When things slow down, the instinct is to change something
Published about 2 months ago • 2 min read
Hey there,
Q1 ends today. Tomorrow it all resets.
And if you're already hearing whispers about what needs to change in Q2 — new initiatives, new channels, a repositioning conversation that keeps coming up — this one's for you.
I've been in a lot of rooms when the energy shifts.
Growth slows, forecasts tighten, and suddenly the conversation shifts. Someone suggests a new product. Someone else brings up a new channel. Someone’s already thinking about how to reposition what you have.
After 20 years of building brands — and making plenty of mistakes along the way — I’ve noticed something predictable. When that moment shows up, the instinct is almost always the same. It feels productive. It feels decisive.
It’s also usually wrong.
Because most growth problems aren’t solved by adding something new. They’re solved by getting clearer about what already exists.
So how do you know which move to make? Start here.
Get clear about why customers choose you.
I hear some version of this all the time:
“We just need to get to market. We’ll figure out the details later.”
I understand the pressure. But rushing to market without a clear reason for why customers should choose you rarely holds up. If people say “that’s interesting” but don’t buy, you have a resonance problem.
Before you spend more on marketing, before you open another channel, before you add another SKU — be able to explain, simply and confidently, why this matters.
Focus is usually the hardest option.
When growth slows, trying more things feels safer than doing fewer things better. But if your team can’t name your top priorities — or your execution doesn’t match the reason customers chose you in the first place — adding complexity won’t help.
Focus means doubling down on the thing that already works even when it’s less exciting than launching something new.
It’s not glamorous. But it’s effective.
Innovate, but only after you’ve earned it.
Innovation isn’t a panic response. It’s what you do once the fundamentals are working. If you’ve nailed your core offering, if customers are asking for more, and if you can solve a real problem in a way that is desirable, feasible, and profitable — then innovate.
But don’t use innovation to cover up weak fundamentals.
Pivoting is rarer than you think.
One strong conversation at a conference can make you question your entire model. That doesn’t automatically mean you need a new one.
More often than not, it isn’t the what that’s broken — it’s the how.
Before you abandon the core idea, take a hard look at how you’re delivering it. Sometimes the right move isn’t becoming something new. It’s executing the original idea more effectively.
Still not sure which move to make?
If you’re unsure, start with one question: what unique value are we creating?
Be ruthless in your answer.
• If you can’t articulate it clearly, focus. • If you’re delivering it well and customers want more, innovate. • If the value is clear but the model isn’t working, pivot the how, not the why.
The right move isn’t always the most exciting one. It’s the one that actually moves the business forward.
So the next time things slow down and the conversation starts to shift toward what to change — pause for a second. Before you add something new, ask: are we clear on what already works?
Because more often than not, the answer isn’t out there somewhere. It’s already inside the business — it just needs to be seen clearly.
If this sparked something, you probably know a founder who needs it. Send it their way.
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