Not having a clear plan can feel irresponsible.
We’re taught that successful people map everything out before they begin. That they have a five-year strategy, a perfectly timed roadmap, and certainty about what comes next.
But most people don’t get stuck because they lack a plan. They get stuck because they believe they need one before they move.
After building a business from the ground up, including stepping into an online model with no prior experience, I’ve learned that clarity rarely comes first. More often, clarity is the result of movement.
If you’re feeling stuck, here are three practical ways to move forward even when you don’t have it all figured out.
Start with a decision, not a plan
When you don’t have a clear plan, the instinct is to keep thinking. Research more. Analyze more. Wait until the path feels obvious. That’s usually what keeps people stuck. Plans can create the illusion of certainty. Decisions create momentum.
Instead of trying to map everything out, make one decision about what you’re going to do next. Not the next 10 steps, just the next one.
When I first moved into an online business, I didn’t understand digital marketing or ecommerce. I didn’t have a polished strategy or some master plan for scaling.
I made one simple decision: Show the product and explain it clearly. That decision led to the next one. And then the next. You don’t think your way into clarity. You move your way into it.
Practical shift: Stop asking, “What’s the full plan?”
Start asking, “What’s the next decision I can make today?”
Keep moving even when you’re unsure
There’s a moment in every project, business, and career where you stop knowing exactly what to do next. Most people freeze there. That’s the mistake.
As a painter, I’ve learned something that applies far beyond art: If I set a painting aside every time I get stuck, I may never come back to it.
So I don’t stop.
I pick up a different brush. I add another layer. I try a new technique. I make progress, even if I’m not fully convinced it’s the “right” move yet. Eventually, something starts to work. Momentum creates information. Standing still doesn’t.
The same is true in business and in life. If you stop the second things feel unclear, you stay stuck in the uncertainty. But when you keep moving, you create options, insight, and momentum.
Most breakthroughs don’t come from overthinking. They come from staying in motion long enough to discover what works.
Practical shift: When you feel stuck, don’t stop completely; change the action. Try a different approach, tool, or angle, but keep moving.
Shrink the problem so you can act on it
Big, undefined goals create pressure. And pressure often leads to inaction.
“I need to figure out my next move.”
“I need to grow this business.”
“I need to fix what’s not working.”
Those statements are so broad they become impossible to act on. Progress happens when you reduce the problem down to something small enough to do right now.
When I was building our online business, I wasn’t focused on scale in the beginning. I focused on one customer, one product, and one improvement at a time. That’s what made growth possible. Big transformations are usually the result of very small actions repeated consistently. A room doesn’t transform all at once. It happens one brushstroke, one decision, and one layer at a time. The same is true for your career, your business, and your life.
Practical shift: Take whatever feels overwhelming and reduce it to one action you can complete in the next 24 hours.
Final thoughts
You don’t need a perfect plan to move forward. You need to make a decision, keep moving, and make the problem small enough to act on.
Clarity is usually the result of movement, not the requirement for it.
