 |
How to Use Smart Goals to Get Ahead
Author: Victoria K. Munro  | Posted: 29-10-2007 | Comments: 0 | Views: 47 | Rating: (74) (?)
 We have watched many small business owners steadily grow their businesses to new levels as they have regularly set SMART 30-day goals. The results have been remarkable, and we found that consistency is key. If you’ve set goals in the past, we encourage you to consider making goal setting a regular part of your schedule again.
The acronym below gives the criteria for a SMART goal. By using this goal-setting process and the downloadable Make-it-Fly® Goal Worksheet, you can create meaningful goals that you are much more likely to achieve.
Specific
Measurable
Attainable
Relevant
Time Deadline
Specific: State precisely what you want to achieve. For example, “Make 25 sales calls from my prospect list every week,” is a specific goal. Vague generalities like, “Make more sales calls,” won’t prove very helpful.
Specific answers the questions: What? Who? Where?
Measurable: Make sure that you have clearly defined criteria to measure whether or not you achieve the goal. In the above example, you will know if you achieved the number of calls or not.
Measurable answers the questions: How much? How many?
Attainable: You are the best judge of this. You know your own limitations, tendencies and abilities. Set the bar high enough to stretch you a little beyond your comfort zone, but to a level still within your capacity. Be realistic!
Relevant: Keep your big picture in mind. Ensure that your goals are in line with your short-term goals and are compatible with your values.
Time deadline: Set a clear target date or time frame as to when you intend to achieve each goal (i.e., 25 calls each week).
Setting SMART goals significantly increases your chances of achieving success in your life and your business, yet studies show that only 3 percent of people actually have written goals. Writing and following through on these goals will enable you to move your business ahead in the direction you want to go. In addition, SMART goals will:
• Motivate you to action
• Keep you on the right track and moving in the direction you want to take your business
• Enable you to easily identify and avoid distractions
• Encourage you as you’re able to measure progress
• Create incentives within you to think, feel or act in certain ways
• Help you to write motivating daily to-do lists
We recommend that before working on goals, you take a serious look at where you want your business to be five years from now. In light of that, what will you need to have accomplished in two years’ time? Then, in order to keep you moving in the right direction, what will you need to have in place 12 months from today?
Long-range goals should be reviewed frequently. Circumstances will change, and as you move forward, gain new information and insights and grow personally, you may wish to modify or change your goals.
Six Steps to Achieving 30-Day SMART Goals Using the Make-it-Fly® Goal Achievement Plan:
We chose 30-day goals because this gives enough time to make significant progress, yet is short enough to keep you motivated.
Step 1: Express a clear intention by beginning each goal with the words
I will…
Step 2: List all the potential benefits you’ll enjoy as a result of achieving your goal. If you’re not excited about the potential payback, consider a different goal.
Step 3: Record all possible obstacles to reaching the goal. For example, if your goal is to make 25 sales presentations, but you will be out of town for two weeks and you haven’t yet refined and tested your presentation, these obstacles could sabotage your success.
Step 4: After each of your possible obstacles, note a possible solution. In the above example, perhaps adjust the goal to 15 presentations and block out time to refine your presentation.
Step 5: Break your goal into smaller, specific action steps, set a target date for each, and include each one in your electronic or paper time management system.
Step 6: Find someone to regularly hold you accountable and keep you on track to do what you have committed to do!
If you don’t achieve your goal, take time to evaluate why. Consider what you could have done differently.
Don’t forget to reward yourself for your successes!
Rate this Article:
Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/strategic-planning-articles/how-to-use-smart-goals-to-get-ahead-247210.html
About the Author:Victoria K. Munro is co-founder (along with husband Dave Block) of Make-it-Fly® LLC, a company dedicated to creating success for small business owners through creatively designed programs and tools. Victoria has started and run nine different businesses. To receive FREE business success articles with tips to help you with your business, sign up for their award-winning ezine, “In-Flight Refueling,” at: www.Make-it-Fly.com, and receive a free copy of the eBook, Get More Done in Less Time: 101 Quick and Easy Time Tactics & Tips.
|
Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free! |
|
Related Articles
Make your Business Indescribably Successful in 2008! By: Sandy Reed | 07/02/2008 | Business Setting goals for the New Year? Here's the key to unlocking the door to your success in 2008!
