DP978_S27B10 Refocusing Your Business- Rebuilding After a Pivot Without Starting Over

Forward Momentum • April 24, 2026

Refocusing Your Business: Rebuilding After a Pivot Without Starting Over

By Michael Meloche ⏱ 5 minutes read 📅 April 24, 2026

Refocusing your business is rarely a clean restart.

It’s usually messy.

You don’t shut everything down and begin again—you carry pieces of the old business into the new one. Old clients, old habits, old ways of working.

And that’s exactly what makes a pivot difficult.

This episode centers on that reality: what it actually looks like to rebuild a business (version 2.0) while still dealing with the weight of version 1.

https://youtu.be/3iKSdvqlOYU

Refocusing Your Business After a Pivot Isn’t a Fresh Start

When Michael describes his company, EnvisionQA, one thing stands out:

It’s not a brand-new business.

It’s a reboot.

  • A shift from doing everything in tech
  • To focus on software and systems
  • From reactive work → to intentional solutions

But as Rob points out, this is something most developers run into:

You change direction—but the past doesn’t disappear.

Businesses don’t reset. They evolve—with baggage.  

That baggage shows up as:

  • Legacy clients
  • Old service offerings
  • Processes that no longer fit

The Hidden Cost of Carrying the Old Business Forward

The hardest part of refocusing your business isn’t choosing a new direction.

It’s letting go of the old one.

Because even when you know something doesn’t fit anymore:

  • It still generates revenue
  • It still demands attention
  • It still feels “important.”

This creates a split:

  • Where do you want to go
  • Where your time is actually spent

Warning: If your time reflects your past instead of your future, your business won’t change.

This is exactly what plays out in the episode.


Refocusing Your Business Means Redefining What You Do

During the breakdown, Rob takes a consulting approach:

Instead of jumping into solutions, he asks:

  • What does the business actually do today?
  • Where is time being spent?
  • What should be working—but isn’t?

That last question is critical.

Because it exposes:

  • Broken processes
  • Misaligned expectations
  • Gaps between vision and execution

Michael even identifies a key issue:

Taking on work without enough structure or guardrails, leading to complexity and drag  


Why Most Business Pivots Stall

The reason pivots fail isn’t a lack of direction.

It’s a lack of focus.

After a pivot, you’re often juggling:

  • Old work
  • New opportunities
  • Undefined processes
  • Limited time

So instead of moving forward, you end up maintaining everything.

Insight: Refocusing your business requires subtraction before addition.

You don’t just add a new direction—you remove what doesn’t fit.


Refocusing Your Business Comes Down to One Problem

This is where the episode lands—and where the real execution begins.

Instead of trying to fix everything, Rob introduces a constraint:

Pick one problem.

Not the biggest list.

Not a full roadmap.

Just one.

“If you could snap your fingers 90 days from now and it’s fixed—what would that problem be?”  

This forces clarity:

  • What actually matters?
  • What’s holding you back the most?
  • What would create the biggest shift?

Weekly Challenge: Identify and Solve Your One Problem

This is the core challenge from the episode.

Action Challenge: Refocusing Your Business

  1. Identify the one problem that, if solved in the next 90 days, would have the biggest impact
  2. Be specific—avoid vague goals like “grow revenue.”
  3. Clearly define:
    • What the problem is
    • Why it exists
    • What “fixed” looks like
  4. Start a conversation with AI:
    • “I want to fix this problem…”
    • Ask for breakdowns, strategies, and approaches
  5. Refine your definition as you go

The most important part isn’t the solution.

It’s this:

“How did you define that problem? That’s where all the gold is.”  


Why This Works After a Business Pivot

After a pivot, everything feels important.

But this approach:

  • Cuts through noise
  • Creates momentum
  • Forces meaningful progress

Instead of juggling everything, you:

  • Solve one real constraint
  • Create space
  • Then move to the next

Perspective: You don’t rebuild a business all at once—you rebuild it one solved problem at a time.


Conclusion: Rebuilding Is About Focus, Not Force

Refocusing your business after a pivot isn’t about working harder.

It’s about working more intentionally.

  • Let go of what doesn’t fit
  • Understand what’s actually happening
  • Choose the one problem that matters most

Because the difference between a stalled pivot and a successful one isn’t effort.

It’s focus.


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