- Florida-based sales leader Jared Rudnick outlines a simple, realistic plan designed for individuals with limited time, focus, and bandwidth.

Florida, US, 15th January 2026,ย ZEX PR WIRE,ย Many professionals know what theyย shouldย be doing, but struggle to find the time to do it consistently. Jared Rudnick, partner at RMS Sales, believes the problem isnโt effortโitโs overcomplication. Drawing on decades of experience in sales and entrepreneurship, Rudnick has outlined a practical plan for people with limited time and attention.
โMost people donโt need a new strategy,โ Rudnick says. โThey need a smaller one theyโll actually follow.โ
Recent data shows why this matters. Studies indicate that over 40% of professionals feel constantly behind on follow-up, while average sales cycles have increased by 18โ25% across manufacturing and related industries. Add in the fact that buyers now take 60% longer to approve new vendors, and the cost of inaction becomes clear.
โYou canโt control the market,โ Rudnick says. โBut you can control what you do with the time you have.โ
The 10-Minute Daily Plan
Best for busy weekdays
Steps:
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Write down one call, one follow-up, and one note for tomorrow
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Send one check-in email to an existing contact
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Review yesterdayโs single most important task
Expected outcome:
Momentum. โWhen you feel overwhelmed, start small,โ Rudnick says. โOne action usually leads to the next.โ
The 30-Minute Focused Plan
Best for mornings or lunch breaks
Steps:
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Review your top three accounts or relationships
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Make two direct outreach attempts (call or email)
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Write one handwritten or digital note outlining next steps
Expected outcome:
Consistency. โEffort compounds,โ Rudnick says. โMissing a goal taught me that more calls and more presence matter.โ
The 2-Hour Weekend Reset Plan
Best for regaining clarity
Steps:
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Review the past week and identify what actually worked
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Write where you want to be in 1, 3, and 5 years
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Clean up your contact list and flag dormant relationships
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Plan next weekโs top five actions
Expected outcome:
Direction. โYou donโt need perfect balance,โ Rudnick says. โYou need a clear direction.โ
What to Avoid
Rudnick cautions against a few common mistakes:
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Overplanning instead of acting
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Waiting for motivation
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Chasing shortcuts or automation too early
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Ignoring follow-up
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Comparing progress to others
โBalance shifts,โ he says. โTrying to hold everything steady usually leads to burnout.โ
Why This Approach Works
Rudnickโs approach reflects how he built his own careerโfrom award-winning sales performance to co-founding RMS Sales. โThere are years you grow and years you learn,โ he says. โBoth matter.โ
He believes simple, repeatable actions are more powerful than complex systems. โTake care of the little things,โ Rudnick adds. โThe bigger things follow.โ
Call to Action
Rudnick encourages readers to start todayโnot next weekโby choosing the 10-minute plan and completing it once. โDonโt wait for clarity,โ he says. โAction creates it.โ
About Jared Rudnick
Jared Rudnick is a Florida-based partner at RMS Sales with more than 20 years of experience in electronics manufacturing representation. He is known for his disciplined, long-term approach to sales, leadership, and building businesses through consistent effort and practical habits.
