
A sneak peek into the thinking behind the book I'm writing: The AI Way - How Business Owners Win in the AI Automation Economy
I woke up this morning thinking about four words: habits, routines, schedules, and discipline.
Most people throw these around interchangeably. They're not the same thing. And if you don't understand how they connect, you'll keep working hard without ever building anything that lasts.
This is one of the core ideas I'm digging into as I write my book — and I figured it's worth unpacking here while it's fresh.
A schedule is tactical. It's time-blocked, minute-by-minute, intentional structure. 9am to 10am is communication. 10am to 11am is build. That's a schedule.
A routine is different. Routine is your groove — the flow you move through your day with almost automatically. You get up. You stretch. You make your coffee. You transition from "off" to "on" without burning mental energy deciding what happens next.
Here's mine as it stands right now:
5–6am: Wake up
6–7am: Personal time — minimum 15 minutes of stretching, non-negotiable
7–8am: Getting to work
8–9am: Getting the day going
9–10am: First communication block
10–11am: Build block
That 15 minutes of personal time might sound small. But here's how I think about it: if you can't carve out 15 minutes each day for yourself, that is exactly where you need to start. You cannot work on anyone else's business, life, or problem before you've shown up for your own.
This is where most people have it backwards.
They think discipline is willpower — something you either have or don't. They try to force it and wonder why it doesn't stick.
Discipline is actually what happens when your routine and schedule are solid. It's the byproduct of structure, not the source of it. When you've built the right routine and time-blocked your schedule, showing up consistently gets easier. It becomes default behavior, not a daily battle.
Let's talk about distraction, because this one costs people a fortune in lost productivity.
The "open door policy" is one of the biggest myths in business culture. Yes — people should feel they can reach you. But that doesn't mean interrupt me whenever you feel like it. If that's how your day actually runs, you will never get the deep work done that moves the needle.
Real accessibility looks like this: someone needs to talk, you schedule it. You box it in at an appropriate time. You protect your build blocks.
I've found that compartmentalizing distraction is one of the most underrated success principles out there. When you stop letting interruptions dictate your day, you start making real, compounding progress.
Looking back over my career — across restaurants, Spiffy, building consulting businesses — there's a pattern I keep coming back to.
The periods of highest output and biggest wins align almost perfectly with the periods of tightest discipline. Locked-in routine. Blocked schedule. Protected focus time.
And the dips? Almost always trace back to a point where I hit a level of success, eased off, and let the structure loosen. Without strong systems in place, that easing off hits harder than people expect.
Here's the thing I'm still working out — and it'll be in the book: the most successful people I've observed aren't just successful in business. They're mentally sharp. Physically healthy. Fit. Intentional about their time.
That's not coincidence. Discipline in one area feeds discipline in another. Routine in the morning supports structure in the afternoon. Physical investment pays back in mental clarity. It all goes together — or it all comes apart together.
I'm in the thick of of the final rewrite right now, and the further I get into it, the more I realize this foundational layer — habits, routine, schedule, discipline — has to come first. Before strategy. Before offers. Before marketing.
You can have the best systems in the world. If the person running them hasn't built the personal infrastructure to execute consistently, the systems fail.
More on this as the book takes shape. I'll be sharing chapters of thinking here as I go — not polished summaries, but real ideas as they develop.
If this resonates, stay close. The best is coming.
— Jonathan
Jonathan Munsell is the founder of Success Systems and the author of an upcoming book on business growth, systems, and the mindset required to build something that lasts called THE AI WAY: The AI Way is the new operating system for business—where AI and automation turn hustle into structure, and structure turns into growth.
I’ll share updates, insights, and release details as this comes together.
If you want to stay in the loop, you can join the early list at https://jonathanmunsell.com/the-ai-way

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