
Busyness is not productivity. And more hours do not mean more money.
Most people treat their life like a leftover. Work comes first. Family, fun, travel – those get whatever’s left at the end of the day. And there’s never anything left. That’s not a life. That’s a slow burn.
In this episode, we get into what actually happened when Steve chose his family over his business… and ended up making more money. Because when you shrink your time, you have to think smarter. The deadline of a dinner with your kids will do more for your productivity than any system ever will.
Here’s what you’ll walk away with:
- Plan the fun first. Then fit work in. Put everything you want to do on the calendar first — trips, dinners, date nights, all of it. Then fill in the business around what’s left. Nobody does this. It changes everything.
- Busyness is not productivity. Sitting at your desk longer does not mean you’re getting more done. One meaningful thing done in four hours beats ten forgettable things done in twelve.
- The deadline is the gift. When Steve worked two days a week in New Zealand, he made the same money. Because the constraint forced him to focus on what actually moved the needle and nothing else.
- Freedom makes you better at everything. Better decisions. Better relationships. Better business. When you’re rested and present, people pay you more — because you’re worth more.
Listen to the podcast below:
More Business More Life® Podcast Episode 205
The More Business More Life® podcast has been recorded by Napolitan Inc. It is hosted by the company’s Podbean channel and you can subscribe to the podcast on your favorite apps as follows:


Steve Napolitan
Related posts
Everyone's telling you to deploy AI right now. Almost no one's asking why. Here's the thing. AI accelerates whatever you already have. Good systems get better. Broken systems break faster. So if your processes are a mess and your strategy is fuzzy, AI won't hide that. It'll put it on a billboard. Which means the work isn't the tool. The work is knowing your business first.