How to Set Goals you Will Achieve By: Victoria K. Munro | 29/10/2007 | Small Business Many entrepreneurs live frenetically busy lives, taking little time to stop and plan where they really want to take their lives. Under the daily pressures of running a successful business, goals often fall by the wayside unachieved, but setting and reaching our goals will allow us to create the life we really want. Goals help us achieve what our hearts knows is right.
Effective Planning and Goal Setting Can Help You Achieve Any Dream By: Ian Hutchinson | 03/03/2008 | Self Improvement For everyone, to get any type of success in life, goal setting is very important and what is even more important is the fact that you stick to those goals which are essential to achieve the hopes and dreams connected with it.
Sharpen Your Intuition And Grow Rich By: Hirini Reedy | 13/04/2006 | Motivational Your intuition can give you more knowledge beyond your current thinking. Many successful leaders, millionaires, warriors, writers and artists have tapped into the power of intuition as part of their overall success. It can help you open doors to new riche
Re-invent Your Life With a Do -it-Yourself Retreat By: Lynn Ellen Docon | 12/11/2006 | Goal Setting If you are dissatisfied with your life, feel it is aimless or that you are going in the wrong direction these exercises can help you plan a new course of action and get your life on track again.
On Goal Setting: Paving the Path for Tomorrow, Today By: Jayson Cardwell | 03/07/2007 | Small Business This article discusses the process and importance of setting goals for the new fiscal year. How it guides and directs business decisions, habits, focus.
Keys to Personal Productivity: Understanding yourself is the Secret! By: Victoria K. Munro | 30/10/2007 | Small Business We live in a fast-changing world. Products that were state of the art yesterday have become commonplace today and will be obsolete tomorrow. With ever-increasing amounts of new information to process daily, and escalating demands on our time, many feel they’re on overload. In addition, if you’re in business for yourself, you need to gain and maintain a competitive edge. You can’t afford to be inefficient. You need to find practical solutions that will increase your personal productivity.
Create Anything you Want With These 7 Secrets to Goal-setting By: Eric Garner | 10/10/2007 | Self Improvement 2. Put Your Goals In Writing. Written goals have a way of transforming wishes into wants, can'ts into cans, dreams into plans and plans into reality. The act of writing clarifies your goals and provides you with a way to check your progress. You can even add reasons to give you more motivation. So don't just think it - ink it!
Got a Question? Ask.
Ask the community a question about this article:
Frequently Asked Questions
I have been looking fro a wall map for plannng my ...
By: matty223 | 23-08-2008
i have been looking fro a wall map for plannng my 2 month trip to europe
im looking for something that i can put pins in for stops and stuff liek that any help would be great.
Clean an office
By: Dublin Met | 22-08-2008
generally, how much should i charge to clean a dentist office
Classic Car Show Tips
By: Gil's Body Shop | 19-08-2008
I need tips on planning a car show event. I own a body shop where I do mostly classic car restoration. Can you help?
Small town square resourses needed.
By: Alice | 16-08-2008
What is the process to start planning a small town square?
Hi
By: cyralee | 10-08-2008
hi..im planning to visit my family in hawaii. could u guide me what am i going to do?here's my email cyraleedelacruz@yahoo.com
Small Business development
By: Paelu | 04-08-2008
I am setting up a business where I will have a private facility,20' X 40' area, available for training seminars, lectures and "hands on" massage classes. Most of the seminars, will be from 8am to appx 5pm and will last 2 to 4 days.
There will be 10 to 30 people in the classes.
I will have overnight accommodations available for a limited number of people to include the instructors and their assistants, (usually 3-4 people)
There will be kitchen privileges, and relaxation areas with TVs.
I am wondering where I would find more information on how to charge the
the instructors for use of the conference space, as well as, what kind of
room fees to charge for participants in the classes. I know how to break down my utilities for usage but am not sure how to project amount of usage ie utilities, wear, tear, and possible damages, liability insurance, housekeeping to include bed linens, bath towels etc. and what else I might need to include in my tabulations
Q&A Powered by:
Latest Strategic Planning Articles
The Advantages and Pitfalls of Self Employment By: Donald Yates | 04/09/2008 Thousands of people go into business for themselves each day, only a very become successful. Here is a sampling of business ideas and their possibilities. Stay focused, be diligent and most of all proceed with caution.
