You've built something real. The work now is making sure it runs without you in every decision.
Significant volume. A team that handles most of the business. Agents and loan officers who want to work with you because of who you are and what you have built. But here is the honest question: does the business actually run when you step back, or does it still depend on you being dialed in? Leading on paper and truly owning this stage are two different things.
The shift here is from producer to vision-caster. From doing to developing. The producers who truly own this stage stop asking what do I need to do and start asking who do I need to develop. They bring on loan officers they can mentor, not just hire. They cast vision and let the team execute it, without being consulted on every step. That is the legacy question. And it starts with the foundation everyone on your team is running on.
The foundation your team runs on determines whether what you built outlasts your personal involvement. The Challenge installs that foundation, across every seat.
Every producer writes and signs their identity claim. Not a goal. A decision. When your team operates from identity instead of behavior modification, the standard holds when you are not in the room. That is the difference.
Same Way Every Time. Each day of the week has a prospecting theme. Every producer runs the same structure, builds the week before it starts, and measures it the same way. Your standard. Every seat.
The same three asks in every conversation, word for word. When your team asks the way you ask, you protect the reputation you have built with agents and clients. That is not a training problem. It is a language problem. Day 5 solves it.