Important
Another year is almost done. Before you shut the laptop and head off for a well-earned break, there is something worth doing that does not involve spreadsheets, strategy sessions or five-year forecasts. It is reflection.
Another year is almost done.
If you are in a small business, leadership, or even just trying to build a decent life on a salary, you probably feel it. A few highs. A few lows. A couple of roundabouts you swear you have already driven around once before.
That is business. That is life. It is rarely a straight line.
Before you shut the laptop and head off for a well-earned break, there is something worth doing that does not involve spreadsheets, strategy sessions or five-year forecasts.
It is a reflection.
Use the Downtime Properly (Without “Working”)
By this time of year, most people are running on fumes. The natural instinct is to collapse into the couch and try not to think.
And yes — rest matters.
But downtime can be useful without being heavy.
When the noise drops away, your subconscious starts sorting things out. Ideas surface. Priorities become clearer. The “I should really…” thoughts get louder.
Use that space to think about 2026.
Not in a hype, New Year’s resolution way. In a calm, deliberate way.
Ask yourself:
- What do I actually want to achieve next year?
- What needs to change?
- What needs to stay the same?
- What have I been avoiding?
Then reduce some of those thoughts to writing.
Writing Goals Down Changes the Game
There is something powerful about getting goals out of your head and onto paper. It forces clarity.
We all know we should write goals down. Most people do not.
When you write them down properly, a few things happen:
- You start seeing realistic timeframes.
- You separate short-term wins from long-term plays.
- You spot which goals are genuine priorities and which are just ego.
- You realise some “urgent” goals are actually 3–5-year projects.
For example:
- Growing revenue by 30% might sound like a one-year push — but once you break it down, you might see it is a two to three-year structural shift.
- Paying down debt might require short-term restraint to enable long-term flexibility.
- Hiring a senior team member might mean investing in systems first.
Writing it down exposes reality. And that is a good thing.
Turn Around and Look Down the Mountain
If you are goal-driven — and most business owners are — you are probably wired to keep looking up the mountain.
Achieve one goal. Roll straight into the next. Repeat.
The danger?
You forget to turn around and look at the view.
It is incredibly easy to focus on what you did not achieve. The deal fell over. The client you lost. The growth target you missed.
It is much harder to stop and ask:
- What did I actually get done this year?
- What problems did I solve?
- What did I build?
- What did I survive?
When you reduce your achievements to writing, you will often be surprised.
The wins are usually far greater than you remember.
Appreciate the People Who Helped You Get There
None of us achieves anything in isolation.
There were people who:
- Backed you.
- Covered for you.
- Encouraged you.
- Put up with you.
- Challenged you.
- Or simply showed up consistently.
This time of year is a good opportunity to show some direct gratitude.
It does not have to be dramatic.
- A short message.
- A thank you.
- A coffee.
- A simple acknowledgement.
It strengthens relationships. And strong relationships compound over time.
Rest Properly — Then Come Back With Intent
Enjoy the break.
Actually rest.
Recharge properly.
Let the brain reset.
Because once January rolls around, 2026 will not ease you into it gently.
The opportunity next year will not be won by hype or wishful thinking. It will be won by:
- Clarity.
- Consistency.
- Long-term thinking.
- And deliberate action.
Write the goals down.
Review what you have achieved.
Thank the people who helped you.
Reset properly.
Then come back ready to rock and roll.
And attack 2026 like you are angry at it.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information only and does not take into account your personal circumstances. It is not financial or tax advice. You should seek independent advice from a qualified professional before making decisions about tax, legal or financial planning matters, along with loan structures or entity structure.






