Stop Hating the Boring Stuff
Consistency in business is one of the hardest things to pull off.
Table of Contents
ToggleAnd I know you feel me. Take a look, for instance, at the number of projects you’ve started and stopped over the years. And I’m raising both hands too, sis. But I now have a definition for what ‘sticking with it’ means.
Consistency is the over-and-over-again treadmill we climb on when we want better results, better data, better systems, frankly… better anything.
And I know because that was exactly what the lead of my development team was really asking me about last December when he said:
“How do you know it’s going to work, Judette?”
Nouman’s question was focused on the consistent efforts I had been putting into one of my projects back in December. And he had every right to ask.
For three straight weeks, I’d been building a validation system for the launch of the Business Reset Guide + Planner, which my tiny team and I launched last December.
Think of it as a controlled test.
One Example Of Consistency In Business At Work
The intention was simple: build a small-budget Meta ad campaign that led straight to the landing page of the Guide and Planner.
The end game was even simpler: see if those ads could turn browsers into buyers, the curious into customers.
I was so over clicks
Plus, I’m data-obsessed, so I asked Nouman to pull the numbers from past launches so I could study what worked, what didn’t, and all the stories from the metrics that were both obvious and hidden.
From there, I built the logic for the test: what we would spend, the specific metrics we needed to glued into, a brief into which point we’d adjust etc.
The work was detailed. Boring. Consistent.
So when Nouman asked me the question, I paused.
Because when you’re in the trenches, it’s hard to explain how you’re seeing both the big picture and the details at the same time.
My answer to Nouman was dead panned.
“Nouman,” I said; “I’ve done the boring, hard stuff, consistently, of course it’s going to work.”
Over the years when it came to selling online products, I had studied. I executed. I failed. I studied again.
I gained a little traction, looked at the data, hired a coach, and kept going. Tweaking and going again until I found the results I was looking for.
Did I mention this was lonesome work.
Most of it happened at night, when the team was long gone, the house was quiet. I was already several launches in when I decided it would no longer be “go big or go home.”
I was quietly confident in what I’d learned: spend small, test, read the data, decide whether to scale or pause.
I did that over and over again.
And yes, it was tedious. No one loves boring. Boring never makes for a good headline.
But my confidence in December came because I had done the boring, repetitive work required when you’re on a success path.
Why Consistency in Business Is Built on Boring Work
Developing the keep-at-it muscle early enough was one of the best things I ever did.
Many have done the same thing. In fact, most of the people I looked up to, the ones who carved a path I could actually walk on, understood what consistency in business really looked like in practice: repeating the same processes day in and day out.
Marie Forleo did it the unsexy way: while she was a dance instructor and a bartender, she collected email addresses at every event, every encounter, every room she stepped into. So when she finally launched her online business, she wasn’t starting from zero; she already had a database with thousands of names.
Jasmine Star, an 8 figure business owner would set up her camera in her studio every single Wednesday at the same time. No one would show up to her Lives at first, but she was learning consistent storytelling, mastering presentation skills. When her first viewers turned into hundreds and then thousands, she was more than ready to commnad their attention.
Pat Flynn, a successful You Tuber would flim his YouTube script every week on the same day and time, with the same distribution checklist. Fifteen years and over 1,000 episodes later, that system still drives his success.
Different industries. Different personalities. Same pattern: they picked a process and stayed with it long enough for it to compound.
Boring isn’t the problem. Most times, boring is the solution.
Pointing Fingers
Here’s why I think we’re drawn to the razzle-dazzle
I realised it while watching Mia Mottley in conversation with Trevor Noah on YouTube.
Mottley, the PM of Barbados is a force on the global stage. And Noah, once dominated late night television, he’s an author and a super successful podcaster.
They talked about the steady diet of short hits we’re fed on social media packed enough stimulation to keep us scrolling, but not enough depth to build anything meaningful.
I lingered on that for a bit, because it’s not just social media at play here.
It’s the entire pace we’re moving at now, the way things are packaged, sold, and repeated until we start to believe that progress is supposed to feel fast and visible.
