By the time you hit this part of the year, agency momentum starts telling the truth.
The New Year hype is gone.
The big January plans are old news.
The “we’re gonna tighten everything up this year” speeches have either turned into action… or they haven’t.
And right about now, you can usually tell which agencies are building a stronger year and which ones are slowly drifting into survival mode.
It usually comes down to one thing:
That’s it.
Not a magic script.
Not a secret carrier relationship.
Not some revolutionary new sales trick.
Just discipline.
Most agencies start the year with some level of urgency.
They’re talking about:
January is full of ambition.
But ambition is easy when the calendar is fresh and everyone still feels like they’re “getting back on track.”
The real separator shows up later.
That’s where better agencies pull away.
Not because they stop caring.
Because they stop tightening the screws.
They start getting loose with:
Nothing breaks all at once.
It’s death by drift.
One missed follow-up here.
One stale prospect there.
One week of “we’ll get back on it next week.”
Then suddenly it’s June and the agency is wondering why production feels soft.
They’re not dramatic.
They’re not reinventing the wheel every week.
They’re just consistent.
They keep doing the things that actually move the business:
That doesn’t sound sexy.
It sounds like work.
Because it is.
But it’s also what wins.
This doesn’t mean running your team into the ground.
It means refusing to let standards slip just because the calendar got busy.
Not “when we get to it.”
Not “if the producer has time.”
Still matters.
Not in theory.
Not in a spreadsheet no one opens.
Actually happen.
Clients don’t care that your office is busy.
If you wait too long to communicate, you create your own problems.
Agencies get sloppy when leadership gets vague.
People need clarity.
They need standards.
They need to know what matters most right now.
It’s a quarter with no structure.
Because without structure, teams start operating off emotion:
That’s not leadership.
That’s pinball.
And pinball doesn’t build an agency.
A lot of agencies don’t have a motivation problem.
They have a maintenance problem.
They know what works.
They just stop doing it consistently once the year gets rolling.
That’s why some agencies feel like they’re constantly “trying to get back on track.”
They keep abandoning the track.
The agencies that win in Q2 usually aren’t doing something wildly different.
They’re just doing the fundamentals longer than everyone else.
When everybody else gets loose, distracted, reactive, or tired…
they stay disciplined.
And in this business, discipline has a funny way of looking a lot like momentum.