You've spent real money on courses, books, and programs you never finished. This is the 7-day sprint that takes one of them off the shelf — and turns it into something real, with a system that keeps running after.
And we both know what's on it:
You're not lazy and you're not behind. You're over-supplied — rich in knowing, starved of doing. And buying one more thing won't close that gap. Finishing something will.
Consuming information feels like progress without the risk of actually trying. So the shelf grows — not because you lack discipline, but because the ideas have nowhere to land. No single target. No minimum version. No slot in your week. Those are system flaws, and systems can be fixed by anyone willing to follow a sequence.
That's the whole idea here. For twenty years I worked in operations and supply chains — the unglamorous job of making sure the right thing happens, repeatably, when it's supposed to. A production line doesn't care how inspired you feel; it cares whether the system runs. The Implementation Sprint puts that same operator's lens on you.
A guided app to do the work in, and a companion guide to think it through. Built to be used, not collected.
One short module a day — five to ten minutes of action, not reading. The app walks you from a cluttered shelf to one working loop, and carries your answers forward as you go.
The method and the mindset behind the sprint, in a clean, premium guide you can read in a sitting and return to — with space to work each day by hand if you prefer.
Seven days from now, it could be done — and you'd know exactly how to do it again.