
Ever feel like your week runs away with you?
You start Monday with good intentions, feeling that this week you’ll stay on top of everything. Suddenly, it’s Thursday, your inbox is full again, your to-do list has somehow doubled, and you’re not sure what is finished.
I’ve been there, and it can still happen if I’m not careful.
One thing I don’t skip anymore is my Weekly Reset Hour. It’s not complicated. It helps keep my business (and clients’ businesses) running smoothly.
It’s one simple hour, either at the end of the week or first thing on Monday, where I pause and reset before moving forward.
Here’s what it looks like for me.
- I go through my inbox and clear anything that’s been there for a while.
- I check my calendar, not just what’s coming up, but where I need more space.
- I update my to-do list, so I’m not carrying everything in my head.
- I follow up on anything I’ve been meaning to get back to.
- I make a simple plan for the week ahead so I don’t have to start from scratch.
When I don’t do this, things quickly start to feel messy.
Small tasks get missed.
Emails sit unanswered longer than they should.
You start reacting rather than leading your business.
I see this sometimes with business owners I support. You’ve just got too much on your plate to stop and reset.
Here’s the shift when you do.
- You go into the week knowing what needs your attention.
- You feel calmer.
- You stop second-guessing what you’ve forgotten.
- You create space actually to focus on work that grows your business.
If you’re reading this, thinking.
“That sounds great, but I don’t have an hour to do that.”
When that happens, something needs to change.
Try it this week:
Open your calendar and block out one hour.
Call it your Weekly Reset. Treat it like a meeting you can’t cancel.
Start simple: your inbox and your calendar.
If that hour is still out of reach,
Or maybe something that keeps slipping down your to-do list.
That’s exactly the kind of thing I can support you with.
Fancy a chat? Book your discovery call now.
Your time is better spent growing your business, not chasing emails and trying to remember everything.