Writing a Business Plan By: Zack Fair | 02/09/2008 When it comes to writing a business plan you need to remember that it should focus on four separate elements of your business: description, marketing, finances and management. These will be the main focus of anyone who wants to learn about your business.
How Many Memberships Did You Say You Have? By: Mrrb Mrrboo | 01/09/2008 As we enter into an new level of communication in the on the internet. We must hone our old tools and create new tools to address these new set of problems and challenge that arrise when we move a warp speed ahead. So what if you all of a sudden found yourself with more resource than you can handle? What would you do? This article addresses some of the concern in the new era of living that has all of us more busy than a beaver with thousands of trees to chew through.
Lean Six Sigma:why Do You Need to Improve Your Processes? By: Tom Smith | 25/08/2008 Once you understand your customers, the next step is figuring out a way to get better at delivering what they want. The answer lies in improving the processes your company uses to generate the services and products you sell.
The Goal of Lean Sigma By: Tom Smith | 25/08/2008 One of the challenges you’ll face as you begin to use Lean Six Sigma is defining and measuring defects.Since Lean Six Sigma starts with customers, its goal is clear—to eliminate anything that doesn’t meet their needs.
How to Create the Perfect Survey By: Janae | 22/08/2008 Although it may seem easy, creating a successful survey requires quite a bit of planning and research. The following Do's and Dont's will help you as you sit down to craft your "perfect survey."
Ease the Headache of Shipping By: BILL HANDY | 21/08/2008 Why use a freight broker to move your freight? When time is critical and your resources are limited to local trucking companies in your area. If your job is to move loads in and out of your business and you job or customers are on the line. One call is needed to take the burden off your shoulders.
Model Definition By: Nancy billa | 21/08/2008 Some Words will help you
More from Victoria K. Munro
Want to Get Ahead? Consider a Coach By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship Being the boss can be lonely. You can’t always share your trials and triumphs or discuss crucial issues with employees or others. But someone with whom you can talk through a situation or challenge you’re facing and can prove invaluable. Hiring a coach may be the answer.
Your Beliefs Could be Holding You Back By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship Subtle yet deeply held limiting beliefs could be preventing you from achieving your goals. What we truly believe—those often-unconscious assumptions about who we are and what we’re capable of—can propel us to greatness and enable us to achieve audacious dreams, or they can sabotage our efforts.
Release the Power of the Real You: Five Steps to Know Thyself By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship To enjoy true success, we need to discover—really know—who we are at our core. Having a clear understanding of who we are, what matters most to us, and what we want to accomplish in life releases tremendous energy. It inspires confidence and ignites within us a sense of purpose. It gives meaning to even trivial tasks.
Don't Fly Solo! Join an Advisory Board or Build Your Own By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship Flying solo can be lonely and sometimes scary. Statistics confirm that being in business on your own is risky. In addition to the constant steam of demanding daily tasks and stressful financial challenges, it’s all too easy to just get bogged down with busyness.
How to Make the Most of Your Summer By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship The weather is warm, the days are long—it’s summer. But don’t let those lazy hazy days just drift by. Plan now to make the most of the season: get some needed rest, recharge your batteries, regroup and be ready to hit the ground running this fall.
10 Tips for a Stress Free Summer By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship Summertime brings its own stresses for entrepreneurs. For example, running a business, while entertaining a string of out-of-town guests can be a challenge. For those with school age children, summer vacations have their own joys and pressures. Add to this the lure of good weather and multiple opportunities to play, the dilemma of whether or not to leave the business and take a vacation and for some a seasonal cash flow crunch.
Seven Easy Steps to Reach Your Goal By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship It’s easy to lose focus and fritter away your summer. We need to relax and have fun, but don’t let the season slip by without achieving what you want. Following the steps below will get you where you want to go.
Entrepreneurs: Don’t Get Stuck in the Status Quo! By: Victoria K. Munro | 26/06/2008 | Entrepreneurship It’s time to review and revise your business plan. Because personal and business lives are often interwoven for entrepreneurs, it’s good to consider both. Learn from the past and decide on changes you want to make in life—don’t get stuck in the status quo.
|
 |