Year-End Reflections

Year-End Reflections

Forgive a year end prompt to reflect, it's an approach I was guided through by a business partner, sadly no longer with us and figured others may find it useful too.

At this time of year it's my moment to pause. I take stock of what I’ve achieved and decide where I want to go next. I believe it’s not just a habit; it’s how I keep moving forward.

Reflection isn’t a reward for a job well done. It’s the tool I use to understand what worked, what didn’t, and what I can do better.

Here’s how I approach it:

Why I Reflect

If I don’t look back, I can’t make sense of what I’ve done. Reflection helps me see patterns, both the good and the bad.

I ask myself hard questions:

  • What were my biggest wins this year?
  • Where did I miss the mark?
  • What could I have handled differently?

Writing it down is non-negotiable. Keeping it in my head doesn’t give me the clarity I need and actually my memory doesn't recall all the instances that need to be identified.

The Challenges I Face

Reflection isn’t easy. It forces honesty, and I find it uncomfortable.

Sometimes I focus too much on what went wrong. Other times, I dismiss my small wins as unimportant. The hardest part is facing questions that don’t have easy answers. I don’t avoid them, it’s where I learn the most.

My Process

Here’s what works for me:

  • Set time aside: I block out a day when I won’t be interrupted. No emails. No distractions.
  • Gather the facts: I look at my metrics, feedback, and the outcomes of my projects. Numbers don’t lie.
  • Ask myself the hard questions: What stood out this year? Where did I win? Where do I need to improve?
  • Write a list: I jot down what I want to achieve next year. I make it clear and specific, we all know vague goals don’t get results.
  • Identify my gaps: I think about the skills I need to develop or the resources I’m missing.
  • Take immediate action: I pick one thing from my list and start working on it before January rolls around.

The Power of a Plan

Reflection on its own doesn’t change anything. What matters is turning those reflections into a plan.

I focus on:

  • What my colleagues need from me. (In this case TEG, The Entrepreneurs Group )
  • What skills I need to develop.
  • What’s holding me back and how to remove it.

What Holds Me Back

I’ve made excuses before, “I don’t have time” or “I’ll look at it tomorrow.” But when I look at the cost of waiting, it’s clear I can’t afford to put things off.

Success is about choices. Reflecting now helps me make better decisions next year.

I hope you find this helpful and that next year is good to you - because you planned it that way!

Colin Gilchrist

Marketing operations

2 个月

Thanks Heather. Yes, it would be lovely to catch up in the new year. Indeed, taking a full day may seem indulgent, I prefer to be comprehensive and really challenge myself. Hope you enjoy your festive break too.

Heather Gordon

CEO & Founder at Heather Gordon Leadership Consultancy | Regenerative Leadership Expert

2 个月

Thanks for sharing your approach- I particularly like the part where you take a whole day to reflect and then take one action “before” January comes around. My experience of forward planning this time of year is: I am full of good intentions, then full of procrastination through convincing myself I deserve a nice lazy break- consequently no action taken before January and then when January arrives I am jumping into “full speed forward thinking mode” - hence little reflective learning. So thanks - so note to self- do the work and then I can put my feet up!!! Have a good festive break and hope to meet up again next year.

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