From the Company of One podcast
Most people think success requires a breakthrough.
It usually requires repetition.
When you study people who actually build something — real income, real leverage, real influence — you see the same pattern over and over. They experiment until they find what works. Then they repeat it long enough for it to compound.
That’s it.
It sounds almost boring. But boring is powerful.
The Myth of Complexity
We overestimate what it takes.
We convince ourselves there must be a hidden strategy, a secret network, a perfect system waiting to be discovered. In reality, most successful people did two things very well.
First, they figured out how they could genuinely help people. That part is hard. It requires testing, real conversations, adjustment, and humility. Second, once they saw what worked, they kept doing it — day after day, week after week — until it compounded into something undeniable.
It often looks unimpressive from the outside. But that discipline creates leverage.
Why Most Professionals Stay Stuck
Here’s what actually happens: people experiment a little. They send a few messages. Post a few times. Pitch an idea once. If it doesn’t explode immediately, they pivot.
New tactic. New idea. New direction.
It feels productive. But it resets the clock every single time.
The problem isn’t a lack of effort — it’s a lack of direction. And owning a direction requires staying with something long enough to know whether it actually works.
The Company of One Framework
If you’re a company of one, your job is surprisingly simple:
- Identify a problem you can solve
- Test whether people value it
- Refine your approach
- Repeat what works
That applies whether you’re inside a company, building on your own, or trying to grow your income. This isn’t dramatic. It’s disciplined.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Become known for solving one specific pain
Instead of being generally “solid” at your job, choose one problem that frustrates leadership — reports that are always late, projects that stall between departments, a recurring customer complaint — and volunteer to fix it. Study it. Improve it. Track the results. Repeat until your name is attached to that solution.
That’s leverage.
Run small experiments, not big announcements
Instead of proposing a sweeping transformation, test something small. Pilot a new meeting format. Build a simple dashboard leadership can check weekly. Automate one repetitive process. Don’t ask for a title change or permission to “lead.” Test. Measure. Refine. Repeat. When it works, expand it.
Build visibility through consistent signal
Share short updates on what you’re improving — not bragging, just signal. A monthly note summarizing improvements and impact. Data on time or cost saved. A short insight offered in a meeting instead of staying quiet.
Repetition builds reputation.
Have five strategic conversations per week
One coffee with someone in another department. One conversation with a senior leader about what they care about. One discussion with a peer about a shared friction point. One follow-up with someone who responded well to your idea. One conversation asking: “What’s slowing you down right now?”
You’re testing where value is needed. When you see a pattern, you lean into it.
Repeat the play that gains traction
If a specific improvement gets attention or results — don’t immediately pivot. Improve it. Scale it slightly. Document it. Repeat it in another area. Most people try one initiative and move on. The disciplined professional compounds one initiative until it becomes undeniable.
The Wildly Simple Weekly Framework
If you’re feeling stuck, here’s a starting point that is almost embarrassingly simple:
- Have five real conversations each week about a specific problem you care about solving
- Offer one concrete idea or solution in those conversations
- Notice what people respond to
- Repeat the parts that create traction
Do that for 90 days.
Not three days. Not two weeks. Ninety.
Most people won’t. Not because it’s hard — but because it’s repetitive. And repetitive doesn’t feel like progress, even when it is.
The Discipline Advantage
The people who win often look boring from the outside. They’re not chasing every opportunity. They’re not reinventing themselves monthly. They’re running the same play — refined — again and again.
That repetition builds skill. That skill builds confidence. That confidence builds visibility. That visibility builds leverage.
Nothing magical. Just compound ownership.
A Personal Note
There are seasons when direction feels scattered — too many ideas, too many experiments, too much shifting. But progress always accelerates when focus narrows. When one path is chosen. When repetition replaces novelty.
Clarity often follows commitment — not the other way around.
The Bottom Line
If there’s tension in your career right now, the answer probably isn’t something complex.
It’s probably something simple that you haven’t repeated long enough.
You don’t need a dramatic reinvention. You need a problem you care about solving, a clear way to help, and the discipline to repeat what works.
That’s the wildly simple path. And it’s available to anyone willing to stay with it long enough to let it compound.
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