A good annual plan doesn't try to predict a year. It sets direction, defines priorities, and creates the accountability structure that keeps execution on track through the inevitable changes that a year brings.

Part 1: The Honest Review (Half Day)

Before you plan forward, account for backward. What did you commit to last year? What happened? Be specific and honest — not just revenue figures but strategic priorities, team goals, operational commitments. What did you learn from what worked and what didn't? This review is humbling and valuable. Most teams skip it because it's uncomfortable. The teams that do it consistently make better plans.

Part 2: The Direction Statement (Two Hours)

Where are you taking the business in the next three years? Not a mission statement — a specific picture of what the business looks like if the next three years go well. Revenue, team size, customer profile, geographic reach, what you're known for. This three-year picture is what makes annual priorities feel meaningful. Without the longer view, annual planning is just operational management.

Part 3: The Annual Priorities (Two Hours)

Given the three-year direction, what are the three most important things you need to accomplish this year? For each priority: who owns it, what does success look like specifically, and what are the quarterly milestones that tell you whether you're on track?

Part 4: The Cascade (Ongoing)

Annual priorities translate into quarterly 90-day plans. Quarterly plans translate into monthly focuses. Monthly focuses translate into weekly commitments. This cascade — with a consistent review rhythm at each level — is what turns planning into execution. The annual plan is not a document. It's a living conversation that happens weekly, informed by what's actually happening in the business.

When to Plan

The best annual planning happens in November for the following year — not December when everyone is distracted, and not January when you're already behind. Give yourself four to six weeks to think before you commit.