At the start of Q4, your project planning usually looks solid. Milestones are clear. Timelines feel realistic. Christmas has been “taken into account.” Everything seems under control.
And then December arrives.
Suddenly, suppliers are harder to reach. Team members start signing off. Feedback loops slow down.
And before you know it, progress quietly stalls, not because something went wrong, but because everyone is stepping away.
If you’ve ever returned in January feeling like you need two weeks just to remember where your project left off… you’re not alone.
The good news?
This isn’t a failure of planning. It’s a signal that your project needs a deliberate pause strategy.
Why Christmas Often Disrupts Product Development (Even When You Planned for It)
The holiday period doesn’t usually cause problems because of one big issue.
It’s the accumulation of small delays:
- One missing approval before someone goes on leave
- A supplier who shuts down earlier than expected
- Samples that arrive just too late to be reviewed
- Open questions with no clear owner during the break
And if you’re working with international suppliers, you’re already mentally juggling what’s coming next: Chinese New Year.
This is exactly why December isn’t the time to push harder.
It’s the time to stabilize, document, and protect momentum.
How to Pause Your Projects the Product CEO Way
Right before the holidays, your role shifts.
You’re no longer pushing execution, you’re setting future clarity.
Here’s what that looks like in practice.
1. Get crystal clear on who is available and until when
Don’t assume timelines. Verify them.
- When is the last working day of each core team member?
- When do suppliers, agencies, and manufacturers close?
- Who will already be offline earlier than expected?
This matters more than any task list. A missing deliverable is manageable, a missing person is what creates stress.
2. Lock decisions or consciously defer them
Unfinished decisions create mental clutter.
Before you slow down:
- Finalize what can realistically be closed
- Clearly document what is intentionally postponed
- Capture open questions and assumptions in one place
This way, January doesn’t start with confusion, it starts with direction.
3. Make your restart frictionless
The most valuable thing you can give your future self is context.
Before you log off:
- Write a short “project status snapshot”
- Note current phase, key risks, next priorities
- Define the first three actions to pick up in January
When you come back, you shouldn’t have to dig.
You should be able to lead.
A Note on Planning for Next Year
This moment is also a quiet reminder of something important:
Holiday disruptions only feel chaotic when they’re not structurally built into your planning.
Strong Product CEOs:
- Add buffers around predictable breaks
- Plan sample reviews and shipments with real lead times
- Design timelines that work with reality, not against it
Not to squeeze more out of the year, but to protect their energy, their team, and their margins.
Because sustainable product development isn’t about constant acceleration.
It’s about intentional pace.
Before You Log Off for the Holidays…
As a Product CEO, your impact isn’t measured by how much you push in December.
It’s measured by how well you prepare your projects to move forward without friction.
Taking a deliberate pause isn’t slowing down.
It’s leadership.
If you take one moment this week to create clarity for your future self, you’ll start the new year with confidence instead of catch-up mode.
And that’s how sustainable product businesses are built.
XO, Marie-Louise
PS: If you’re worried your new product development decisions are based on assumptions instead of real numbers? Check out my Product Development Operating System today and feel confident before you invest any time or money in a new development project. Now for just €19 until Dec 31, 2025.

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