What if the coming year could be the one where everything finally aligns—your goals, your values, and the way you spend your time? Design Your Next Year is a guided workbook that helps you reflect, reset, and create a clear plan for the life you actually want to live. More than just another planner, it blends intentional reflection with practical goal-setting so you can step into the year with clarity, focus, and purpose. Inside, you’ll discover: Structured life review exercises to process the past year and carry forward what matters most. - Goal-setting workbook tools that turn big dreams into achievable daily actions. - Vision and values prompts to design your life around what’s truly important. - Journal frameworks that break the year into manageable, motivating milestones. - A purpose-centered approach that ensures your goals feel aligned, not forced. Whether you’re looking to reset your routines, focus on new priorities, or finally follow through on the changes you’ve been imagining, this workbook gives you the structure and support to make it happen. If you’re ready to stop drifting and start designing, Design Your Next Year will give you the tools—and the confidence—to make this your most intentional year yet. You want to live "on purpose" but reflecting on what makes for a meaningful life and defining goals can be overwhelming. The process I've outlined in this workbook has helped me. I published my process in the hopes it could be valuable to you, too. I commend you on living with intention. Warmly, Lisa Liguori You are gifted, capable, and needed more than you may realize. My purpose is to help you uncover what makes you uniquely you—and to use those gifts to create a life that feels purposeful and joyful. I'm Lisa Liguori and for 25 years I've been irresistibly drawn to facilitating meaningful conversations, learning new things, and hosting educational events. Some of my grandest adventures have included swimming with tiger sharks in Fiji, photographing giraffes in South Africa, and piloting a small plane with my husband, David. Yet most of my favorite memories come from lingering over slow, sweet dinners with family and close friends. I have an incurable "thing" for stocking up on greeting cards, (enough to last several lifetimes), adore the fragrance of gardenias, and only watch movies with happy endings. Because I can take life too seriously, I'm stretching myself with improv-comedy classes—and I fully intend to join a flash mob someday (call me if you're planning one!).