New Year. New Opportunity. But Do You Have a Plan?

Andrew Mattner • January 7, 2026

The start of a new year brings fresh energy, new goals, and good intentions. For many business owners, however, it also brings the same challenges as the year before - long hours, responsibility for every decision, and very little time to step back and think.


If you’re honest with yourself, do you have a clear plan for where your business is heading this year… and beyond? Or are you hoping things will somehow work themselves out as you go?


Hope isn’t a strategy - and growth doesn’t happen by accident.


Why the New Year Is the Right Time to Step Back


Most business owners aren’t short on ambition. They’re short on time, clarity, and breathing room.


When you’re deep in the day-to-day, it’s easy to keep pushing forward without pausing to ask the bigger questions.


  1. Are we heading in the right direction?
  2. Are we we working smarter, not harder?
  3. Is this business working for us - or are we working for it?


The new year is one of the few natural moments where stepping back makes sense. Done properly, it doesn’t just reset your goals - it reshapes how your business operates.


Strategy Is the Foundation


A solid business strategy goes beyond annual targets. It’s about making deliberate decisions around where your time, money, and energy are best spent.


That means understanding your budgeting and forecasting so cash flow is protected. It means ensuring the right people are focused on the right work, reviewing suppliers and overheads to identify what’s eroding margins, and being honest about where your time is best spent - and what can be outsourced.


It also means creating space to work on the business, not just in it. Without this structure, growth stays reactive instead of intentional.


Growth Should Create Freedom - Not Pressure


One of the biggest myths in business is that growth automatically brings less stress. In reality, growth without structure often leads to more complexity, more decisions, and more pressure on the owner.


We’ve worked with many business owners stuck in what we call business owner jail - where everything relies on them. The turning point isn’t working harder. It’s stepping back and building a clear, practical plan.


How We Can Help


Our expert team of Business Advisors help business owners turn strategy into action. As your trusted strategic partners, we remove the guesswork from growth by helping you gain clarity, create balance, and reclaim time - while building a more successful and sustainable business.


Through a hands-on, practical approach, we work with you to understand where your business stands today, define where it’s heading next, and build a clear, actionable roadmap to get there.


Taking a holistic view, we focus on improving top-line growth, creating efficiencies, and strengthening foundations so your business works for you - not the other way around.


On both a personal and professional level, we help remove roadblocks, solve problems, and clarify priorities, providing independent insight, proven tools, and a step-by-step plan to help you achieve your goals faster.


Make This Year Different



If you’re serious about growth and want more time back to focus on what truly matters, now is the time to act.


👉 Get in touch to start building a clear, practical plan for the year ahead:


Because the best businesses aren’t built on guesswork - they’re built on clarity, intention, and smart planning.

