Prospecting gets talked about like it needs to be heroic.
Wake up at 5. Make 100 calls. Never hesitate. Never get tired. Never have a weird Tuesday where your brain feels like a damp sock.
That version of prospecting is not useful for most advisors.
The advisors who stay consistent are usually not the ones doing the most dramatic stuff. They are the ones who have a simple weekly system. They know what they are doing, when they are doing it, and what “done” looks like before the week gets messy.
That is what this checklist is for.
Not to turn you into a prospecting robot. Just to help you keep the pipeline moving without having to reinvent your entire approach every Monday morning.
“Prospect more” is not a plan.
It sounds good. It is also too fuzzy to survive contact with meetings, client work, admin, and life in general. A weekly checklist works because it turns prospecting into a repeatable rhythm instead of a permanent background guilt cloud.
It also helps with one of the biggest prospecting mistakes advisors make: spending too much energy deciding what to do next.
The more decisions your system makes for you, the more likely you are to actually follow through.
Before you start, define what a solid prospecting week looks like for you.
That might be:
Your numbers will depend on your model, your niche, and how you like to work. The point is not to copy someone else’s volume. The point is to give yourself a clear target and a clear finish line.
A weekly checklist works best when it is realistic enough that you can actually repeat it.
Prospecting goes off the rails fast when Monday starts in chaos.
Use the start of the week to clean up the pipeline and figure out where your energy should go.
Monday checklist:
This part is not glamorous, but it matters. A lot of prospecting friction is really just organizational drag wearing a fake mustache.
This is where the week actually starts producing movement.
Do not wait for the perfect mood. Do not wait until you feel especially bold, charismatic, or spiritually aligned with the phone.
Block time and do the work.
Tuesday checklist:
This could be calls, emails, LinkedIn messages, referral outreach, or re-engagement messages. The channel matters less than consistency.
A lot of advisors prefer fresh outreach because it feels more productive. Follow up can feel repetitive, awkward, or easy to avoid.
It is also where a lot of real opportunity lives.
Wednesday checklist:
Follow up is not the leftover task. It is the task that keeps promising conversations from quietly dissolving.
Prospecting is not only about volume. It is also about staying visible in a way that feels useful.
This is a good day for softer touches that help people remember you and understand how you think.
Thursday checklist:
This is where prospecting starts to feel less transactional and more like relationship building.
A good Friday prospecting routine stops you from starting the next week half-buried in forgotten notes and unfinished intentions.
It does not need to be long. It just needs to happen.
Friday checklist:
This is also a good place to ask one useful question:
What made prospecting easier this week, and what made it harder?
That question usually tells you more than another generic productivity article ever will.
A weekly checklist gets better when it sits on top of a few simple rules.
If you are calling, emailing, checking LinkedIn, updating the CRM, and rewriting your script all in the same 40 minutes, you are not prospecting. You are pinballing.
Batching works better.
If there is no next step, the lead tends to vanish into the soft furniture of your CRM.
Some advisors hide in follow up. Others hide in new outreach. A strong week usually includes both.
Prospecting gets harder when every interaction feels like it needs to become a full discovery call immediately. Often the real win is just getting the conversation moving.
A quiet Tuesday does not mean the system is broken. Prospecting has some lag built into it. Let the week play out.
You do not need a giant dashboard that looks like an air traffic control center.
You do need a few numbers.
Track:
That is enough to start seeing patterns.
If meetings are low but replies are decent, your next-step language might need work. If touches are high and replies are dead, your targeting or message may be off. If follow up is weak, you probably do not need a new lead source yet. You need a better weekly rhythm.
The most common prospecting problem is not laziness. It is friction.
Too many tasks. Too many channels. Too much vagueness. Too much emotional resistance around outreach. Too much reliance on motivation.
That is why a weekly checklist helps.
It lowers the activation energy. It gives structure to the week. It helps you do the next right thing instead of arguing with yourself about whether now is the right time to do it.
And honestly, that argument is exhausting.
If you want the shortest possible version, here it is:
Weekly prospecting checklist
That is it.
Not glamorous. Not complicated. But very usable.
Prospecting gets easier when it becomes familiar.
Not easy easy. Not floating-through-a-field easy. But easier in the very practical sense that your brain stops treating it like a dramatic event every time it shows up on the calendar.
That is the real value of a weekly checklist. It turns prospecting from a looming concept into a repeatable practice.
And repeatable is usually what wins.
If you want to build on this, these topics fit naturally alongside it: