Make Success A Purposeful Habit
In a time of ongoing tariffs, shifting generational expectations, and rapid developments in AI, purpose-driven professionals are being called to adapt faster and smarter than ever. While the environment around us continues to change, the habits we build can keep us grounded, focused, and fulfilled. James Clear’s Atomic Habits reminds us that big transformations begin with small, intentional actions—a message that feels especially relevant in our industry today.
Focus on Systems, Not just Goals
Clear reminds us that “You don’t rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.” Goals are important—they give us direction. But systems are what keep us moving forward.
Instead of saying, “I want to sell $1 million this year,” create the daily systems to make it inevitable:
- A morning habit of prospecting 10 new leads.
- A weekly system for client follow-ups.
- A process to review and refresh your product knowledge.
Purpose-driven professionals build systems that align with their values, not just their quotas.
Identity-Based Habits: Who do you want to be?
Clear’s most powerful insight is this: true change comes from identity, not outcomes.
Rather than focusing on what you want to achieve, ask: Who do I want to become?
- “I am the kind of rep who always brings fresh ideas.”
- “I am the professional who follows through every time.”
- “I am the leader who invests in my team’s growth.”
When you act from identity, every habit becomes a vote for the person you’re becoming.
The Four Laws of Behavior Change
Clear lays out four keys to habit formation:
- Make it Obvious – Set up cues: leave tomorrow’s prospect list on your desk; schedule weekly reminders to check in with clients.
- Make it Attractive – Pair new habits with things you enjoy: review industry trends while having your favorite coffee.
- Make it Easy – Reduce friction: pre-load proposal templates, keep your sales toolkit organized, automate what you can.
- Make it Satisfying – Celebrate small wins: acknowledge each follow-up, each closed deal, each act of service to a client.
Small Habits Can Create Big Results
Habits are compound interest for self-improvement. One extra call, one handwritten thank-you note, one more product sample sent—it doesn’t seem like much. But over time, these micro-actions separate the good from the great.
Imagine improving by just 1% every day. A year from now, you’ll be 37 times better. That’s the power of small habits, practiced with purpose.
Purpose-Driven Habits for the Promotional Professional
What habits reflect your purpose? Here are a few to consider:
- Daily Connection: One handwritten note or personal message to a client or partner.
- Continuous Learning: Ten minutes a day reading about design trends, AI tools, or supply chain news.
- Intentional Creativity: Create one fresh idea for a client campaign every morning before opening email.
- Reflection: End each week by reviewing what aligned with your values—and what didn’t.
When your habits reflect your purpose, work stops feeling like a grind and starts feeling like a calling.
Big achievements aren’t the result of massive change. They’re the sum of small, purposeful actions repeated over time. As you look at your goals for the remainder of the year, ask yourself: What daily habit would make everything else easier—or even unnecessary?
Start small. Start today. And watch your purpose compound.
Be on purpose,
Paul
Paul Kiewiet MAS+ is an industry speaker, writer, consultant and coach. Kiewiet was inducted into the PPAI Hall of Fame and the MiPPA Hall of Fame. He served as Chairman of PPAI in 2007. A former distributor, he founded Promotion Concepts, Inc in 1982 and worked with some of America’s most valuable brands including Coca-Cola, Kelloggs, and Whirlpool.