By Garfield Joseph, MBA
The Trap of Being Busy
Across Antigua and Barbuda, there is no shortage of hard work. Entrepreneurs open their doors early and close late. Managers juggle staff, customers, and constant demands. Families stretch every dollar and make daily decisions just to keep things moving.
We are, without question, a busy people.
But here is the uncomfortable truth—being busy is not the same as moving forward.
Too often, individuals and small businesses find themselves caught in a cycle: solving problems, responding to emergencies, paying bills, and repeating the same routines day after day. At the end of the month, the question quietly lingers: “After all that effort, what has really changed?”
It is in this space—between effort and progress—that strategic planning becomes not just useful, but essential.
A Simple Turning Point
Consider Marcia, a small business owner running a retail shop in St. John’s. For years, she did everything right—or so it seemed. She worked long hours, kept her shelves stocked, and stayed committed to her customers. Yet her profits remained flat, and growth felt out of reach.

