My three teenagers are home for the summer, the calendar cleared out the last week of May, and like a lot of business owners I could feel the pull to write the next two months off and call it a season.
I’m not doing that, and I don’t want you to either.
After almost 20 years of running this business, here’s what I’ve watched happen every single year. The women who disappear completely in June and July are the same ones scrambling in September, marketing dried up, no clients in the pipeline, head barely above water. The chaos they feel in the fall isn’t a fall problem. It’s a summer problem.
This is the season I do some of the most strategic work of my entire year, and I still take two full weeks off with my family. Both are true. I’m recording this in early June with most of 2027 already mapped, not because I’ve converted to hustle culture, but because I refuse to spend October panicking while I’m also helping my kids study for the SATs.
What I want to give you today is a way to use a slower summer to build the capacity fall is going to demand, so you walk into your busiest season with more room instead of more dread.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
Key Concepts from the Episode
Summer Is a Season With a Job to Do. Slower does not mean stopped. When demand dips and your inbox quiets down, that open space is the whole point. It’s the time to finally work on the business instead of in it. Slower seasons are not the same as stalled out. Don’t check out just because your clients did.
Your Business Has Seasons, and So Do Your Clients. Planning as if every month brings identical demand, energy, and client volume is magical thinking. The fix is knowing your own growth seasons and, just as much, knowing where your clients’ attention actually is. Meet your clients where their attention is, not where you wish it was.
Build the Capacity Before the Demand Shows Up. Q3 has one job, and that’s building the infrastructure for the clients you already know are coming in the fall. Wait until they arrive and you’re onboarding in a panic with your head barely above water. You can’t wait for the demand to show up and then build the capacity. That’s where the scrambling comes from.
Stop Building on Willpower. Willpower is the first thing to go when life gets hard or busy, so marketing that only runs when you can show up week after week is built on the wrong foundation. Batch the assets, map the sales calendar a year out, and let the systems carry the heavy lifting. Willpower is the first thing that goes when life gets hard. Build assets, not motivation.
Feast or Famine Is a Planning Choice. The cycle isn’t a fact of running a business. It smooths out when the work you do in the quiet seasons holds through the loud ones, and your business stops depending on your stamina. Calm is capacity, and you can spend the summer building a little bit of both.
Resources Mentioned
The On-Demand CEO Retreat. Build your 90-day plan on your own schedule, around your summer instead of on top of it. Currently bundled with the Client Growth Engine™, the first system we install in every business inside The CEO Collective®.
The CEO Mid-Year Review. The episode and workbook for pressing pause, checking your real numbers to date, and looking forward through the next six months. This is the first move of the season.
Notes to Future Me. The episode on the habit Racheal uses to protect her calendar and her capacity, and to leave herself instructions for the busy weeks ahead.
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