Most business owners focus their planning just 12 months ahead. That's understandable; this quarter alone often demands year-long attention. But a 12-month window rarely gives you time to hire the right person, let alone build the team and systems needed for substantial growth. To achieve meaningful progress, you need a broader horizon.
Three years, on the other hand, is the sweet spot. It's long enough to make a real change and short enough to stay grounded in what's achievable. Twelve quarters. Not long. That brings us to why planning ahead is so crucial.
The question isn't whether the next three years will bring change. It will, in technology, customer expectations, workforce dynamics, and the economic pressures your industry is already navigating. The real question is whether you're shaping that change or reacting to it.
If you run a trades or service business, three categories of change deserve your attention over the next three years:
Technology and AI - and not in the abstract, sci-fi sense. In the practical, today sense. Business owners in construction, plumbing, maintenance, and building services are already using AI to halve estimating time, generate scopes of work from site walkthroughs, and automate the administrative load that quietly consumes a third of every working day. The benefits include faster processes, greater consistency, reduced costs, and more productive teams. This isn't coming. It's here. The gap between businesses that adopt and those that don't will widen faster than most people expect.
Skill shortages are especially notable in trades near major infrastructure projects. Competition for qualified workers has intensified. Businesses that invest in training, mentoring, and developing their own people now will have an advantage in three years. Those relying on the same hiring pool as everyone else will find it increasingly expensive and unreliable.
Workforce expectations: your team wants more than a pay cheque. They want to grow, understand why they're doing what they're doing, and feel the business has a future worth being part of. The businesses that figure out how to provide that- real development, accountability, and culture- will keep good people. The ones that don't will keep cycling through them.
Let's be specific, because vague enthusiasm about AI isn't useful.
Here's what business owners in trades and service industries are genuinely implementing right now:
Smarter estimating. AI tools are being used to process purchase orders, build job schedules, assign trades, and set timelines in minutes, all from a document that used to take hours to interpret manually. The benefits include improved speed, increased estimate consistency, reduced human error, and the ability to delegate with confidence. Estimates built on a documented system, rather than on a senior person's gut feel, are easier to review, delegate, and improve over time.
Visual scopes of work. Rather than presenting clients with dense written reports, some operators are using AI-assisted video walkthroughs to explain what's wrong, why it matters, and what the recommended solution looks like in plain language, visually. The result for clients is greater understanding, while the business benefits from faster sales cycles, better-qualified leads, and significantly higher conversion rates from consultation to project.
Outsourcing cognitive labour. Estimating, scheduling, and even elements of project management can now be handled by well-briefed offshore teams or AI-assisted tools at a fraction of the cost of a senior in-house role. This use of AI improves productivity, creates room for growth, and reduces operational costs, enabling growing businesses to accomplish more within their existing resources.
None of this replaces expertise, judgement, or the relationships that make a business worth working with. But it changes the economics of who needs to do what and that has significant implications for how you structure your team over the next three years.
Here's a useful exercise. Think back three years. Where was your business then? Three years ago, it looked different for most business owners than it does today. Some have doubled. Some have restructured completely. Some have gone from doing everything themselves to leading a team that runs without them. Three years is a long time when you're deliberate about it. Three years is a long time when you're deliberate about it.
Now flip the question. If nothing changes, no new systems, team development, or investment in capability, where does your business end up in three years? Probably in the same place, but with a founder who's three years more exhausted.
That's the cost of doing nothing. It's not dramatic. It's just compounding stagnataion.
You don't need a 40-page strategic plan. But you do need clarity on three things:
The numbers you're aiming for. What does the business look like financially in three years? What's the revenue target? What margin are you running at? What's the business worth? Start with something concrete, because everything else flows from it.
The capabilities your customers will need from you. Not just what you offer today, but what customers will expect in three years. Faster turnaround? More sophisticated reporting? A seamless digital experience alongside the hands-on work? Better communication throughout a job? Define the capability gaps, and then figure out how to close them, whether that's technology, training, or new hires.
The team required to get there. If your business doubles, can your current team support that? Are your supervisors, estimators, and leading hands ready to step up? Or are you still the primary decision-maker, problem-solver, and knowledge holder? The investment in people training, development, and upskilling takes longer than most founders expect. Which means starting now matters more than it feels like it does.
Here's the pattern that holds across almost every founder-led business:
In the early years, the founder does everything. That's necessary. That's how businesses get started.
As the business grows, the smart move is to shift from doing to leading, from technician to building the systems and team that deliver what you used to do yourself, and from solving every problem. That transition is harder than it sounds. It requires trust, letting people make mistakes and learn from them. It requires investing in training, systems, and sometimes paying for expertise that doesn't immediately show on the P&L. It also requires you to redefine your own value to the business.
But here's the thing: the founders who've made that shift consistently say the same thing. The business becomes more valuable, more resilient, and more enjoyable to run. Not because the hard work disappears but because it changes character.
What do you want your business to look like in three years? Be specific, not vague. Revenue, profit, team size, your own role, the clients you serve, and the work you are proud of.e, Then work backwards. What needs to be true in two years to make that possible? What about in one year? In the next quarter? Years for that to be possible? In one year? In the next quarter?
Three years will arrive quickly. The choices you make or defer in the next 90 days are the ones that define your business's future. Start planning now to shape what that future looks like.