Should We Be Planning 2026? (How to Lead Your Business in an Unpredictable Market)
If you've been wondering whether it even makes sense to plan for 2026 with the market shifting under our feet — this episode is going to feel like a deep exhale.
In today's solo episode, we're talking about what mature entrepreneurs already know:
Annual planning isn't about predicting the year. It's about directing it.
It's about creating a structure sturdy enough to hold you, even when the market doesn't cooperate.
I'm walking you through the exact framework I use — the Rocks, Pebbles, and Sand method — and how seasoned business owners can use it to build a grounded yet flexible plan for the year ahead.
Here's what we explore:
Market instability doesn't make planning irrelevant. It makes planning essential — especially for long-term business owners who need clarity, direction, and steadiness to lead well.
• Rocks → your major anchors: launches, revenue cycles, time off
• Pebbles → your marketing rhythms, content cadence, CEO time
• Sand → everything else that fills in around the bigger pieces
This is the flexible, mature CEO approach to annual planning.
Sales cycles are longer. Trust is slower. Forecasting feels impossible.
So instead of forcing a rigid plan, I break down how to build:
• an annual vision,
• a quarterly strategy,
• and monthly goals that respond to real data.
Annual planning gives you direction.
Monthly metrics give you staying power.
I'll share how a monthly relationship with your numbers helps you:
• spot micro-trends before they become problems
• correct course quickly
• make decisions you actually trust
• stay grounded through market uncertainty
This is how experienced entrepreneurs lead with clarity instead of reactiveness.
If this episode speaks to you, you'll want to join my live, waitlist-only Focus Group for my new offer, The Monday Meeting — a space designed for seasoned entrepreneurs who are craving steadiness and clearer decision-making in the year ahead.
Join the waitlist to get your invite:
marissalawton.com/waitlist