Some people think focus means “do less.”
It doesn't.
Focus means doing only what matters most, relentlessly.
When you are focused, you may find yourself doing more than you ever did before. But all the effort is channeled to a goal.
I’ve been experimenting with this in every part of my life lately:
In business, I trimmed our offerings, doubled down on media, and saw our pipeline grow.
In fitness, I’m sticking to a simple plan: less fancy, more consistency.
In both, I’ve noticed something weird: focus has simplified the actions I need to take (what to do) and allowed me to do more and work harder (how I do it).
“If it’s not a hell yes, it’s a no.” - Derek Sivers
It’s not just good advice. zit’s math.
Saying no to 5 things gives your yes 5x the power. Even things that are “good” are stealing from THE thing you’re trying to accomplish.
🏗️ Builders Who Out-Focused the Competition
If you’re like me, you’re probably kinda nodding, but also you kinda don’t care what I think. You want proof. Who is legit that has followed this thinking?
I’m glad you asked:
1. Mark Allen
At 37, Mark Allen became the oldest Ironman World Champion ever.
Not because he was stronger. But because he focused better.
He trained like a monk, obsessed over recovery, and tuned out everything but his mission.
2. Chipotle - ever heard of them?
While other fast food chains chased gimmicks, Chipotle focused on one thing: operational efficiency.
Their “Chipotlanes” drive-thrus exploded growth, added 250 locations, and created 7,000 jobs.
3. L’Oréal
L’Oréal simplified their entire brand message around one idea: “Beauty is essential.”
This singular focus helped them beat the market and hit record margins in 2024. Focus doesn’t just help. It compounds. Similar to what we discussed last week.
🏋️♂️ Focus Isn’t Optional in Fitness (or Life)
When you lose focus in the gym, you don’t just miss reps…you miss results.
Here’s what it looks like:
Distraction: You check your phone between sets… suddenly you’ve been “training” for 90 minutes and haven’t broken a sweat.
Lack of intent: You show up, but don’t have a plan. You lift weights, but skip progression. You run, but without splits in mind.
Multitasking: You bounce between strength goals and cardio goals, trying to do both, but actually progressing in neither.
Now flip it:
Single-tasking your training? You build strength faster.
Structured plan? You measure improvement week to week.
No phone distractions? You finish in 45 minutes and feel like a weapon.
Like in business, focus compounds fitness. Not just in muscle, but in mood, sleep, confidence, and stress.
And here’s the part most people miss:
The way you train is practice for how you work.
You want deeper focus in your business? Start by finishing your sets without looking at your phone.
You want better energy for creative work? Focus on sleep, training, and recovery like they matter (because they do).
You want more consistency? Track it. Plan it. Stick to the plan.
Focus isn’t something you summon once a quarter during a strategy meeting.
It’s something you train.
🔁 The Takeaway
The hardest part of focus isn’t saying yes.
It’s saying no. To the distraction, the shiny object, the next thing.
But when you master that discipline, everything else gets easier.
This week, don’t work on everything. Pick the one thing that matters.
And put your whole self behind it.
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✉️ PS: I’d love to hear…what are you focusing on right now? Hit reply and tell me.
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