The Risk of Waiting Until the New Year
by Doug Radkey

Sometimes “waiting” means “waiting.” Too often, “waiting” means “…until it’s too late,” or “never”
It’s that time of year again.
The leaves are turning. The holidays are approaching. And everywhere you look, people are starting to say the same thing: “I’ll wait until the new year.”
They’ll wait to start the new habit.
To launch the business.
To fix the broken system that’s draining their energy.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth: waiting is one of the most expensive decisions you’ll ever make.
The Myth of January
It seems that January has become society’s magical “reset” button.
This is when people start going to the gym more (or at all). It’s when aspiring entrepreneurs tell themselves they’ll be ready to start. When current operators say the holiday season is too busy.
It’s funny that somehow the turn of a calendar gives them permission to begin.
But in business—and in hospitality in particular—the market doesn’t wait. The competition doesn’t wait. Staff and guests don’t wait.
And the risk of waiting isn’t just lost time, it’s lost opportunity and lost momentum.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
Let’s look at some numbers.
On October 1st, you still have 25.21% of the year left.
By November 1st, you still have 16.71% left.
And on December 1st, you still have 8.49% left.
That’s not scraps. That’s a quarter, a sixth, or even a full month of your calendar. This is time you’ll never get back once it is gone.
So ask yourself this question: Do you really want to burn that much equity of time waiting for a date on the calendar that somehow gives you permission to move forward?
A Familiar Story
Each year, between October and January, I take calls from operators or aspiring entrepreneurs who tell me the same things.
The aspiring entrepreneur wants to open a new concept.
A year or two after first opening, an operator wants to stabilize their operations.
The veteran operator wants to get their brand’s finances under control.
But here’s the thing: approximately 80% of them admit they already decided to “wait until after the holidays.”
By the time they wait it out until the new year, the real estate they were eyeing is gone. The investor they were courting has moved on and is backing a different concept. Or worse, a new or scaling competitor has beaten them to the punch.
The cost of inaction always shows up, 100% of the time.
The Illusion of Busy
I get it. Society and this industry seem to thrive on being busy. The closer we get to the holidays, the easier it is to convince ourselves there’s no time to think about strategy.
Well, here’s the problem: that “too busy” mindset is often just a shield. It’s easier to stay stuck in the chaos than to step back and do the real work of building clarity.
And yet, that’s exactly what separates operators who crush it from those who drift away toward mediocrity or closure.
The ones who wait? They start the new year months behind or in survival mode.
The ones who act now? They start the new year in control.
That’s why this is called “separation season.”
Momentum Beats Motivation
Motivation is fickle. It spikes in January when gyms are full and the journals or planners are fresh.
By February, it all begins to fade.
Momentum, however, is different. Momentum compounds over time.
When you take action in October, November, or December, you’re not just getting ahead. You’re strategizing and developing the foundations. Or you’re training your systems, your people, and yourself to move forward when the calendar flips.
By the time many are just warming up, you’re already moving at full speed. Think about those positive results.
The Risk of Inaction
Let’s talk about what waiting actually costs you.
- Prime Real Estate: The space you’ve been watching doesn’t wait for January. It will be leased by the operator who had the courage to strategize and take action.
- Capital: Investors are looking for leaders with confidence and momentum. If you show hesitation, they’ll invest their money elsewhere.
- People: Your best staff won’t stick around forever waiting for change. If you don’t build clarity and systems, they’ll leave for a team that already has them in place.
The longer you wait, the steeper the climb is going to be in the new year.
The Power of Now
So, what happens when you act now?
- You gain clarity. Strategic playbooks create focus for your concept, your brand, your financials, and your guest experience.
- You create momentum. Your systems start running, your people align, and your execution gains speed.
- You build confidence. Investors, staff, and even guests can feel when an operator is in control.
Taking action now separates yourself from the 99% who sit back and wait.
From Survival to Legacy
Let’s be clear: This isn’t about working more hours. It isn’t about grinding yourself into burnout before the holidays.
It’s about mindset. Ask yourself:
- Do you believe long hours equal nobility or inefficiency?
- Do you believe success is about hustle or about alignment?
- Do you want to survive another year or build a business that outlasts you?
The entrepreneurs and operators who crush it don’t wait for January.
They strategize now. Build now. Lead now.
Why? Because survival is built on reaction. Legacy is built on clarity.
A Challenge for You
Take a hard look at your calendar.
If you start today, you still have weeks (if not months) to set the stage for the business you want to run next year, and the many years thereafter.
Lay the foundation now. Create your strategies now. Get your systems ready now.
Do it now so that when the new year arrives you’re not scrambling to catch up—you’re already miles ahead.
The Final Word
Hospitality doesn’t wait. Guests don’t wait. The market doesn’t wait.
So why are you waiting?
The real flex is proving that October, November, and December are still full of opportunity.
Because when clarity meets courage and strategy meets execution, you don’t just start the new year strong, you start it by separating yourself from others, and leading the way.
Now is the time. Take action. Build momentum. Create your legacy in hospitality.
Image: Levi Meir Clancy via Unsplash

