You can’t control whether the phone rings. You can control your inputs, and you can engineer almost everything else into reach — including demand itself. Here’s the three-bucket model I run on, how to go from waiting to building, and the most literal example I’ve got: the hats and the tie-dye jacket I use to control how approachable I am.
Change the room, not the resolve. Willpower is unreliable; a well-built environment isn’t.
Most advice stops at “control what you can, accept what you can’t.” The third bucket is where the work is: what you can engineer to drag from the can’t-control column toward the can. You can’t control the economy or whether one lead closes — but you can control your inputs, your standards, and who you say yes to, and you can build systems that tilt the odds. Most stress is energy spent in bucket two. Most growth is widening bucket three.
Waiting for clients is sitting in bucket two, hoping. Building demand is engineering bucket three: the guide that markets for you while you sleep, the referral you seeded on purpose, the reputation that walks into the room before you do. You don’t chase demand — you construct the conditions that keep producing it. Every free tool on this site is me doing exactly that in public.
Willpower is a battery that dies; environment is a wall that stays. Change the room, not the resolve. My most literal example: I wear a “Do Not Disturb” hat and a “Focus Mode” hat when I need deep work — the boundary sits on my head so I never have to defend it in a conversation. And I wear a loud tie-dye jacket when I’m shooting an event, on purpose, so people feel invited to walk up and talk to me. I can’t control whether someone approaches — but I can absolutely engineer how approachable I look. Dress carries meaning and flexibility. Use it deliberately.
The fastest way to clog the environment you’re building is hoarding things that stopped serving you — an old process, a title, a tool, a tagline you loved. Use it, discard it, or route it to where it can be useful to someone else. Rehome, don’t landfill; but don’t let dead weight set your defaults. Nothing is above being retired, including your own good ideas from last year.
I buy gear, lighting, and tooling that match what I’m actually trying to accomplish — a coherent kit across every business, not a magpie’s pile of the latest releases. New-and-shiny doesn’t move me, because anything I didn’t already have is new and shiny to me: I traded a Switch for a PS4 and got a whole library of games I’d never played; I bought used speakers that beat anything I’d ever owned. Not the best I’ve ever heard — but owning a good-enough tool you’ll actually use beats renting awe from someone else’s setup. Match the tool to the mission, then go wear it out.
So I stopped designing around being right and started designing around finding out fast. More at-bats, more eyes, more cheap drafts — being wrong quickly and with help beats being “sure” alone every time. That’s not a lack of confidence; it’s where the confidence comes from. This whole site is a draft that keeps getting better because I take the many, and I take the assists.
Put it together and you become someone demand finds instead of chases: controlled inputs, engineered visibility, no dead weight, many cheap attempts with help. People will call it luck. It’s design — and design is the one thing on this whole list that was always in bucket one.
stop pushing the rope — move the wall the rope is tied to
Control, can’t-control, engineer-able.
Stop waiting; start constructing.
Signals over willpower.
Wrong fast, with help, beats sure alone.
Every box above is doable solo — I’m not gatekeeping, the whole guide is free on purpose. But solo means you pay full tuition on each lesson: the wrong first hire, the package priced from fear, the move made a year too late. Fail-fast keeps the tuition survivable; it never makes it free.
A mentor doesn’t do the work for you. They’ve already eaten those mistakes, so you get to skip the drafts that only teach you what not to do. The guide hands you the map; someone who’s done it hands you their reps.
That’s the oldest shortcut there is — ask someone who’s been down the road before. Me, or anyone in your corner who has. (No one on your bench yet? Guide No. 6 is about building it.)
the checklist is free. the reps behind it weren’t.
Ask someone who’s done itIf the phone’s too quiet and you can’t tell which lever is actually yours to pull, that’s the exact conversation this practice is built for — sorting the buckets, then engineering the one that moves demand.