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This episode opens with a simple question that hits home for many agents: Do you struggle with consistency? Rob Nelson is joined by Larry Kendall and Eric Thompson to review the pattern they found while researching Ninja Coaching clients who had their best year yet in 2025. Across different personalities, markets, and business styles, the common denominator was not a specific lead source or marketing tactic. It was consistency, and the clearest measurable indicator of consistency was turning in a weekly scorecard.
They share that 87% of the "Best Year Yet" Ninha Coaching clients consistently turned in a weekly scorecard, making it the strongest correlation they found. The scorecard is positioned as the truth teller and the ultimate tool for tracking, gamifying, and sustaining the Ninja Nine habits over time. Rather than chasing results, the conversation emphasizes managing activities, because activities repeated over time create predictable outcomes.
Larry and Eric walk through what the scorecard is, why it works, and how it has evolved, including modern enhancements like daily personal text messages and tracking open house conversations. They explain the five pathways to consistency, track activities, gamify, join a group, hire a coach, and find an encouragement partner, and show how the scorecard supports all five. They also discuss realistic targets and the idea that perfection is not required. A score of 70 out of 100 is the acceleration point where business becomes consistent, while missing one week is a mistake and missing two is the start of a new habit.
The episode closes with practical guidance on how to restart after falling off, how to plan for 45 full on weeks and seven recharge weeks, and why keeping scorecards in a binder becomes a powerful way to measure progress and diagnose a slump. Larry reinforces the message with a personal example, his long running pushup log, showing how tracking drives consistency, and consistency drives results.
Key TakeawaysConsistency is the common denominator behind best year yet results, even when the specific business style varies
Turning in a weekly scorecard is the strongest measurable correlation, with 87 percent of best year yet coaching clients doing it
Scorecards shift focus from results to activities, which restores control, reduces frustration, and creates momentum
The scorecard supports five ways to stay consistent, tracking, gamifying, joining a group, hiring a coach, and using an encouragement partner
Missing one week is a mistake, missing two is the start of a new habit, so the goal is to avoid the second miss
Managing activities is more effective than managing production, and it is especially useful for managers and sales leaders
Modern enhancements include personal text messages with a FORD question and tracking open houses as a major buyer entry point
Plan for 45 full on weeks and seven recharge weeks to build consistency with grace, sustainability, and real life flexibility
Memorable QuotesDo you struggle with consistency
The number one correlation between having a best year yet is that they turn in a weekly scorecard
Most people do not fail because they do not know what to do, they fail because they do not do what they know consistently
The answer may be you are not keeping score
If you do the activities, the production takes care of itself
Stop trying to manage production and start managing activity
The scorecard is the truth
You can miss one, that is a mistake, but if you miss two, that is the start of a new habit
Two weeks at a hundred and ten weeks at zero is not the same as twelve weeks at seventy
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By Ninja Selling4.8
310310 ratings
This episode opens with a simple question that hits home for many agents: Do you struggle with consistency? Rob Nelson is joined by Larry Kendall and Eric Thompson to review the pattern they found while researching Ninja Coaching clients who had their best year yet in 2025. Across different personalities, markets, and business styles, the common denominator was not a specific lead source or marketing tactic. It was consistency, and the clearest measurable indicator of consistency was turning in a weekly scorecard.
They share that 87% of the "Best Year Yet" Ninha Coaching clients consistently turned in a weekly scorecard, making it the strongest correlation they found. The scorecard is positioned as the truth teller and the ultimate tool for tracking, gamifying, and sustaining the Ninja Nine habits over time. Rather than chasing results, the conversation emphasizes managing activities, because activities repeated over time create predictable outcomes.
Larry and Eric walk through what the scorecard is, why it works, and how it has evolved, including modern enhancements like daily personal text messages and tracking open house conversations. They explain the five pathways to consistency, track activities, gamify, join a group, hire a coach, and find an encouragement partner, and show how the scorecard supports all five. They also discuss realistic targets and the idea that perfection is not required. A score of 70 out of 100 is the acceleration point where business becomes consistent, while missing one week is a mistake and missing two is the start of a new habit.
The episode closes with practical guidance on how to restart after falling off, how to plan for 45 full on weeks and seven recharge weeks, and why keeping scorecards in a binder becomes a powerful way to measure progress and diagnose a slump. Larry reinforces the message with a personal example, his long running pushup log, showing how tracking drives consistency, and consistency drives results.
Key TakeawaysConsistency is the common denominator behind best year yet results, even when the specific business style varies
Turning in a weekly scorecard is the strongest measurable correlation, with 87 percent of best year yet coaching clients doing it
Scorecards shift focus from results to activities, which restores control, reduces frustration, and creates momentum
The scorecard supports five ways to stay consistent, tracking, gamifying, joining a group, hiring a coach, and using an encouragement partner
Missing one week is a mistake, missing two is the start of a new habit, so the goal is to avoid the second miss
Managing activities is more effective than managing production, and it is especially useful for managers and sales leaders
Modern enhancements include personal text messages with a FORD question and tracking open houses as a major buyer entry point
Plan for 45 full on weeks and seven recharge weeks to build consistency with grace, sustainability, and real life flexibility
Memorable QuotesDo you struggle with consistency
The number one correlation between having a best year yet is that they turn in a weekly scorecard
Most people do not fail because they do not know what to do, they fail because they do not do what they know consistently
The answer may be you are not keeping score
If you do the activities, the production takes care of itself
Stop trying to manage production and start managing activity
The scorecard is the truth
You can miss one, that is a mistake, but if you miss two, that is the start of a new habit
Two weeks at a hundred and ten weeks at zero is not the same as twelve weeks at seventy
Links:

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