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oal setting is a formal process for personal planning. By setting goals on a
routine basis you decide what you want to achieve, and then move
step-by-step towards the achievement of these goals. The process of setting
goals and targets allows you to choose where you want to go in life. By
knowing precisely what you want to achieve, you know what you have to
concentrate on to do it. You also know what is merely a distraction.
Goal setting is a standard technique used by top-level athletes, successful
business-people and achievers in all fields. It gives you long-term vision
and short-term motivation. It focuses your acquisition of knowledge and
helps you to organize your resources.
By setting sharp, clearly defined goals, you can measure and take pride in
the achievement of those goals. You can see forward progress in what might
previously have seemed a long pointless grind. By setting goals, you will
also raise your self-confidence, as you recognize your ability and
competence in achieving the goals that you have set. The process of
achieving goals and seeing this achievement gives you confidence that you
will be able to achieve higher and more difficult goals.
Goals are set on a number of different levels: First you decide what you
want to do with your life and what large-scale goals you want to achieve.
Second, you break these down into the smaller and smaller targets that you
must hit so that you reach your lifetime goals. Finally, once you have your
plan, you start working towards achieving it.
Starting to Set Personal Goals
This section explains how to set personal goals. It starts with your
lifetime goals, and then works through a series of lower level plans
culminating in a daily to-do list. By setting up this structure of plans you
can break even the biggest life goal down into a number of small tasks that
you need to do each day to reach the lifetime goals.
Your Lifetime Goals
The first step in setting personal goals is to consider what you want to
achieve in your lifetime, as setting Lifetime goals gives you the overall
perspective that shapes all other aspects of your decision making.
To give a broad, balanced coverage of all important areas in your life, try
to set goals in some or all of the following categories:
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Artistic:
Do you want to achieve any artistic goals? If so, what?
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Attitude: Is any part of your mindset holding you back? Is there any part of the way
that you behave that upsets you? If so, set a goal to improve your behavior
or find a solution to the problem.
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Career: What level do you want to reach in your career?
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Education: Is there any knowledge you want to acquire in particular? What information
and skills will you need to achieve other goals?
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Family: Do you want to be a parent? If so, how are you going to be a good parent?
How do you want to be seen by a partner or by members of your extended
family?
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Financial: How much do you want to earn by what stage?
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Physical: Are there any athletic goals you want to achieve, or do you want good health
deep into old age? What steps are you going to take to achieve this?
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Pleasure: How do you want to enjoy yourself? - you should ensure that some of your
life is for you!
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Public Service:
Do you want to make the world a better place by your existence? If so, how?
Once you have decided your goals in these categories, assign a priority to
them from A to F. Then review the goals and re-prioritize until you are
satisfied that they reflect the shape of the life that you want to lead.
Also ensure that the goals that you have set are the goals that you want to
achieve, not what your parents, spouse, family, or employers want them to
be.
How to Start to Achieve Your Lifetime Goals
Once you have set your lifetime goals, set a 25 year plan of smaller goals
that you should complete if you are to reach your lifetime plan. Then set a
5 year plan, 1 year plan, 6 month plan, and 1 month plan of progressively
smaller goals that you should reach to achieve your lifetime goals. Each of
these should be based on the previous plan.
Finally set a daily to-do list of things that you should do today to work
towards your lifetime goals. At an early stage these goals may be to read
books and gather information on the achievement of your goals. This will
help you to improve the quality and realism of your goal setting.
Finally review your plans, and make sure that they fit the way in which you
want to live your life.
Staying on Course
Once you have decided your first set of plans, keep the process going by
reviewing and updating your to-do list on a daily basis. Periodically review
the longer term plans, and modify them to reflect your changing priorities
and experience.
An easy way of doing this is to use the goal-setting software like GoalPro 6
on a daily basis - we review GoalPro on the left-hand sidebar, alternatively
you can download GoalPro from Success Studios web site. GoalPro uses a
similar set of categories to ones we recommend - either use theirs, or adapt
the software to use ours.
Setting Goals Effectively
The following broad guidelines will help you to set effective goals:
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State each goal as a positive statement: Express your goals positively -
'Execute this technique well' is a much better goal than 'Don't make this
stupid mistake'
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Be precise: Set a precise goal, putting in dates, times and amounts so
that you can measure achievement. If you do this, you will know exactly when
you have achieved the goal, and can take complete satisfaction from having
achieved it.
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Set priorities: When you have several goals, give each a priority. This
helps you to avoid feeling overwhelmed by too many goals, and helps to
direct your attention to the most important ones.
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Write goals down: this crystallizes them and gives them more force.
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Keep operational goals small: Keep the low-level goals you are working
towards small and achievable. If a goal is too large, then it can seem that
you are not making progress towards it. Keeping goals small and incremental
gives more opportunities for reward. Derive today's goals from larger ones.
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Set performance goals, not outcome goals: You should take care to set
goals over which you have as much control as possible. There is nothing more
dispiriting than failing to achieve a personal goal for reasons beyond your
control. These could be bad business environments, poor judging, bad
weather, injury, or just plain bad luck. If you base your goals on personal
performance, then you can keep control over the achievement of your goals
and draw satisfaction from them.
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Set realistic goals: It is important to set goals that you can achieve.
All sorts of people (parents, media, society) can set unrealistic goals for
you. They will often do this in ignorance of your own desires and ambitions.
Alternatively you may be naοve in setting very high goals. You might not
appreciate either the obstacles in the way, or understand quite how many
skills you must master to achieve a particular level of performance.
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Do not set goals too low: Just as it is important not to set goals
unrealistically high, do not set them too low. People tend to do this where
they are afraid of failure or where they are lazy! You should set goals so
that they are slightly out of your immediate grasp, but not so far that
there is no hope of achieving them. No one will put serious effort into
achieving a goal that they believe is unrealistic. However, remember that
your belief that a goal is unrealistic may be incorrect. If this could be
the case, you can to change this belief by using imagery effectively.
Achieving Goals
When you have achieved a goal, take the time to enjoy the satisfaction of
having done so. Absorb the implications of the goal achievement, and observe
the progress you have made towards other goals. If the goal was a
significant one, reward yourself appropriately.
With the experience of having achieved this goal, review the rest of your
goal plans:
If you achieved the goal too easily, make your next goals harder
If the goal took a dispiriting length of time to achieve, make the next
goals a little easier If you learned something that would lead you to change other goals, do so
If while achieving the goal you noticed a deficit in your skills, decide
whether to set goals to fix this.
Failure to meet goals does not matter as long as you learn from it. Feed
lessons learned back into your goal-setting program.
Remember too that your goals will change as you mature. Adjust them
regularly to reflect this growth in your personality. If goals do not hold
any attraction any longer, then let them go. Goal setting is your servant,
not your master. It should bring you real pleasure, satisfaction and a sense
of achievement.
Example:
The best example of goal setting that you can have is to try setting your
own goals. Set aside two hours to think through your lifetime goals in each
of the categories. Then work back through the 25-year plan, 5-year plan,
1-year plan, 6-month plan, a 1-month plan. Finally draw up a To Do List of
jobs to do tomorrow to move towards your goals.
Tomorrow, do those jobs, and start to use goal-setting routinely!
Key points:
Goal setting is an important method of:
Deciding what is important for you to achieve in your life
Separating what is important from what is irrelevant Motivating yourself to achievement
Building your self-confidence based on measured achievement of goals
You should allow yourself to enjoy the achievement of goals and reward
yourself appropriately. Draw lessons where appropriate, and feed these back
into future performance.
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