Press release
Ron Yeffet: Strong Planning Beats Big Ideas Every Time
Ron Yeffet, president of R & I Trading and global real estate and infrastructure developer, explains why discipline and planning create lasting results in New York and Jerusalem.The Planning Gap Is Widening
New York, USA, Jun 05, 2026, ZEX PR WIRE - Most people have big ideas. Few turn them into reality. The gap is not talent or opportunity. It is planning.
Ron Yeffet has spent more than 25 years managing complex projects across the United States, Israel, Europe, and Africa. His work includes concrete superstructures, energy supply systems, power plants, and major roadways. He believes the reason most projects fail is simple.
"Big ideas are easy. The hard part is turning them into something real," Yeffet says.
Research shows that people who write down goals are significantly more likely to achieve them. Yet most individuals skip the planning step. They jump straight to action or remain stuck in endless brainstorming. Yeffet argues that weak planning guarantees weak outcomes.
"If the plan is weak, the outcome will be weak. Strong planning allows the team to execute with confidence," he explains.
Discipline Is Not Optional
Discipline is often seen as something you apply when you feel like it. Yeffet disagrees. He believes discipline is a way of thinking that shapes every decision.
After serving 37 months in the Israeli Defense Forces as a Major Sergeant, Yeffet learned that details matter. Shortcuts create risk. Consistency builds trust.
"Discipline is not something you turn on later. It becomes part of how you think and act every day," he says.
This approach has informed his work across continents. Whether managing a power plant in Africa or a residential development in New York, the same principles apply. Details matter. Planning drives execution. Results build relationships.
"You learn very quickly that details matter. In that environment, there is no room for shortcuts," Yeffet notes.
Long-Term Thinking Builds Lasting Value
Short-term thinking dominates much of modern life. Quarterly results. Quick wins. Instant gratification. Yeffet argues this mindset undermines real progress.
"Infrastructure is not just about building something quickly. It's about building something that works for decades," he says.
This perspective shapes his approach to community development. When you build a project, you are not just constructing a building or a road. You are creating something that shapes lives and economies for generations.
"When you build a community, you are building something that continues long after the project is done. It creates stability and connection," Yeffet explains.
Long-term thinking requires patience. It demands a willingness to invest time and resources without immediate payoff. But the results compound. Infrastructure projects create jobs. They improve quality of life. They attract investment and opportunity.
Relationships Are Built on Trust and Results
No one succeeds alone. Yeffet emphasizes that great projects require the right people and the willingness to trust them.
"Great projects are never done alone. You need the right people, and you need to trust them," he says.
His enterprise operates with a hybrid model. In-house leadership works alongside trusted external partners. Engineers, contractors, and local experts join projects depending on the region and scope.
"Relationships are built on trust and results. If you deliver consistently, people want to work with you again," Yeffet notes.
This approach has enabled him to manage the development of over 100 projects and own more than 50 across multiple continents. The consistency of execution creates a reputation. That reputation opens doors.
Your Next 7 Days
Start applying these principles this week. Small actions build the foundation for bigger results.
Day 1: Write down one goal you have been avoiding. Be specific about what success looks like.
Day 2: Break that goal into three smaller steps. Identify what needs to happen first, second, and third.
Day 3: Block 15 minutes on your calendar each morning for planning. Protect this time like a meeting.
Day 4: Review your plan from yesterday. Did you follow it? If not, adjust your approach.
Day 5: Identify one person who can help you. Reach out and ask for their input or support.
Day 6: Remove one distraction that pulls you away from your goal. Turn off a notification or decline a low-value commitment.
Day 7: Review your week. What worked? What did not? Write down one lesson and apply it next week.
Your Next 90 Days
Use the next three months to build habits that last. These actions create momentum.
Action 1: Commit to weekly planning sessions. Set aside 30 minutes every Sunday to map out the week ahead. Review what you accomplished and adjust your priorities.
Action 2: Start a project journal. Write down decisions, outcomes, and lessons learned. This record becomes a resource you can review and improve over time.
Action 3: Build accountability. Share your goal with someone you trust. Check in with them monthly to report progress and stay on track.
Action 4: Invest in learning. Read one book or take one course related to planning, execution, or leadership. Apply at least one concept to your current work.
Action 5: Evaluate your relationships. Identify the people who support your growth and the ones who drain your energy. Spend more time with the first group and less with the second.
Start Now
Planning is not complicated. It is a choice. Discipline is not reserved for military officers or project managers. It is available to anyone willing to build it.
Pick one action from the list above. Start today. Do not wait for the perfect moment or the perfect plan. Start with what you have and improve as you go.
"I didn't have a perfect plan. I had a direction and a willingness to work," Yeffet says.
You do not need perfection. You need consistency. You need discipline. You need to start.
About Ron Yeffet
Ron Yeffet is president of R & I Trading and a global real estate developer and infrastructure leader based in New York and Jerusalem. After serving in the Israeli Defense Forces, he began his career in New York City real estate development. Over more than 25 years, Ron has managed the development of over 100 projects and owned more than 50 across New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Israel, Italy, and Africa. His work includes concrete superstructures, energy supply systems, power plants, and major roadways. He supports Or Itzhak in Albania and Thessaloniki and serves on the Honorary Council for Senegal in Israel.
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