Goal Setting – A
roadmap to success
It’s time for the family
vacation. You are about to begin an 11
hour drive for your well-earned holiday with your wife and 3 children. You’ve been planning this for months. The van is packed. Goodie bags have been made for the kids…also
a few munchies for Mom & Dad. Every day has been well thought-out out. The map has the routes that you will
take. It also includes the several break
areas and fuel stops noted. If all goes
as intended arrival at your destination sans traffic in just shy of 11
hours.
Does this sound
familiar? Most of us take greater pains
to plan our vacation than our plans for the future. In fact, it’s been stated by professional speaker,
trainer and consultant, Brian Tracy that only
3% of adults have clear written goals. A failure to plan is a
plan for failure. It’s been further stated that those people (the ones with
goals written down) are 5 to 10X more accomplished than those of equal or
better education who do not take the time to write out exactly what they want. Too many of us treat goal setting the same way. We dream
about where we want to go, but we don’t have a map to get there.
Let’s commit today to make sure that we are doing everything within our
power to achieve greater return in life.
A roadmap to success!
If
you follow the few short steps I’ve outlined below you will be well on your way
to becoming an expert in building the road maps to achieving your goals.
1. What do you want to accomplish?
When
setting goals it is very important to remember that your goals must be
consistent with your values. Goals should be clear-cut, straightforward and give
emphasis to what you want to happen. Details help us to focus our efforts and
clearly define what we are going to do.
Writing down your goals creates the
roadmap to your success. Although just the act of writing them down can set the
process in motion, it is also equally important to review your goals
frequently. Critical examination of your goals with “stepping points” will help
you do a progress report throughout your journey. Remember, the more focused
you are on your goals the more likely you are to accomplish them. I cannot emphasize enough that a goal “is
nothing more than a wish unless you write it down”. Your written goals have clearness. You have the ability to be laser-targeted in
precisely accomplishing your goals. Your
goal will motivate you and release endorphins to energize you to perform. The excitement that you get as you begin to
move forward to your ultimate goal will help clarify and make your goals
tangible. Once you can truly see it…you
can then feel it….ultimately achieving it!
This is a great time to talk about SMART goal-setting. The acronym stands for:
Specific
Measurable
Attainable
Realistic
Timely
Specific is the What, Why, and How of the SMART model.
- WHAT are you
going to do? Use action words such as direct, organize, coordinate, lead,
develop, plan, build etc.
When
determining your action words use “brain power” by using positive terminology in
your tactical plan. The stepping stone process
is a short list of the tactics that you will employ in your overall strategic
goal achievement. Always use positive verbiage to enable our subconscious mind
to help us carry out the plan. Your subconscious mind is a very efficient tool.
The more positive instructions you give it, the more positive results you will
get.
- WHY is this
important to do at this time? Start with the end in mind and the stepping
stone process to achievement.
- HOW are you
going to do it? ~Stepping stones
Measurable
If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it. Deadlines are critical. If you do not have deadlines your goal has no urgency.
Establish concrete criteria for measuring progress toward the attainment of each goal you set. This will help you be efficient and reach your goals sooner. Once mini-goals are reached you can experience the exhilaration of achievement that will continue to spur you on to continued effort required to reach your goals.
Attainable
Ability
to be achieved, accomplished, or obtained!
Realistic
Bend but don’t break. It’s worked for the New England Patriots….It can work for you. Allow for yardage inside the 20’s but keep them out of the end zone. You do not want to set goals that are out of reach or impossible but be sure to set goals that you can attain with some effort! Too difficult and you set the stage for failure, but too low sends the message that you aren’t very capable. Set the bar high enough for a satisfying achievement!
AIM HIGH = Soaring AIM LOW = Boring
Timely
Set a timeframe for the goal: for next week, month, six-month & annually. Putting an end point on your goal gives you a clear target to work towards.
Continued
success and best of selling to you! I will end this blog with a quote from one
of the most beloved players from Major League Baseball ~ “If you don't know where you are going, you'll
end up someplace else.”
Yogi Berra
Yogi Berra
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