Setting
SMART Business Goals
You have probably come across many articles, books, and audios that
stress the importance of setting goals. Hopefully, you have taken the
time to sit down and write out goals for yourself. But are you writing
SMART goals? SMART goals are Specific, Measurable, Attainable,
Realistic and Time Related.
Specific goals are written out clearly and have a set time frame. When
you write out your goals, state what you want, and give it a deadline.
A simple goal of “earning money by working from
home”
becomes much more motivational if you phrase it as “earning
$500
per month on a regular basis within sixty days”. Once you
know
what your plan is, it will be easier to achieve it.
It is important to have Measurable Goals, as they will help you track
your progress. If a goal is not measurable, it will be very hard to
define when you have actually achieved it. In the example above, by
defining how much income you want to earn and giving it a time frame,
you will know instantly when those sixty days are over if you have
achieved the goal.
An Attainable Goal is a goal you know you can achieve. Don’t
be
fooled by the word “attainable”. It can still be a
challenging goal and require effort to achieve it, but it does need to
be something you can do. For instance, if your goal is to learn to
build websites and you have absolutely no experience, your goal
shouldn’t be to build a huge, portal website in a week. An
attainable goal would be giving yourself a month to learn the software
and build a small, but functioning website. Otherwise you will be
putting pressure on yourself. If you are constantly setting
unattainable goals, you may end up doubting yourself and become so
afraid of failure that you start procrastinating on easy tasks.
While it is great to shoot for the stars when you are setting your
goals, they also need to be Realistic Goals. Using the first example,
the goal wasn’t to earn $500 within a week. Instead, the goal
was
to earn $500 per month within sixty days. If you are new to working
from home, it may take some time for your business to be profitable.
Instead of setting one huge goal, break the goal down into manageable
“mini-goals”.
You may have noticed that the example goals were Time Related. There is
an old saying that “a goal without a deadline is just a
wish”. Having a defined time line will keep you motivated. If
you
have an open-ended goal, it will be easier to procrastinate, and
therefore, harder to accomplish. However, knowing you need to
accomplish something in a set period of time will spur you into action.
Copyright © klfad.com.
All Rights Reserved.