer Prospecting Assessment to help you answer that question objectively.

It will help you:

    • See where your time is really going
    • Identify gaps in your prospecting approach
    • Understand how to level up your growth game

It’s quick, but powerful. Check out the assessment here.

 

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