Dave Anderson, founder of LearnToLead, is calling on dealership personnel to stop glorifying busyness and instead measure success by productivity. Speaking on the latest episode of Lessons in Leadership, Anderson asserts that too many professionals confuse activity with accomplishment.
“We love to go home and tell our spouse how busy we were. We tell our teammate, ‘Well, I’ve been busy all day,” Anderson clarifies. “Very often that has very little to do with whether or not you were productive.”
Anderson cautions that many people mistake motion for progress, speed for direction, and often prioritize minor tasks over meaningful work. He compares the problem to a rocking horse, saying it “moves a lot, but it’s not doing anything.”
Instead, Anderson urges leaders to narrow their focus to four key priorities each day. This is what he calls “MAX ACTS,” or maximum activities. He asserts that identifying the four most impactful tasks helps leaders know where to concentrate their efforts and what to say “no to.
“Sometimes we confuse activity with accomplishment."
“Out of 40 things I have to do today, if I could only do four that were most predictive of taking me to where I need to go, what would they be?” he said. “The only way you can know what to say no to is to first understand up front what you must say yes to.”
By keeping a tight focus, Anderson said leaders can sharpen execution and excel at the tasks that matter most. True effectiveness, he emphasized, comes not from completing every item on a list but from prioritizing the right work.
He also asserts that effective execution is not just getting things done, “it’s getting the right things done and knowing what to leave undone until those right things are accomplished.”