By Andrew Mattner March 5, 2026
Want a High-Performing Team? Start with the North Star. If you want to build a high-performing team, the starting point isn’t tools, systems, or even talent. It’s clarity. High-performing teams are aligned around what I call the North Star - a clear, compelling understanding of where the business is heading. They know: Where the business is going Why that direction matters How their individual role contributes to achieving it When people understand the bigger picture, they don’t just complete tasks, they contribute to something meaningful. That’s when discretionary effort shows up. If your team cannot clearly articulate what the business is working toward this year, that’s the first place to focus. Translate Vision into Clear Goals A shared vision is powerful - but it must translate into measurable goals. Every team member should know: What success looks like in their role How their performance is measured What outcomes they are responsible for Clarity drives performance. When expectations are vague, effort becomes inconsistent. But when success is clearly defined, ownership increases naturally. And just as importantly, contribution needs to be recognised. People perform best when effort is acknowledged and expectations are fair, transparent, and consistent. Define Ownership Clearly (Use the DACI Framework) One of the fastest ways to lift performance and reduce confusion is by clearly defining ownership - especially on projects and key initiatives. A simple and effective way to do this is the DACI framework : Driver – Who is leading this and responsible for progress? Approver – Who signs off on major decisions? Contributors – Who provides input or expertise? Informed – Who needs to be kept updated? Without this clarity, projects stall. Decisions drag. Frustration builds. With it, accountability becomes visible, and momentum improves. Consider Focused Working Squads High-performing businesses often create small, focused “working squads” around priority initiatives. Each squad should have: A clear objective Defined ownership Authority within clear boundaries A timeline This approach prevents every decision from flowing back to the business owner. It builds leadership capacity within the team and accelerates progress. Performance Improves with Structure When purpose is clear and accountability is defined: Collaboration improves Decision-making speeds up Ownership increases And the business owner steps out of the bottleneck role High-performing teams don’t rely on motivation alone. They rely on structure. Build clarity. Build accountability. Build high performance. If you would like to know more about building a high-performing team, speak to us today.
By Andrew Mattner March 2, 2026
What Separates a Group of Employees from a High-Performing Team? Do you know what truly separates a group of employees from a high-performing team? Most employees show up, do their job well, and head home at the end of the day - and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. But here’s the real question: Are they simply completing tasks, or are they actively helping drive your business forward? There is a meaningful difference between a group of employees and a high-performing team - and that difference has a direct impact on growth, culture, and long-term success. Let’s break it down. 1. Shared Purpose vs. Individual Focus A group of employees often works in silos, focused primarily on their individual responsibilities. A high-performing team, however, is united by a clear and compelling purpose. Every member understands how their role contributes to the bigger picture. They don’t just complete tasks, they connect their work to the broader vision of the business. When purpose is shared, alignment improves. When alignment improves, performance follows. 2. Clear Accountability In a group setting, accountability can feel vague or inconsistent. Responsibilities may overlap, expectations may be unclear, and ownership can be diluted. High-performing teams operate differently. They establish clear expectations and measurable outcomes. Each person understands what success looks like and takes ownership not only for their own performance, but for the collective results of the team. Accountability isn’t about blame. It’s about clarity and commitment. 3. Collaboration Over Simple Cooperation Groups tend to cooperate when required. High-performing teams actively collaborate. They leverage diverse strengths, perspectives, and experiences to innovate, solve problems, and continuously improve. Rather than working alongside each other, they work with each other. 4. Raising the Standard A group often aims to meet expectations. A high-performing team looks for ways to exceed them. They challenge each other. They lift the bar. They hold themselves to a higher standard, not because they are told to, but because they are collectively committed to excellence. This mindset doesn’t just improve output, it elevates the entire business. 5. Culture Is the Foundation A group can function within a neutral, or even negative, culture. High-performing teams are intentional about building trust, respect, and psychological safety. They understand that culture is not a by-product of performance - it is a driver of it. When people feel supported, valued, and aligned, performance accelerates. The Takeaway The difference between a group of employees and a high-performing team isn’t talent. It’s clarity. It’s accountability. It’s collaboration. It’s culture. If you want to improve performance in your business, start by examining whether your people are simply working - or truly working together. At Your Success Lab, we actively support organisations to strengthen their workforce management and build the systems that underpin high performance. We work alongside business owners to implement: Clear role design and accountability frameworks Structured performance management processes Workforce planning aligned to growth strategy Leadership capability and communication rhythms Cultural alignment that reinforces high standards We don’t just talk about high-performing teams - we help businesses build them. Get in touch today.
By Andrew Mattner February 17, 2026
One of the most common frustrations I hear from small business owners is managing team performance. Every business owner or manager has faced the tough decision of disciplining or terminating an employee, whether due to poor performance, bad attitudes, redundancy, or misconduct. These situations are highly stressful and complex, often leading businesses to avoid addressing them. This avoidance can cause financial loss, damage to team morale, and emotional stress. So, what should you do when love doesn’t live here anymore? Prevention is better than cure. Implementing robust systems to manage human relations is crucial. Here’s how: Structured Recruitment: Use psychometric testing and thorough reference checks. Clear Employment Contracts: Ensure all terms are transparent. Effective Induction and Training: Properly onboard and train new hires. Mentoring System: Establish a “buddy” system for support. Regular Performance Management: Schedule documented performance reviews. Integrated HR Management System: Use software to manage HR tasks efficiently. In our business, these processes are managed through a comprehensive program that offers letter templates, reminders, and a structured approach to HR issues. This program integrates with our business management system, ensuring correct management of start dates, leave accruals, and more. Even with the best systems, issues can arise. Here are my top tips for managing poor performance: Act Quickly: Procrastination harms everyone—your business, team, and customers. Swift action is essential. Document Everything: Keep thorough records to protect yourself legally. Follow a Clear Process: Adhere to legal frameworks for performance management and termination. Seek Expert Advice: HR is complex; professional advice can save you thousands in the long run. Proactive measures and decisive action are key to maintaining a healthy, productive workplace. By addressing issues head-on and implementing solid HR practices, you can prevent many problems before they start.
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