Sean Dyche was proud of the group effort after Burnley extended their fine run with a hard-fought 3-1 win against Fulham.
The Clarets have rallied impressively since relegation back to the Sky Bet Championship and moved up to second in the standings with Tuesday's win at Turf Moor.
Andre Gray's brace gave Burnley a deserved half-time lead, but Fulham belatedly kicked into gear after the break and Ross McCormack's fine effort shortly after half-time led to a nervy ending.
Substitute Matt Taylor settled the nerves in stoppage time by wrapping up the win, which means Dyche's men have secured 29 points from the last 36 available.
"There is a humbleness about the way I work and the group," the Burnley boss said.
"We know there's no guarantees - you have to be ready every single time and you have to find different ways of operating, different ways of winning.
"We never do any BS, quite frankly - we always tell the lads the truth, the demands, that these are a good side we are playing, these are the details.
"But we are a good side so we have got to operate in a manner that can be effective and it is a case of so far (so good), but it is a so-far situation because we know it is a marathon not a sprint.
"(Wolves on Saturday is) another tough place, another tough game, but they're all tough, home and away.
"I haven't played a Championship game yet that is a walk in the park, that's for sure.
"Sometimes you are performing really, like tonight in the first half was, and it was a more comfortable performance.
"The second half it wasn't, so there's no guarantees. You've got to be right all of the time."
Fulham's second-half upturn was a case of too little, too late as they looked to turn things around following a toothless first half.
There were times when it looked like they would return to west London with at least a point, but Kit Symons was left ruing what could have been.
"I gave them a little bit of a volley, really," the Fulham manager said of his half-time team talk. "I told them to liven up, be a bit more confident. It's the same old.
"You lose games of football sometimes, but if you are going to go down then go down with your boots on, having a right go.
"We did that in the second half so I have no complaints with the second half.
"I thought we were very brave, really had a go and if we had got something out of the game then I don't think too many people could have complained, really."
Source: PA-WIRE