31 March 2026
By Lyn Oaten, Co-founder
March is a special month. Not just because it hints at spring, lighter evenings and the odd brave daffodil, but because it marks the end of the financial year.
In business terms, it’s New Year’s Eve with spreadsheets.
More importantly, March is the ideal moment to pause, take stock, and start planning ahead so you can prepare for 2026–27 with clarity and confidence.
It’s your chance to close one chapter properly and make this year better than the last, with less stress and far more purpose.
Good planning ahead always starts with a deceptively simple question:
“Where do I actually want to end up?”
Too many businesses focus on tasks instead of outcomes and while tasks keep you busy, outcomes move you forward.
If you want to prepare for 2026–27 properly, you need a clear picture of what success looks like first.
Is it:
Once the destination is clear, planning ahead becomes easier and you can reverse‑engineer the steps needed to get there (like IKEA furniture, but with instructions that actually make sense and no leftover screws).
Your business should support your life, not compete with it and if you want to make this year better, your personal goals need to shape your business planning.
When you plan ahead with personal goals in mind, you avoid building a business that looks impressive on paper but feels exhausting in real life (like owning a Ferrari you’re too busy to drive).
To truly prepare for 2026–27, it helps to break planning ahead into realistic timeframes:
Clear time horizons stop everything feeling urgent and help you plan ahead without burning out.
Planning ahead only works if your goals are actionable. That’s where SMART goals come in:
For example:
Your goal shouldn’t be “Get more clients”, it should be “Secure three new monthly retainer clients by 30 September through targeted networking and referrals.”
SMART goals turn intentions into action and action is what helps make this year better.
Setting goals is easy but sticking with them is where planning ahead really earns its keep.
Build in regular reviews:
These check‑points help you adjust course early, rather than realising in February that things drifted off track back in July.
Reflection matters, but it shouldn’t turn into an archaeological dig.
You need to ask yourself:
Take the lesson, not the luggage.
Dwelling on mistakes doesn’t help you plan ahead but action does.
There is never a bad time to reset, refocus and take a proper look at where you are heading.
With thoughtful planning, clear goals and regular reviews, you can move forward with more confidence and make the year ahead better, not busier, not more stressful, just better.
Because the best time to plan for the future was yesterday.
The second best time is now.
Get in touch with our team today for advice and guidance.