2. Shift demand across markets: chase opposite seasons, but localize for real
3. Shift demand across partners: align with adjacent peaks and build coalitions
4. Re‑architect the offer for continuity, not just spikes
5. Smooth the supply side so you can say yes when demand shows up
6. Program your year like a portfolio manager, not a sprinter
7. Acknowledge seasonality—and design around it—in your strategy docs Call it out early: if your demand is highly seasonal, write it into your SWOT and your plan of action. Then articulate exactly how you’ll subsidize the lows—whether via a market stall, a second line, or a partner channel—before the season tests your cash flow. Many founders smooth their curves with a simple, adjacent revenue stream that fits the same customer but a different calendar .
The cool insight Your curve is not one curve. It is the sum of many smaller ones: geographies with opposite seasons; partner calendars that peak when yours falls; product layers that breathe in and out across months; channels that ignite fast and others that hum steadily. When you treat seasonality as a portfolio design problem—layering those curves so their peaks and valleys offset—you don’t just survive the off‑months. You build a business that earns and learns 12 months a year, on purpose.