What Are You Creating in 2026?

Leadership doesn’t start with strategy—it starts with creation. As you step into 2026, consider what kind of environment you are intentionally creating for your team to thrive.

What Are You Creating in 2026?

The opening weeks of a new year tend to pull leaders toward planning.
Goals. Strategies. Metrics. Initiatives.

None of those are bad things. But they are rarely where leadership actually begins.

Before there was a plan, before there was a command, before there was even a person to lead, there was creation.

Genesis 1:1 tells us, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”

That single sentence doesn’t try to explain leadership. It simply reveals something about the nature of God—and, by extension, something about the nature of leadership itself. Leadership begins with intentional creation.

God didn’t start by giving instructions.
He started by making space.

Creation Before Command

One of the most overlooked leadership mistakes is assuming that clarity, motivation, or productivity should come first. In reality, those things emerge after something has already been created.

Before anything could grow, there had to be an environment where growth was possible. Before there could be purpose, there had to be order. Before there could be movement, there had to be space.

That’s true in creation—and it’s true in leadership.

Whether we realize it or not, leaders are always creating something. The question isn’t if you’re creating. It’s what you’re creating.

You’re creating culture.
You’re creating expectations.
You’re creating pace.
You’re creating emotional tone.
You’re creating space—or pressure.

Sometimes all at once.

Creativity Isn’t About Being Artistic

When we hear the word “create,” many leaders instinctively disqualify themselves.

“I’m not creative.”
“I’m not artistic.”
“That’s not really my gift set.”

But leadership creativity isn’t about imagination or innovation in the traditional sense.

It’s about design.

It’s about intentionally shaping the environment your team operates in—often through decisions that look small on the surface but carry significant weight over time.

You don’t need to be artistic to create clarity.
You don’t need to be imaginative to create rhythm.
You don’t need to be inspirational to create space.

You just need to be intentional.

The Environment Is the Message

Most leaders spend a lot of energy communicating expectations. Far fewer stop to consider the environment those expectations live in.

If a leader says, “We value excellence,” but the environment rewards speed over quality, the environment wins.

If a leader says, “We want people to grow,” but there’s no margin to learn or fail, the environment wins.

If a leader says, “We care about our people,” but the pace is relentless and unpredictable, the environment wins.

Creation always speaks louder than intention.

The systems you build, the rhythms you establish, and the space you allow communicate far more than any speech, meeting, or email ever could.

A Pause Worth Taking

As you move into 2026, before you finalize plans or launch initiatives, it’s worth slowing down long enough to ask a more foundational question:

What am I intentionally creating for my team to thrive?

Not what are you fixing.
Not what are you reacting to.
Not what are you pushing harder.

What are you creating?

A Few Questions to Sit With

Not as a checklist. Not as a framework. Simply as prompts.

  • What have I created that helps my team know what matters most?

  • What rhythms have I created that shape how work actually gets done?

  • Where have I created space for people to think, grow, or recover?

  • What kind of emotional or relational environment have I created?

  • Where have I created ownership instead of dependency?

Even sitting with one of these honestly can be a meaningful starting point.

One Small, Intentional Step

You don’t need to redesign everything at once.

This week, choose one thing to create intentionally.

Leadership rarely changes through grand gestures. It changes through thoughtful creation, repeated over time.

Beginning Again

Genesis doesn’t begin with activity.
It begins with intention.

As leaders, we often feel pressure to do more. But sometimes the most faithful and effective leadership move is to pause long enough to create the conditions where others can truly flourish.

As you step into this year, consider:

What are you creating for your team to thrive in 2026?

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12 Leadership Decisions That Will Shape Your Year

Strong leaders don’t drift into good years — they decide their way into them. Leadership isn’t shaped by bold resolutions, but by quiet, consistent decisions about what we protect, prioritize, and practice. These twelve leadership decisions will help you step into 2026 with clarity, intention, and purpose.

Strong leaders don’t drift into good years.
They decide — early — how they’ll lead.

Over time, I’ve noticed that leaders who experience clarity, health, and sustained influence don’t rely on motivation or momentum. They make intentional decisions before the year begins to move too fast.

Not resolutions.
Not goals.
Decisions.

John Maxwell puts it simply: “Life is a matter of choices, and every choice you make makes you.” Leadership formation works the same way. Over time, our decisions shape our character, our influence, and the environments we lead.

Scripture reminds us that intentional leadership isn’t about control — it’s about alignment:

“The heart of man plans his way, but the LORD establishes his steps.”
— Proverbs 16:9 (ESV)

Here are 12 leadership decisions that quietly shape the year ahead.

1. Decide What You Will Protect

Time, energy, health, and relationships don’t protect themselves. Without clear boundaries, leadership demands will slowly erode what matters most. Deciding what you will protect early in the year creates margin that sustains you when pressure increases.

2. Decide How Your Calendar Will Reflect Your Priorities

Your calendar reveals your real values, not your stated ones. Strong leaders don’t just react to requests — they intentionally schedule what matters most. When your priorities live on your calendar, they stop competing with everything else.

3. Decide How You Will Communicate Expectations

Many leadership frustrations aren’t people problems — they’re clarity problems. Deciding how and when you’ll communicate expectations reduces confusion and builds trust. Clear expectations give people confidence in how to win.

4. Decide How You Will Develop People

Leadership that lasts multiplies. Growth doesn’t happen accidentally — it happens through intentional coaching, feedback, and opportunity. Deciding who you’ll invest in ensures your leadership impact extends beyond your own capacity.

5. Decide What You Will Say “No” To

Focus requires restraint. Every “yes” carries a cost, whether you see it immediately or not. Deciding ahead of time what doesn’t belong in your year helps you preserve energy for what does.

6. Decide How You Will Handle Pressure

Pressure is inevitable in leadership, but panic is optional. Deciding in advance how you’ll respond under stress keeps emotions from driving decisions. Prepared leaders respond thoughtfully instead of reacting impulsively.

7. Decide How You Will Care for Your Health

Leadership is demanding, and neglect eventually shows up somewhere. Physical, emotional, and spiritual health directly affect how you show up for others. Deciding to care for your health isn’t selfish — it’s responsible leadership.

8. Decide How You Will Build Trust

Trust grows through consistency, integrity, and follow-through. Small, repeated actions shape credibility far more than big moments. Deciding to be dependable in both visible and unseen ways builds a foundation others can rely on.

9. Decide How You Will Course-Correct

Strong leaders don’t avoid adjustment — they expect it. Deciding now that feedback and correction are part of growth keeps pride from blocking progress. Course-correction is not failure; it’s leadership maturity.

10. Decide How You Will Finish the Year

Strong finishes don’t happen by accident. Deciding early how you want to close the year influences how you pace yourself throughout it. Leaders who finish well build momentum that carries forward.

11. Decide How You Will Measure Success

Busyness is not success, and visibility isn’t impact. Deciding what “winning” actually means protects you from chasing the wrong metrics. Clear measures of success bring focus and reduce unnecessary pressure.

12. Decide What You Will Carry Forward

Every year leaves something behind — habits, lessons, and patterns. Deciding intentionally what you’ll carry forward helps you build on growth instead of repeating mistakes. Reflection turns experience into wisdom.

Final Thought

You don’t need a perfect plan for the year ahead.
You need clarity.

Strong leadership starts with intentional decisions — and those decisions quietly shape everything that follows.

Start Strong. Lead Well.

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