Hosted by Financial Advisor Coach, Ray Sclafani, "Building The Billion Dollar Business" is the ultimate podcast for financial advisors seeking to elevate their practice. Each episode features deep dives into actionable advice and exclusive interviews with top professionals in the financial services industry. Tune in to unlock your potential and build a successful, enduring financial advisory practice.
Ray Sclafani (00:00.142)
you
Welcome to Building the Billion Dollar Business, the podcast where we dive deep into the strategies, insights, and stories behind the world's most successful financial advisors and introduce content and actionable ideas to fuel your growth. Together, we'll unlock the methods, tactics, and mindset shifts that set the top 1 % apart from the rest. I'm Ray Schlaffani, and I'll be your host.
I've got a short episode for you today that's centered around a word that's borrowed from the design and publishing industry that applies directly to leading a wealth advising business. And that word is white space. In design, white space is the space around text and images. It's not empty. It's what gives structure and meaning to what you want the reader to notice. Without white space, everything competes for attention and nothing stands out.
Leadership works the same way. White space is this intentional space, space to think, space to reflect, space to create. And in my experience, the most effective leaders, while they don't stumble into white space, they design for it. You see, as the organization will continue to grow, the calendars will fill up, then meetings will multiply, decisions start to stack. The pace while feels productive, necessary even, the constant motion comes with a cost.
When leaders stay embedded in day-to-day execution without stepping back, will they lose perspective? They become excellent at responding and less effective at seeing the forest for the trees. This is not my opinion. Research backs it up. McKinsey's work on senior leadership effectiveness shows that executives who intentionally remove themselves from day-to-day operations to focus on reflection and long-term thinking, will they demonstrate stronger judgment
Ray Sclafani (01:59.512)
better adaptability and higher decision quality in complex environments. Their research consistently points to the same conclusion, distance improves leadership effectiveness. Korn Ferry's leadership research reinforces this. High-performing leaders are not defined by longer hours, they are differentiated by how they allocate their time. Leaders who protect thinking time show greater strategic clarity
make stronger people decisions and build more engaged teams over time. White space is associated with better outcomes, not reduced productivity. Stepping back does not slow performance, it actually sharpens it. The leaders I respect the most understand this intuitively. They don't treat thinking time as a luxury or reward, they think of it as part of their role. They create quiet space for themselves and their leadership team.
Space where they are deliberately removed from meetings, emails, the operational noise day to day, not to escape responsibility, but to meet it at a higher level. I often hear leaders say their best ideas come when they're not trying to be more productive. On a long walk, early in the morning, while traveling alone, those moments are not accidental. They are environments that naturally create white space.
They slow the pace just enough for insight to surface. Whitespace is not catching up on tasks in a quieter location. It's not clearing your inbox without interruptions. True Whitespace requires restraint. It means choosing not to fill every moment back to back to back to back in your calendar. For high performers, that can feel uncomfortable. We're wired to equate activity with value.
And that discomfort is often the signal that you've stepped into a more strategic leadership role. Think of white space as an executive timeout, a deliberate pause that allows you to step above the business rather than remain buried inside it. This is where leaders reframe problems instead of reacting to them, where patterns become more visible, where people and direction come back into focus.
Ray Sclafani (04:24.45)
This becomes more important, not less, as your responsibility grows. When everything feels urgent, nothing gets the depth of thought it deserves. Leaders who never slow down eventually lose altitude. Leaders who protect white space gain perspective, and perspective compounds. The discipline here is simple. At least once a quarter, create intentional white space for yourself. Real space.
Not an hour between meetings, not a half day filled with preparation, time designed specifically for thinking. That might be a half day away from the office, a solo offsite, a long walk with no agenda beyond reflection. Choose an environment that supports the thinking that's gonna work best for you. Fewer inputs, less noise. When you block the time, use this language with yourself. This is an executive timeout.
This is time to think and step above the business, not away from it. This is time to think, connect patterns and create rather than react. Set yourself up for success by reflecting on when you personally think and create at your very best. Is it in the early morning? Is it a travel day? Quiet location? Design your calendar so those conditions are intentional, not accidental.
White space does not show up on a P &L, but I promise you this, its absence eventually will. In design, white space allows meaning to emerge. In leadership, it does the same. If you want to build something enduring, you need the space to think beyond the next meeting, the next quarter, or the next fire drill. Create the space, protect it, treat it as part of the job. For me, I find every time I jump on an aircraft and I
put my Bose headphones on in the listen only mode with no outside noise and I pull out my iPad or a spiral notebook and grab a pen and just sit right and think. It's amazing how the good ideas and the prioritizations just start to rush over. And that's just the first phase. Then by relaxing and quieting the mind, the best ideas come forward. With each episode, I want to make sure that I provide you a couple of coaching questions
Ray Sclafani (06:50.346)
that you can reflect after listening to this episode. And I've only got two coaching questions today. The first is three to five years from now, what kind of leader do you need to be? And where will that clarity come from if your calendar never slows down? The second question, when do you personally think and create at your very best? And how intentionally are you designing your schedule to make that state repeatable?
rather than accidental. For me, I love coming up to Park City when I jump on that aircraft two hours and 15 minutes, and I hit the mountains, all of a sudden, the fresh air, that mountain air comes rushing over. And I just find a great time to think and create and things become more clear. Hey, that works for me. You're gonna laugh. I'm a scuba diver. I'm a rescue certified rescue diver through Patty, a certified master scuba diver. And I find the moment I step into the water and
I start to descend at 15 feet, 20 feet, 30 feet, 40 feet. All of a sudden things open up. All I hear is my own breath and a really quiet, relaxed dive. For me, some people listening to this episode might think Ray, you're out of your mind. For me, that's a place where the quietness, the ride on the boat out to the dive site, the dive, the ride back. Wow. For me, that just opens up. So I would encourage you right now, here's an actionable idea.
Open up your calendar. Look at the 12 months ahead and block not one or two or three, but four quarterly white space sessions for yourself. Name it, put it on the calendar, protect the time, keep it non-negotiable and consider it that executive time out. This is not time away from leadership. That is where leadership actually happens. I hope you enjoyed today's episode. Well, thanks for tuning in and that's a wrap.
Until next time, this is Ray Sclafani. Keep building, growing, and striving for greatness. Together, we'll redefine what's possible in the world of wealth management. Be sure to check back for our latest episode and article.