Scale

Everyone Says “Build Systems,” but What Does That Actually Mean?

The Goal Setting System That Actually Works


If you’ve been around business, entrepreneurship, or any growth-focused community for more than ten minutes, you’ve heard some version of this phrase:

“You need to build systems.”

Great advice. Totally true.
But also incredibly vague.

What does building systems actually mean? What does it look like in practice, inside a real company with real customers, real orders, and real people who all have different responsibilities?

Because it’s one thing to say it.
It’s another thing to execute it.

Today, I want to show you what it looks like when a system goes from concept to reality.

The Problem With One-Off Work

Inside ezJustice, we handle a wide variety of projects. Some are large-scale implementations. Others are small, supplemental, or unique one-off orders that don’t happen every day.

And like in most companies, those smaller items are the easiest to lose track of.

Not because people are lazy.
Not because anyone is ignoring them.
But because without a defined workflow, they get passed around verbally, handled differently every time, and ultimately… things fall through the cracks.

If you’ve ever had a customer ask “Hey, did that thing ever get shipped?” you know exactly what I mean.

This is exactly where systems matter most.

Turning Chaos Into Clarity

To fix this, we built a full end-to-end process at ezJustice for handling every supplemental or one-off order.

It covers:

    • Who owns each stage

    • How the handoffs work

    • What triggers movement from one status to the next

    • What qualifies an order as complete

    • What happens when someone is waiting

    • How accounting plugs into the workflow

    • How the whole thing is tracked inside HubSpot

This isn’t theory.
It’s a real system that keeps our operations tight and our customers well-served.

So instead of saying “build systems,” I want to show you one.

A Real SOP You Can Learn From

I’m sharing the exact SOP we just rolled out.
This is a living, breathing example of how systems should be designed so the entire team knows exactly what to do and when to do it.

--> Click here to download the full SOP

Use it as inspiration. Copy pieces of it. Compare it to your own workflows.
Whatever helps you build processes that make your business run smoothly.

Why Systems Matter

When people say “businesses don’t scale people, they scale systems,” this is what they’re talking about. Systems reduce confusion, eliminate assumptions, and create consistency across your company.

They free your team from constant questions.
They free you from babysitting tasks.
And they free the business to grow without breaking.

Because a company without systems relies on luck.
A company with systems relies on structure.

If you found this helpful and want to see more behind-the-scenes examples like this, let me know. I’m always building new processes and am happy to share more as we refine and scale.

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