I’ve spent decades coaching founders, athletes, and creators. One truth cuts through every excuse: purpose needs time on the calendar or it’s just a slogan. My stance is simple and firm. If you can’t commit at least 30 minutes a day, seven days a week, to your mission, you’re not serious about it.
If your mission is to empower other people, and you don’t have a minimum of 30 minutes a day, 7 days a week for your purpose, your mission, then you’re full of…
I don’t say that to shame anyone. I say it because small, daily time blocks compound into big outcomes. That’s how I live. That’s how I coach. I host short calls to help people make more money, help more people, and get results faster. Minutes matter.
The 30-minute rule that changes outcomes
Here’s what I know from thousands of reps. Focused time beats grand plans. You don’t need a two-hour block to change your life or someone else’s. You need a committed half hour—every single day—aimed at your highest purpose.
I do those calls for the sake of helping people make a lot of money, help a lot of people, and how I can move the needle in minutes by giving advice or introducing them to people.
That’s the point. Short, direct actions compound. Five targeted introductions across a week can reframe a career. Ten minutes of clear advice can save someone a year of trial and error. Speed comes from clarity and cadence, not chaos and luck.
What gets scheduled gets done
People tell me they’re “too busy.” We all are. But the calendar never lies. If purpose is absent from your schedule, it’s absent from your life. The fix is both simple and hard: make it nonnegotiable. Treat your mission like a top client. It deserves daily attention, even on weekends. Especially on weekends.
Here’s how I make those minutes matter:
- Set a daily 30-minute block for purpose work—same time, every day.
- Pick one person to help and one task to advance your mission.
- Use five-minute calls to give advice or make a warm intro.
- Track a single metric: people helped or outcomes created.
- End with one ask and one promise for tomorrow.
This rhythm keeps momentum high and excuses low.
Addressing the pushback
Some argue they need longer “deep work.” Fine. Use those when you have them. But don’t wait for perfect. Thirty minutes daily is the floor, not the ceiling. Others say they lack the right network. Start with who you know. Share value first. Advice, templates, introductions—one brick a day builds a wall.
There’s also the fear of not knowing what to do. Keep it simple: help someone, learn something, create something, or ask for help. Repeat. The pattern matters more than the plan.
The payoff of minutes well spent
I’ve seen these small windows produce big returns. Not just money. Confidence. Clarity. Reach. When you help someone win, you win. When you show up every day for your purpose, people start showing up for you. That’s not magic. That’s math.
Your mission deserves 30 minutes today. If you can’t give it that, rethink the mission—or rethink your priorities. Real change happens in minutes, not someday.
Call to action
Open your calendar. Block 30 minutes every day for the next 30 days. Choose one person to help and one step to move your purpose forward. Keep score. Watch what shifts. Momentum is waiting for you on the other side of that first block.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What should I do in my 30-minute purpose block?
Pick one clear action: help someone with advice, make a warm introduction, create a simple asset, or learn a skill you’ll use within 24 hours.
Q: How can I help if I don’t have a big network?
Start local and specific. Offer brief calls, share a resource, or give feedback. Value builds trust, which grows your network over time.
Q: What if I miss a day?
Restart the next day. Don’t double up. Consistency beats intensity. Aim for streaks, and keep each session focused and simple.
Q: How do I measure progress?
Track one metric: people helped, intros made, or outcomes created. Review weekly and adjust your actions to increase that score.
Q: Can five-minute calls really move the needle?
Yes. A clear question and a direct answer save time and money. Short calls with a next step or intro often create fast, real results.