Over the last year, there’s been one pattern I’ve seen again and again in conversations with business owners, and it has nothing to do with effort, intelligence, or ambition. It has everything to do with overwhelm.
Specifically, tool overwhelm.
Every few weeks, there’s a new platform being promoted as the thing that will finally solve a problem that feels persistent- more savings, more time, more clarity, more scale. The messaging is compelling, the demos are impressive, and the promise always sounds slightly bigger than the last one. It’s easy to believe that if you just added this one more tool, things would finally feel simpler.
But here’s the reality I see when I sit down with people privately: almost every tool is ultimately being used for one very specific function. Not the entire ecosystem. Not the full suite of features. Just the one thing it does that originally caught their attention.
Last month, one of my clients shared something.. She had just gone through a spreadsheet with her accountant that listed every tool and subscription she and her team had picked up over the past year. Marketing platforms, automation tools, CRMs, AI software, layered add-ons- all of it. When they totaled it up, the number was just over forty thousand dollars and she was not getting any financial benefits!
What surprised her most wasn’t the amount. It was the realization that she was probably using, at best, twenty-five percent of what she was paying for.
Not because she wasn’t capable. Not because she didn’t try. But because running a real business already requires enough cognitive load without also mastering dozens of tools that all promise to be “all-in-one.”
What she described wasn’t just financial fatigue, it was mental fatigue. The constant sense that she was behind because she wasn’t using everything she had invested in. The quiet guilt that comes from buying something with good intentions and never fully integrating it. The pressure of feeling like everyone else had figured something out that she hadn’t.
That conversation reinforced something I’ve believed for a long time: this isn’t really a tool problem. It’s a noise problem.
The market is very good at selling complexity as progress. It convinces smart, capable people that growth requires more dashboards, more integrations, more subscriptions, more systems layered on top of systems. And yet, clarity almost never comes from adding more. It comes from discernment.
Knowing what actually matters.
Knowing what free tool you truly need.
Knowing when something is helpful and when it’s just another distraction dressed up as opportunity.
This year, more than anything, I hope people make firmer business decisions. Not reactive ones. Not decisions driven by fear of falling behind. Not decisions based on what everyone else seems to be buying. But grounded decisions that are rooted in understanding how you actually work, how your business actually grows, and what you realistically have the capacity to use well.
Most people need fewer things, chosen with intention, and a clearer sense of what deserves their time, energy, and focus.
If there’s one takeaway I’d leave you with, it’s this: simplicity is not a lack of sophistication. It’s the result of clarity. And clarity is often what creates the most profits.

