Related Links

Featured Links





Recommended Products



 

 
Featured Articles

Is Setting Personal Goals REALLY Necessary?
What is your reason for setting a goalThis is the first, and important question you need to ask yourself. Why? If your reason for setting your goal is not sincere, your motivation and enthusiasm can wane drastically as you progress on your goal path. ...

Right Brain Goal Setting
Ever notice that New Year's Resolutions tend to lose steam somewhere around February 1st? If you find this is true in your own life, ask yourself, are these resolutions something you truly want? Or are they "shoulds"? Something you think you should be ...

Setting Goals With an Annual Life Review
If you've ever had a yearly performance review for your job, you know it can be a tense experience that determines whether you receive a pay raise or not. Your boss will likely have a detailed checklist of your progress and success, as well as notations ...


Google
Easy Goal Setting
 

The GET Step

Decide what it is you want to get. Do you want to get a new car? A degree? Better at something? Do you want to get away from it all on a vacation? Decide what it is you want to get and write it down. Make a list of all the things you’d like to do and be, a list of all the places you want to go, and the things you want to accomplish.

The ORGANIZE Step

Organize your plan. First develop a plan by listing every step that it will take to get you what you want. One easy way of doing this is to imagine yourself as having already attained your goal. Then “look back” and make note of all the steps it took you to get there. Don’t worry about the order yet; just list as many steps as you can think of.

Now, organize your plan by prioritizing your list. Make a list of the order that will best accomplish your goal. For instance, if your goal is to get to Hawaii you would need to plan the dates before you make hotel reservations. You would need to have a plan for saving the money before you booked your plane.

If some of the items on your list look overwhelming, break them down into smaller pieces. If you want to write a book, break it down. Start with the table of contents. Write a chapter a month. Write four pages per day. Make each task manageable.

The ACTION Step

Take some action every day to move you toward your goals. Every week write down the three or four things that are most important to do to move you toward your goals and plan when to do them. Then do


them.

I often use my Weekly Prioritizing worksheet. You can too. Write down your top three priorities for the week. Next, list three actions you need to take this week to honor these priorities. The next step is the most important—list the possible distractions you will encounter and how you will eliminate them.

For instance, if one of my priorities were to get my first book published, I would write “book” as one of my priorities. I would then list, “write chapter four before work on Tuesday.” Now, what could distract me? It could be raining Tuesday morning and then I would have to take my son to school. How will I eliminate those distractions? I could ask my husband if he will be available for school transportation or set it up with a neighbor. I could also set aside some time Tuesday night just in case.

By looking ahead and preventing possible distractions before they occur, or by having a secondary plan just in case “plan a” doesn’t work, I will get those things done one way or another.

The LIST Step

Make lists as you go. List what you want. List how to get there. List the obstacles that might get in your way. List how to overcome them. List your action steps. By writing things down, you form a commitment to get them done.

And finally, The SUCCESS Step

Enjoy your success each time you accomplish part or all of a goal. Each small success will boost your confidence and give you the motivation to go on and finish something else.


About the Author
Theresa Frasch is a "DECLUTTERING SPECIALIST."

Theresa Frasch may be contacted at
mailto:theresa@organized4success.com

Get your FREE Organized 4 Success E-zine and/or "How to Declutter for
Good" pamphlet at http://www.organized4success.com.

News



Forbes

Is Everest Climber's Death A Case Of Goal Setting Gone Terribly Wrong?
Forbes
But what about more quotidian examples of goal-setting and their effects on our well-being? Does choosing to metaphorically scale Everest make us stronger and more resilient or do pie-in-the-sky ambitions set us up for failure and disappointment?

and more »

Goal setting is an art form
Naples Daily News
By JAN KANTOR Goal setting is the art that makes everything else achievable. It gives you energy, focuses your talent and structures your time. To be successful, you must be goal directed. Once you have set goals, you have a script for meeting ...


AUA 2012 - The absence of goal setting in the dialogue between metastatic ...
UroToday
ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - Throughout medical practice, we observe that there is often a misalignment between patient expectations of treatment and those of the clinicians managing patients. The communications of treatment objectives in metastatic ...


Young mums bond, learn life skills
Nelson Mail
Sessions on CV making, goal setting, budgeting advice and child development were included, as well as fitness and arts and crafts. "Knitting is great for stress relief, and you need a lot of that when you're a parent," Tracey Coleman said.


Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of Goals
Lifehacker
Unfortunately, compulsive goal setting can be a major roadblock to actually achieving goals. Applying a rigorous approach to your goal setting is not only a great way to help you along the path to meeting them, but it's also a way to prune out all the ...

and more »