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  • Are You Working from Your Bed?

    Banning the laptop from the bedroom isn’t rigid.

    It’s drawing a line!

    The professionals who keep work out of their sleep space aren’t inflexible.

    They’re defending their peace.

    They know that answering emails under the covers doesn’t make you dedicated.

    It ruins your sleep architecture!

    They know that the bedroom is for recovery, not for revenue.…

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    Tolu Ojewunmi
    1 Comment
    • We underestimate how much our environment shapes our habits. When work and rest share the same space, neither functions well.
      The real question is not where you work, but what it’s costing you when you don’t separate the two.

    • Stop "Chatting" and Start "Operating"

      If you’re only using AI to ask questions, you’re using a Ferrari to drive to your mailbox!

      Most professionals and business owners treat AI like a smarter version of Google.

      They ask it a question, get an answer, and then go back to doing the manual work themselves.

      In the Simply Agile world, we don’t want a “Chatbot.” We want a Workflow.

      The real…

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      Tolu Ojewunmi and Victor Okwara
      2 Comments
      • That shift from asking for information to demanding actual deliverables is exactly how you start buying back your time. It’s way too easy to fall into the trap of treating AI like a glorified search engine instead of a real execution workflow.

        • A lot of people are still stuck in “assistive mode” with AI, when the real value is in “execution mode.”
          The moment you start thinking in terms of outputs instead of answers, everything changes, speed, quality, and even how you structure your work.

        • The Fractional Future of Work

          Stop looking for a ‘job‘ and start looking for ‘work.

          In 2026, the 40-hour-a week, one company for life model is dead.

          If you’re waiting for the perfect full-time offer, you might be missing out on the best bridge to your next career.

          We’ve been raised to think that anything less than a “permanent” role with benefits is a failure. But the market…

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          Tolu Ojewunmi and Victor Okwara
          2 Comments
          • Reframing a contract role as getting “paid to interview” completely changes the game. With companies being more cautious about full-time hires right now, leaning into fractional work is a really smart way to get your foot in the door and prove your value firsthand.

            • The shift from “job security” to “skill relevance” is real. What stands out to me is the idea of treating fractional roles as strategic positioning rather than a fallback. It changes the mindset from waiting to creating opportunities.

            • The "Just One More" Lie

              Leaving a to-do list unfinished isn’t failing. It is being human!

              The business owners who log off with tasks remaining aren’t quitting.

              They’re being realistic.

              They know that staying up to finish “just one more thing” doesn’t clear the plate.

              A new thing always appears. They know that the work is infinite, but their energy is not.

              We…

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              Tolu Ojewunmi and Victor Okwara
              2 Comments
              • I’ve definitely fallen for the “just one more thing” trap, only to realize the to-do list just repopulates anyway. Accepting that the work is infinite but our energy is finite is such a necessary shift for avoiding burnout.

                • For me, it’s the mental carryover.
                  The real discipline isn’t finishing everything. It’s learning to stop without guilt and trust that tomorrow is enough.

                • The Allies Network on Simply Agile

                  Stop explaining your value from scratch every single time!

                  If you are a coach, mentor, or entrepreneur, you already know the most exhausting part of the job: the constant hustle for attention.

                  You post content, someone gets interested, they send a DM, and suddenly you are typing out long paragraphs trying to explain what you do, who it’s for,…

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                  Kerain Shah, Tolu Ojewunmi and Victor Okwara
                  3 Comments
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                  • This is strong because it speaks to a real pain point a lot of coaches, mentors, and founders deal with every day. Constantly re-explaining your value is draining, and it usually means your setup is doing too little of the heavy lifting for you.
                    I like how this positions The Allies Network as structure, clarity, and presence, not just… Read more

                    • Clarity is often the missing link between interest and action. Too many great professionals lose opportunities simply because their value isn’t packaged in a way that’s easy to understand and engage with.

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                    • God is Good - Always! 🙌

                      Tolu Ojewunmi
                      0 Comments
                    • You don’t need a Developer.

                      You just need a Problem to solve.

                      In 2026, “I don’t know how to code” is no longer an excuse for having a messy business process.

                      We’ve all had that moment where we thought: “If I just had a simple app to track these orders/calculate these quotes/onboard these new hires, my life would be so much easier.

                      But in the past, that meant hiring a…

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                      Tolu Ojewunmi and Victor Okwara
                      3 Comments
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                      • This is such a practical reminder. A lot of people are still thinking the only path to fixing a broken process is hiring a full dev team, when in many cases the real starting point is just getting clear on the problem first.

                        What I like here is how it shifts people from “I can’t build this” to “maybe I can solve this faster than I… Read more

                        • The barrier is no longer technical skill, it’s clarity of thinking. If you can clearly define the problem, you’re already halfway to the solution.

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                        • Ghost Jobs

                          “Have you ever applied for a job that seemed perfect, only to see the exact same ad posted again every single month for a year?

                          Welcome to the world of ‘Ghost Jobs‘, where the company isn’t actually hiring, but they’re still collecting your data.”

                          It’s one of the most frustrating parts of job hunting in 2026.

                          You put in the effort, you meet every…

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                          Tolu Ojewunmi and Victor Okwara
                          2 Comments
                          • This is a needed conversation. Job searching is already draining enough without people pouring real effort into roles that were never active to begin with.

                            I like how this turns frustration into something useful by giving people a simple way to vet opportunities before investing too much time. More job seekers need this kind of practical filter.

                            • A lot of candidates assume silence means rejection, when in many cases the role was never active to begin with. That shift in perspective alone can save people a lot of unnecessary stress.

                            • The Doomscroll

                              Numbing out online isn’t resting. It is draining!

                              The people who put their phones in another room aren’t disconnected. They’re fully present. They know that scrolling for two hours doesn’t recharge your battery.

                              It completely depletes your focus. They know that putting the screen down isn’t missing out on the world. It’s re-entering their own…

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                              Victor Okwara and Kim Sanchez Skinner
                              4 Comments
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                              • I started with charging my phone on the other side of the house from the bedroom. That way, I’m no longer using it as my alarm clock and checking news or email before my feet hit the floor.

                                My mornings are better, saving screen time at least until breakfast and coffee. Next goal: screen free meals, even when I’m dining alone.

                                Today, a…

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                              • Such a good reminder. A lot of what we call “rest” is really just overstimulation in a different form, and it usually leaves us feeling even more scattered afterward.
                                I like how simple and real this is. Sometimes the best reset is not doing more, it’s just putting the phone away long enough to feel present again.

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