As a business leader, we reflect on so much of our performance but not the thing that’s driving it: our brains.
Yet it’s our brain anatomy which is truly individualised and unique to each business owner. Without it, our business cannot run.
As a cognitive health strategist for business owners and leaders, I work with people to understand the uniqueness of their brain profiles, in order to support them (and their employees) to have the best cognitive health.
Here’s why I think every business owner should be focusing on their brain health in 2026.
It allows you a competitive edge
Cognitive assessments enable leaders and teams to adapt to challenges, sustain productivity, and maintain a competitive edge in a rapidly evolving market. By understanding your cognitive health through regular assessment and proactive measures, individuals will learn how to perform at their best, driving both personal and business success.
Much like our bodies, we all have a cognitive profile of strengths and weaknesses, the key is to find the areas that we excel in, understand the parts that aren’t so strong and implement strategies long term to protect overall cognitive and brain health. Tech makes it easier than ever to regular assess brain health-both with a baseline and then further down the line to track changes and decline early.
It allows you to spot cognitive biases
Learn to spot common cognitive biases as they arise. For example, if you find yourself favouring information that supports your existing beliefs (confirmation bias), consciously challenge yourself to explore alternative viewpoints or seek data that contradicts your assumptions. An objective mindset delivers a significant competitive edge in decision-making. Knowing how your brain makes decisions and leans into its biases is key here.
It allows you to outsource and build a team the right way
Many business owners experience overwhelm and the solution to that can be outsourcing, whether via automation or building a team. Cognitive Assessment allows you to identify cognitive gaps that you can then build teams around, rather than just find team members to do specific tasks.
For example, your brain profile may show you’re an ideas guy and a strategic thinker, so you’ll take care of the big picture stuff. However, you might struggle with smaller details or struggle to meet deadlines and tasks. So you may then employ someone who can help take care of the day to day details. Understand this about your brain makes this process much more effective.
It allows you to support your team and makes you a better leader
Being conscious of cognitive health can help make sure you’re leading correctly and by raising its awareness in your company too, through steady assessment and proactive measures, it means you can enable employees to perform at their peak—benefiting both personal growth and business success.
Just like you, your employees also have a unique cognitive profile composed of strengths and areas of weakness. The benefits lie in supporting people to identify where they excel, recognise areas that may need intervention, and encourage implementation of long-term strategies to protect and enhance overall brain function.
Try to think of cognitive profile as a blueprint of how the brain processes information—how people solve problems, manage stress, collaborate, and think creatively and get to know it about your team too.
Practical ways to do this can include setting up a peer to peer programme in which people can offer each other valuable perspectives on how cognitive patterns play on a day to day basis. Don’t underestimate the value of gaining an outside input from others . Peers can often spot blind spots in their colleagues cognitive health, so promoting a system in which feedback, especially in areas like communication, problem-solving, and conflict resolution can really improve an individual’s cognitive awareness.
You may consider investing in cognitive health assessments for all your staff with strategists who specialise in this field. The goal here goes beyond stress relief or general wellness—it’s about allowing people to gain a deep insight into their cognitive strengths and vulnerabilities to be a better version of themselves. Businesses offer perks like gym memberships or wellness days but not to support the thing that’s most vital for the organisation: people’s brains! Why not change that?













