“A fresh start is not a place, it is a mindset.” (Jordan Peterson)
The beginning of the new year can be more than another Monday morning: it can be a powerful psychological reset button.
The ‘fresh start effect’ comes after milestones, like New Year’s or anniversaries, that help people believe they can become better versions of themselves – and this applies just as powerfully to teams as it does to individuals.
It’s as if a mere calendar flip wipes the slate clean, making new commitments feel more achievable and reducing the emotional weight of past disappointments.
When your team returns from the holiday break, they aren’t just rested – they are primed for change, and feeling capable of achieving goals that might have seemed daunting just weeks earlier.
Capturing the moment: Practical strategies for January 2026
The “fresh start effect” creates a window of heightened motivation, but it is only temporary. Research consistently shows that initial New Year’s enthusiasm naturally fades without proper structure and ongoing engagement.
The challenge then is to convert this early motivation into sustainable systems.
Timing matters. Schedule your most important organisational initiatives, strategic planning sessions, and team goal-setting meetings in these early weeks of January. The psychological conditions are optimal right now, as your team feels capable, refreshed, and ready for change. Use this window to establish the habits, routines, and systems that will carry you through the entire year.
Start by setting specific and measurable goals. Clear and quantifiable goals significantly improve employee engagement and productivity. Break annual targets into smaller quarterly or monthly milestones to prevent overwhelm and provide regular opportunities to maintain momentum and celebrate progress.
Team-based goal setting enhances overall performance because it creates accountability, builds collective commitment, and ensures that everyone understands how their individual efforts contribute to larger team goals.
Building sustainable momentum beyond January
The fresh start effect can be a catalyst for creating systems, habits, and cultural practices that sustain performance all year long.
Visual progress tracking taps into our psychological need for achievement and keeps the momentum alive. Implement regular check-ins and progress reviews — at least monthly. These touchpoints maintain accountability, allow for course corrections, and provide opportunities to celebrate wins.
Creating fresh starts all year round
You can also engineer temporal landmarks throughout the year. Things like monthly reset days, quarterly planning sessions, or team offsite retreats… These moments provide mini fresh starts that can reignite motivation when energy naturally dips.
Use these inflection points for team brainstorming sessions, strategic pivots, or launching new initiatives. The psychology works the same way: you’re creating a sense of temporal separation that makes change feel achievable.
The long game: Making 2026 different
The new year brings a gift: a team that believes change is possible and feels capable of achieving goals.
What you do in the next few weeks – the systems you establish, the habits you build, and the accountability you foster – could significantly impact your team’s performance for the entire year ahead.
Disclaimer: The information provided herein should not be used or relied on as professional advice. No liability can be accepted for any errors or omissions nor for any loss or damage arising from reliance upon any information herein. Always contact us for specific and detailed advice.
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