- Goals are specific. Remember, “hazy goals get hazy results.”
- Effective goals are broken down into measurable steps such as:
- "Each day I will identify three positive things about my work” or
- “I will conduct two informational interviews every month.”
- Goals are aligned with your values.
- Goals are realistic and reasonably attainable.
- Goals are designed within a realistic time frame with specific deadlines.
- Goals are flexible; they can be altered as change or new awareness occurs and as new information is received.
- A written goal has a greater chance of being accomplished; when a goal is written down it seems real.
- Evaluate whether you achieve your goals. If you set goals that are measurable then you have criteria with which to evaluate them.
- Plan for both short-term and long-term goals.
- Celebrate achieving your goals!
Goal Setting Instructions
When it comes to setting goals, use the acronym S.M.A.R.T.
Specific:
Should address the five W’s: who, what, when, where and why.
Easy to understand.
Specifies desired future results.
Measurable:
Describes how each goal will be measured (numeric or descriptive).
Answers the questions:
- How will I know when the result has been achieved?
- How will I verify the achievement/performance of this goal?
- To what level do we need to achieve this result?
Focus on elements such as observable actions, quantity, quality, cycle time, efficiency and/or flexibility to measure outcomes.
Achievable:
Relevant:
Relevance refers focusing on something that makes sense with the broader business goals. For example, if the goal is to launch a new program or service, it should be something that’s in alignment with the overall business/department objectives. Your team may be able to launch a new program, but if your division is not prioritizing launching that type of new programs, then the goal wouldn’t be relevant.
Answer the questions:
Time-bound:
There is a specific time frame to achieve this goal (beginning and end dates).
May include interim steps and a plan to monitor progress.
May establish a time frame for short and long-term goals.