Where will you complete the goal?
When do you want to do it?
Which requirements and constraints might get in your way?
Why are you doing it?
Specificity is important because when you reach these milestones (date,
location, and objective), you’ll know for certain you have achieved your
goal.
Measurable
Measurable
goals are defined with precise times, amounts, or other units
—essentially anything that measures progress toward a goal.
Creating measurable goals makes it easy
to determine if you have
progressed from point A to point B. Measurable goals also help you figure
out when you’re headed in the right direction and when you’re not.
Generally, a measurable goal statement answers questions starting with
how
, such as “How much?”, “How many?”, and “How fast?”
Attainable
Attainable
goals stretch the limits of what you think is possible. While
they’re
not impossible to complete, they’re often challenging and full of
obstacles. The key to creating an attainable goal is to look at your current
life and set an objective that seems
slightly
beyond your reach. That way,
even if you fail, you still accomplish something of significance.
Relevant
Relevant
goals focus on what you truly desire. They are the exact opposite
of inconsistent or scattered goals. They are
in harmony with everything
that is important in your life, from success
in your career to happiness
with the people you love.
Time-Bound
Time-bound
goals have specific deadlines. You are expected to achieve
your desired outcome before a target date.
Time-bound goals are
challenging and grounding. You can set your target date for today, or you
can set it for a few months, a few weeks, or a few years from now. The key
to creating a time-bound goal is to set a deadline you’ll meet by working
backward and developing habits (more on this later).
Side note:
Okay, here’s where it might get confusing. Sometimes the
“three-month rule” doesn’t apply for every situation. Occasionally you’ll
have a major goal
that demands your attention, but doesn’t neatly fit
into a quarterly block of time.
For
instance, one of my current goals is to complete an IRONMAN
race, which is five months away as I’m writing this.
Training for this
race is still a critical part of my day, but I won’t
achieve the outcome
until two months after the deadline of this quarter.
The point here is like everything else in this book, the three-month rule
isn’t written in stone. Use it as a general guideline—not as an absolute
must.
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