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EP019 | When It's a System Problem
02/19/2026
EP019 | When It's a System Problem
Volume is solid. Skill is solid. But something between "interested" and "paid" is leaking. System problems are the rarest constraint type—and the most overdiagnosed. Everyone wants to believe their machine is broken because it implies they've already done the hard work. But most people who think they have a system problem actually have a volume or skill problem. In this episode, I'm breaking down what real system problems look like, how to audit your journey, find the leak, and fix it without overengineering. Your homework: Map every step from stranger to client. Test your tech. Look at drop-off points. If you find a leak, fix it this week. Here's how you find the leak. Audit the journey. Walk through every step from "stranger sees your content" to "client pays you money." Write each step down. Now ask at each step: What's supposed to happen here? What actually happens here? Is there a gap? Look for places where the answer is "I try to remember to..." or "usually I..." or "most of the time..." Those are system gaps. The process depends on your memory, your energy, your attention. And when any of those fail, leads leak out. Check the tech. When's the last time you tested your own funnel? Filled out your own form? Clicked your own links? Go through the entire process as if you were a customer. On mobile. On desktop. In different browsers. See if everything actually works. You'd be amazed how often something is broken and nobody noticed because the owner never tested it from the outside. Look at the drop-off points. If you're tracking numbers (and you should be), look at where conversions drop dramatically. 100 people visit your page 40 fill out the form 15 book a call 12 show up 4 buy Where's the biggest drop-off? That's where you look for the system leak. 40 form fills to 15 booked calls? What's happening in that gap? Is the follow-up working? Is the calendar link working? 15 booked to 12 show-ups? Is there a reminder sequence? Is there friction in the confirmation process? The numbers point you to the leak. Then you investigate. Now, once you find the leak—how do you fix it? For broken tech: Fix the tech. Test it. Monitor it. Set up alerts if possible so you know when things break. For process gaps: Build the process. Create the follow-up sequence. Write the check-in messages. Systematize the handoffs. For manual tracking failures: Get a simple CRM. Doesn't have to be fancy. You just need a way to track where every lead is and what the next action is. There are free options. Use one. For handoff fumbles: Document the handoff. When someone buys, what's the exact sequence of events? Write it down step by step. Then make sure it happens every time—automated where possible, checklist where not.
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