There’s a moment in a bar, somewhere between six-thirty and seven, when the after-work crowd has paid their tabs and the dinner/post-dinner crowd hasn’t shown. The room hums but the room isn’t moving. You wipe down the same spot on the bar twice. You swivel glasses logo facing out that don’t need straightening. The music feels louder because nothing else is talking. If you’ve never bartended, you can still picture it. Every business has that hour.
Sailors call this slack tide. It’s the small window between flood and ebb, when the current goes quiet and the boat barely drifts. The ocean hasn’t given up on you. It is reorganizing itself. The next push is coming. Right now, the water is just deciding which way to send it. It doesn’t feel great, though.
We don’t have a good word for this in business. We say the dip, the lull, the trough, and most of those terms come pre-loaded with someone else’s framework. So I’m going to borrow from the sailors. The flat patch in your launch, your sales cycle, your team’s energy, your novel’s middle chapters, your kid’s reading progress, your therapy, your career, your second marriage. That isn’t failure. That’s slack tide.
The interesting question is what you do while the water is still…isn’t it?
Three moves. Just ideas to get us moving when the current isn’t.
Shrink the ask, not the ambition.
When the work feels heavy, the instinct is to set a smaller goal. That’s the wrong end of the stick. What needs to shrink is the daily commitment, not the destination. Habit researchers keep finding the same odd thing: people who promise themselves five minutes of practice keep the streak longer than people who promise themselves a full hour. The brain doesn’t audit duration the way it audits identity. Five minutes still counts. Zero does not. During slack tide, you protect the streak. You keep your hand on the rail.
A friend of mine who runs a small agency calls these “tiny touch days.” On the worst days she doesn’t write a deck. She writes one slide. She doesn’t pitch a client. She sends one email. The work doesn’t move much. But the writer in her, the seller in her, the leader in her, stays on the boat.
Change the inputs before you change the outputs.
The instinct in a lull is to try harder at the same thing. Reread your own deck. Open the same dashboards. Sit in the same chair. Eat the same lunch. The brain is a sensory animal. Bees fed only one kind of flower lose immune function. We aren’t bees, but we get duller when our diet of inputs goes flat.
So change the inputs first. New walk. New album. A book outside your field. Lunch with someone who doesn’t work in your industry. Sit in a different chair. Or better yet, stand up desk and unplug it so you can’t lower it. The output will follow, not because the inputs were magic, but because your nervous system needed to feel something new.
I’ve seen entire product teams come out of a creative slump because the founder rearranged the desks. Call that superficial if you want. The team had better ideas the next week.
Find the person three months ahead of you, not three years.
The mentor who’s a year past your problem has already forgotten the texture of it. They’ll tell you it gets better, which is true and useless. The mentor who’s a week ahead is still in it with you, and you’ll trauma-bond instead of getting unstuck. The person you want is ninety days past where you are. Close enough to remember the specifics. Far enough to have proof.
There’s a quiet finding in peer-support research: in recovery programs, the most effective mentors are the ones with six to eighteen months of clean time, not the ones with twenty years. Proximity matters more than altitude. Ask the question. Find that person. Buy them coffee.
These three moves don’t push you through slack tide. They keep you on the boat until the current turns.
Now the part that has to be said for anyone leading a team through this.
When you are in slack tide, your team is too. They feel it earlier than you do, the way lichens know a forest is in trouble before the trees do. The leadership move is not to perform momentum. It’s to ask them what’s heavy. Carry the part you can carry. Name the part that’s yours to carry. Companies break in the dip because the leader bunkers in and the team stops trusting the silence. The silence isn’t strength. It’s slack tide getting confused for a stall.
Invest in your team during the flat water. They’ll invest in your customers when the current turns. The customers will invest back. That’s the order… That’s always the order.
Stay Positive & Don’t Compare Your Captain’s Log # 5 To Someone’s # 25 (but #7 or #8 will do…)
