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10 / Dec / 2013
For many of you, the festive season signals a time to assess business performance for the first half of the financial year, and to plan changes that hopefully will deliver you a prosperous new year.
And with all the hype of new year celebrations some of you may even be tempted to make new year’s resolutions for you and your business!
But can a new year’s resolution represent a viable business strategy? I think the answer is “it depends”.
A new year’s resolution can be defined as “a promise that you make (often to yourself) to start doing something good or stop doing something bad on the first day of the year”.
A more flippant, but probably more accurate, definition is “an assessment of, and often delusional attempt to correct, one’s shortcomings…. “.
I say more accurate because a recent research study of 3000 people making a new year’s resolution found that, while 52% of participants were confident of success initially, only 12% actually achieved their goal – meaning an overall failure rate of 88%.
A range of other studies relating to new year’s resolutions shows that success increases as the level of accountability increases, especially where that accountability is to another person.
So, while a new year’s resolution is no substitute for a structured, well considered, business planning approach, maybe there is a place for it in the scheme of things.
When might this be? I think when the resolution relates not to working in or on the business, but rather to the owner working on him or her self.
So if you have a burning desire to make a new year’s resolution, maybe something along the following lines might give you a good chance of success:
But in my view the best possible new year’s resolution would have to be
And if you forget to make it on 1 January, make it on 2 January, or 3 January, or 4 January or ….. You get the idea!
Then, when new year’s day 2015 rolls around, the only new year’s resolution you will need to make will be “to continue to manage my business in line with my business plan”.
Merry Christmas and a happy New Year’s resolution.
This guest blog was provided by Neil McVicar of Small Fish Business Coaching. If you need help with establishing your business plan we can recommend Neil – he’s helping us!