The Operator Mode Checkpoint
4 techniques to keep movement building with a demanding day job
On Monday I passed the 3-month mark at CRED.
I set this checkpoint before I even started.1
I knew I’d need it, and I was right.
I’m Back in Operator Mode
Some of you know this reality too well.
Operator Mode is when you’re almost inseparable from the machine of the organization you run or help run. Your body clock syncs to the corporate clock. You’re 100% alert to Slack, email, task deadlines and calendar appointments from at least 9-5. There’s no real shutdown after hours because the business keeps humming and you need to check and adjust the dials.

When you carve out time for something not work-related, you feel like you need to make up for it late at night, or early morning, or on the weekend.
There are always goals just out of reach. You track 15 urgent fires and 150 backlog items and lose sleep over broken systems and fantasize about your nice-to-haves. You accept commitments you wish you didn’t have to because it has to get done and there’s nobody else to do it. To be an operator you have to over-commit, then find a way to close the gap. People are counting on you. Profit is counting on you.
You can’t shut down. The machine needs you.
You are the operator.
I learned this at Box when I was the senior manager responsible for strategy and growth programs for a business unit. Box Consulting (BC) enacted the actual transformation for customers like Apple, Broadcom, and State Street. We were the tip of the spear to get traction with our most advanced technology, win bigger deals, and demonstrate unmatched impact at scale. We weren’t selling software seats - we were delivering fundamental change in how organizations functioned.
And our performance got mentioned on earnings calls and affected the stock price. Investors were watching and executives were watching. My VP and peers were counting on me. My wealth and career tied to those numbers, even if I only had so much influence on them, and even if a pandemic or an activist investor radically altered our operating conditions.
When things went well or poorly, I felt that weight.
When pressure, incentives, visibility, measurability, competition all demand you give it your all, Operator Mode feels essential.
At CRED I feel it again. I presented to the board a few days ago. I’m hiring multiple key roles, transitioning out folks, and managing a team. I run our OKR process, set company targets, and approve the budget. My CEO travels often and when he’s out, I’m the leader in charge.
This is an operator job and I’ve turned on Operator Mode.
But unlike a few years ago, I now have concrete practices to protect what matters outside of the day job.
It’s not easy. It can feel like holding a position against a riptide.
Staying Tethered to the Shore
Operator mode took over pretty quickly at CRED. The external accountability, role-based commitments, and material incentives commands the calendar and clock.
The other gravitational pull is health and home. Family has immediate needs - well-being, learning, logistics, and connection. When these are cut back, it has serious and immediate consequences.
Movement work? That’s where responsibility is diffuse, timelines are long, and deadlines are always negotiable, even when ultimately the stakes are still really high.
It takes discipline to keep making investments in a movement when there’s limited gravity compared to what family and job demand. But it is possible, and that discipline actually becomes its own kind of gravity that anchors you to values and building the legacy you want. It’s what keeps you from getting swept to sea.
The hardest part can be knowing what that discipline needs to look like.
Infrastructure Progress & 2026
Six weeks ago I announced I was shifting from publishing to infrastructure building.2 That was both a real strategic priority and a move for public accountability.
Since that announcement, I’ve taken three steps3 to advance the infrastructure:
I renewed my GHL subscription to power my CRM and marketing automation
I reengaged the developer I worked with last year to build the Timeless Leader website so we can make some long-overdue updates.
I’ve built the segmentation strategy for attracting and engaging with different kinds of people with different needs.
I also hosted December Basecamp and signed up a new paid member. Growth is still all word-of-mouth, and it’s nice that this is doing well without too much effort.
The next steps from here are the following:
Q1 - Finish Infrastructure Shift: launch at least 3 different landing pages and onboarding flows, and shift my emails off Substack and to GHL.
Q2 - Multi-media marketing and teaching: The Q1 stretch goal is to kick-off a multi-media content project and start a fresh posting cadence across LinkedIn, Substack, and Youtube. If this pushes to Q2 or even Q3, that’s ok.
Ongoing: Continue the Basecamp, and recruit more members to the Summit program.
Let’s talk about the lessons you can take from this for your own movement work.
Four Strategies for Your Own Movement Work
The lesson here isn’t “do exactly what Joe does.” It’s that leading a for-profit business and advancing movement work at the same time requires a specific discipline:
Limit work in progress. I’m alternating between building infrastructure and recruiting members. Not doing both at once. Right now it’s infrastructure season.
Maintain and nurture your audience. Even if marketing isn’t the key focus, I know some periodic updates and nuggets of value matter. This keeps forward momentum, even if it's slow going.
Set public checkpoints for accountability. I made a promise last month, and this is my follow-up. I’m not just making an agreement with myself, I’m committing to you. Without public stakes, it’s too easy to procrastinate and move the goal posts.
Get help. I can’t build TL infrastructure by myself while running CRED. So I pay for tools and project support. I’m also looking for more volunteers - to write, to host Basecamp calls, to spread the word. You can’t do movement work entirely solo, ESPECIALLY while in operator mode with a day job. It’s a shared effort.
These techniques are the bare minimum, but they work. I may not have the same level of pressure to make progress with TL as I do in my job or my family, but I can create conditions where I don’t lose touch with the legacy I’m committed to building.
What has no deadline in your life?
Your book, your business your movement….the legacy work that’s too easy to put off until “someday”… are you making the progress you’ve hoped for?
We’re approaching the end of the year, and it’s a great time to turn the dream of your legacy into a commitment to do the work.
If the commitment is already made but you’re juggling too much, focus on the few things that actually fit your capacity and move the needle.
Limit your WIP. Maintain your connections. Work out loud. Get help.
If you tie it to building a Democratic Ownership Society4, together we’ll make real progress in the year ahead.
Sending you warm wishes for the holidays,
-Joe
PS. If your movement work IS your day job, your Operator Mode has the tailwind of passion and purpose. That said, the same techniques can help you be more effective, and might be useful to apply to your other side projects - for income or for impact.
In October I shared an updated called Leading in the First 90 Days.
My Post #100 from November, Time to Build, described my writing pause to focus on infrastructure.
I'll do a more detailed breakdown of GHL, why I chose it, and how you might experience it in a future post.
I highly recommend reading Robert Arnold’s post today, where he has a great insight on legacy: “every attempt to lock down legacy accelerates the very judgment it fears. History is least kind to those who try hardest to control it.”


Couldn't agree more. Sometimes even my AI models fel like they're in constant operator mode.
Limiting WIP hahaha! That's also something I have had to create discipline around. There will always be too much to do and learn and I don't have to do everything in the next 3 months :D