Meet Your Business Goals
How to Actually Meet Your Business Goals
By Gene Marks
The Hartford Small Biz Ahead
Originally Published: March 22, 2021 | Updated: May 1, 2024
We all know that setting goals is important, but few of us do it the right way. And unfortunately, it prevents us from reaching our goals. That’s frustrating.
There are a lot of ways we self-sabotage: We over-complicate our goals. We create too many of them. We’re unrealistic. We’re too detailed. We’re wasting our time. We know this. I know this. I was doing all of these things, which means I was doing my goal-setting wrong too.
So about 10 years ago, I changed my approach, and the results have been significant. I’m now setting goals and actually achieving them. Here’s what I do.
For starters, I have two types of goals: quarter and annual. I set the quarter goals at the beginning of each quarter and the annual goals at the beginning of the year. My mindset is: What do I want to happen this quarter, and what do I want to happen by the end of the year? At the end of the period, I just want to go down the list, check off what’s been done and move the ones not accomplished to a new list for the next period. It’s as simple as that.
I keep my goals in my calendar. Maybe you just use Google or Outlook. I use a customer relationship management system (CRM). It makes no difference. What matters is that I log these goals into the notes of an activity (a task or even an appointment), and then I schedule the activity not for the end of my goal period but for the middle. So, for example, if I have goals that I want to achieve by March 31st (the end of our first calendar quarter), I list them all in the notes of a “task” that I schedule for February 15th, or approximately half-way through the quarter. For my annual goals, I schedule the task for every four months.
My goals aren’t a contest, a game or some kind of feat. They’re simply just stuff that I want to make sure gets done during that time period. So I schedule them mid-way through the time period to check on myself and make sure I’m not only on track but that I’m not forgetting any.
So what kind of goals do I schedule? Simple ones that are reasonable and that can be quantifiably achieved…[MORE]
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To read the entire article by Gene Marks at The Hartford Small Biz Ahead website, visit: How to Actually Meet Your Business Goals