Consistency In Business Demands We Linger
But those in the trenches know that consistency calls for us to linger with a challenge long enough even when the pace of everything else is moving fast.
So yes, for sure we drift. We get bored. We convince ourselves an idea needs to be discarded when sometimes the real issue is that we haven’t sat with the work long enough to find the solutions.
I see this in my coaching calls the time.
I remember once coaching someone who launched her digital offer.
It didn’t work, she made zero money from her launch. And yet here she was on a call with me to talk about launching a new project, a book.
I asked her to show me the ecosystem behind her first offer and immediately saw the disconnect. Her offer did not speak to her target audience, her web page did not show off her value propostion well enough.
She was chasing a shiny penny instead of fixing what did not work
My wholesome take is that sometimes the most strategic thing you can do is stay with your work long enough to get a real answer from it.
I’m not pointing fingers. I’m holding up a mirror.
Because if you’re building anything like a funnel, an ad campaign, an ecosystem, a plan, a pitch, heck, a business, you’re going to come face-to-face with this question..
Should you repeat, start over with the same thing but from a different direction, work on a new angle, test, decide what you’re willing to tweak?
Through iteration after iteration I know that what we repeat shapes what we get.
How to Use This Information
So what does consistency in business look like when you bring it down from a big idea and into your actual week as a biz owner?
I have some examples that sort of leans into my take that consistency isn’t just blind repetition.
It is repetition after careful analysis. There is a difference
You’re not ony repeating for the sake of discipline, but also so you can actually see what’s working. What’s not. What needs tightening. What needs to go.
Here are 3 exmaples.
If you’re growing an email list
Spend 3–4 hours a week writing one useful, value-packed email or draft.
Choose one lead magnet and mention it every time you post on social, even when you feel repetitive.
Review your subscriber growth once a week and notice what topic brought the right people in.
Over a few weeks, you’ll start to see the difference between what gets attention and what brings in people who actually stay.
If you’re selling a product online
Set one weekly “sales hour” to check your numbers, tighten your page, and improve one thing.
Collect one simple question after every purchase so you learn what made the decision easy.
Scan your DMs, replies, and objections at month-end and turn them into your next set of sales points.
Your real messaging comes from what people are already showing you they care about.
If you’re building consistency on social
Pick three content themes and rotate them.
Batch-create your posts in one sitting, then schedule them so your week isn’t held hostage by posting.
Do a 10-minute review every Sunday, look at what worked, what felt easier than expected, and what you’re repeating next week.
Over time, you’ll see which ideas worked. There will be some that don’t but consistency will demand you look at the data and adjust.
FAQ About Consistency
Why is consistency important in business?
My take is simple; it allows you to gather enough information to make decisions based on what’s actually happening, not what you think should be happening. Big difference.
What does consistency in business really mean?
It means staying with a process long enough to understand what results you’re seeing from your efforts, and adjusting from there.
Why do most people struggle with consistency?
We’re surrounded by speed, noise, and constant new ideas, which makes it harder to stay with something long enough to see results.
The Bottom Line
Most people chase shiny pennies before the results they really want have had time to show up.
But I promise you, boring is where the advantage lives.
That’s the part of consistency in business we don’t talk about enough. The staying. The watching. The adjusting before you run off to chase the next thing.
Ask me how I know.
We took a small ad spend this Christmas and made 3 x as much in profit.
That was the boring stuff doing what the boring stuff does.
At the time of writing I’ve already built the evergreen funnel so the Business Reset Guide + Planner can sell quietly throughout the year from one clear system.
I no longer need to attach sales to a big exhausting launch.
I’ll keep saying this until I’m blue in the face: 2026 may be the year of the horse, but we all need to put direction and intention before the gallop.
I beg of you, stay close to the unglamorous parts.
Learn from them. Refine them. Let them show you the way.
Because in my own boring journey, I’ve learned that staying with the basics long enough for them to pay off is the kind of consistency in business most people underestimate.



























