For a recent episode of Revenue Mavericks, I sat down with John Allen, Chief Revenue Officer at G&A Partners, a Houston-based professional employer organization that has grown from 80 employees to over 800 during his tenure. His career has taken him from the basketball courts at BYU to the energy group at JP Morgan to a family business he's spent 17 years helping build into something remarkable. But what stayed with me most wasn't the resume. It was the simplicity and durability of his core belief: if you keep showing up, and you do the work, things have a way of working out.

1. What Basketball Taught Him About Belonging

John didn't point to a business school framework or a leadership book when I asked about the experience that shaped him most. He pointed to a tryout.

As a freshman at BYU, John walked into an open gym with more than 300 other hopefuls for a spot on the basketball team. He wasn't recruited. He had no promises. He just spent the first 60 to 90 days of his college career doing the work: sprints at the track, shots in the field house, early mornings before anyone else showed up.

When the list came down to one name on the Marriott Center door, it was his.

Then he showed up to his first practice and realized his new teammates were bigger, stronger, and faster than him. He came back the next day anyway. Five weeks in, something shifted. He belonged.

The lesson wasn't that talent doesn't matter. John is 6'7" and could shoot. But talent alone didn't get him in the door. Consistency did. And consistency, once it becomes a habit, is hard to outcompete.

"If you love something and you work really hard, there's a good chance you can achieve some pretty great things. And when someone tells you that you can't, that's the first sign that you're going to show them that you can."

2. The Bet He Made on a Family Business

John's inflection point came not on a basketball court but in the middle of a financial crisis.

He was at JP Morgan in Houston, working in the energy group, doing well, and on track for a predictable path upward. Then 2008 hit. The markets collapsed, promotions lost their luster, and John found himself asking a question he hadn't planned on: is this actually what I want?

He called his dad, who happened to be the CEO of G&A Partners. One honest conversation led to another, and John eventually made the choice to leave one of the most recognized financial institutions in the country for a family-owned business with 80 employees. He enrolled in the University of Texas MBA program at the same time, told himself he'd reassess in a few years, and never looked back.

What's worth noting is how he entered. His title was "special projects manager." His job was to ask questions, challenge processes, and figure out where the organization had room to improve. By his own admission, he was probably extremely annoying.

But he also started selling. Not because it was in his job description, but because he wanted to earn more and understood that the only path to that was creating value directly. Five or six years in, that instinct led him into sales leadership. He's been building the function ever since.

The lesson here isn't about nepotism or luck. It's about being willing to take a step that doesn't look obviously right on paper, and then doing the work to justify the bet.

3. Two Things He's Never Stopped Doing

When I asked John about the frameworks that have driven his results, he came back to two ideas that have traveled with him throughout his career.

The first is calendaring with intention. John treats his calendar as a strategic document. Workouts, project blocks, family commitments, Friday planning sessions, all of it goes on the calendar in advance. The goal isn't rigidity. It's the elimination of ambiguity. When you know what you're doing and why, you stop waking up and reacting to the day. You execute the plan instead.

The second is public accountability. For over six years, G&A Partners has run a weekly commitments process through Trello, a project management tool, where leaders at every level of the organization state what they will accomplish that week in front of their peers, and then report back the following week on whether they did it.

The psychology behind it is straightforward. Most people are competitive. Most people don't want to let others down. When your commitments are visible, the pressure to follow through becomes embedded in the culture rather than imposed from above. And it gives leadership the visibility to redirect when needed, something that's impossible when you don't know what people are working on.

"You have to prioritize and schedule and be very regimented in all the things that you have on your plate. If you stick to the plan, you're going to accomplish the important things."

Why This Matters

John's approach to leadership isn't built around a proprietary system or a sophisticated methodology. It's built around habits that compound: show up consistently, earn your place through action, hold yourself publicly accountable, and stay accessible to the people you lead.

The revenue leaders who adopt this mindset don't just build high-performing teams. They build cultures where people want to be held accountable, because they've seen what accountability actually produces.

Listen to the full conversation on the Revenue Mavericks podcast.