Future-Proofing for 2026: The Questions Leaders Need to Be Asking Now

Future-Proofing for 2026: The Questions Leaders Need to Be Asking Now

Picture of Charlotte Warr

Charlotte Warr

January 23, 2026

The new year has already started with significant momentum. Potential changes at the Federal Reserve, continued market volatility, and shifting interest rate expectations are creating renewed uncertainty and inflationary pressure. And this is only one piece of what leaders may face as 2026 approaches.

In an environment defined by constant disruption, company leaders must continue asking the hard, essential questions that future-proof both their organizations and their market position. The companies that win won’t be those reacting late—but those preparing early.

Below are several critical questions every leadership team should be asking right now.

How Are You Future-Proofing for Tariffs?

Tariffs aren’t going away. Even without new trade policies, the continued rollout of existing tariffs will impact more industries over time—and eventually, consumers.

For companies manufacturing abroad, particularly in consumer electronics and CPG, many of these added costs are still being absorbed by manufacturers and wholesalers. That dynamic, however, is unlikely to last.

Building Supply Chain Resilience in a Tariff-Driven Economy

At JPalmer Collective, we work alongside strategic capital partners to help businesses diversify sourcing, explore lower-cost alternatives, and proactively plan for supply chain disruptions. This includes pressure-testing price increases with customers and closely monitoring competitors’ pricing strategies.

The goal isn’t just cost control—it’s resilience over cost management.

How Are You Harnessing AI for Competitive Advantage?

If 2025 was the year companies learned what AI can do, 2026 will be the year agile organizations use AI to gain a true competitive advantage.

AI is quickly becoming embedded across organizations—driving efficiency while allowing leaders to redeploy human capital toward higher-value work.

AI as a Growth Enabler for Mid-Sized Businesses

From customer service and finance to product development and supply chain optimization, AI enables faster decision-making, real-time testing, and shorter go-to-market cycles—dramatically reducing execution risk.

Perhaps most importantly, AI allows small and mid-sized companies to operate with the sophistication of much larger enterprises. This leveling of the playing field makes this a uniquely powerful moment for growth-oriented companies.

Are You Evolving at the Speed of the Consumer?

Consumers are evolving faster than ever. Successful companies won’t just meet customers where they are today—they’ll anticipate where they’re going next.

Retail offers a clear example. While the shift from brick-and-mortar to e-commerce was transformative, it may soon look modest compared to what’s coming next.

The Rise of Automation and Smart Reordering

AI is reshaping how consumers order products. Smart kitchens and connected homes are already enabling automatic reordering—often before consumers even realize they’re running low.

Millennials, in particular, are accelerating this shift:

  • 62% expect to order more online
  • 46% anticipate increased automated reordering through smart devices

The message is clear: convenience, personalization and automation are no longer differentiators—they are expectations.

 

What Problem Are You Really Solving for Customers?

Consumers no longer shop purely by product. They shop by problem.

Instead of buying herbal tea, today’s consumer is purchasing a sleep solution. Instead of a beverage, they’re choosing a product that enhances athletic performance. The most agile brands focus less on what they sell—and more on what they solve.

Technology-Driven Insight and Adaptation

Solving real customer problems requires continuous monitoring of behavioral shifts and the ability to adapt quickly. Technology plays a critical role here, enabling businesses to listen, learn, and respond in near real time.

This mindset shift is increasingly central to how modern leadership teams think about growth.

The Bottom Line: Adapting to Constant Change

Change is hard—especially when it feels relentless. But survival and success will belong to companies that can accurately self-diagnose, adapt nimbly and remain willing to disrupt themselves.

As the year begins, leaders should take a hard look at where their business stands and how their customer is evolving. The most important question isn’t whether change is coming—it’s this:

Are you changing at the speed of your customer?

 

Ready to Future-Proof Your Business for 2026?

Partner with JPalmer Collective to build resilient, forward-looking strategies aligned with market shifts and consumer behavior.

 

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