10 Tips for Achieving Your Goals
There are only 24 hours in a day for each of us. Those who use
them wisely, get where they want to go. Those who don't, are left
to dream. If you carve out enough time for the right things and
then focus on getting them done, you too can achieve your goals.
Follow these 10 steps to significant results and less stress:
- Know what is important
Decide what is truly important to you, whether personal or business.
What must you do to create value for which customers are willing
to pay? What will make you or your company more able to create
that value? What will make you a stronger, more capable person?
What will keep your life balanced, healthy and sane? Devoting
time to these goals will help you get to where you want to go.
Devoting time to everything else – the urgent but unimportant,
the myriad little tasks piled up at your desk – will only
suck up your seriously limited hours. Know what is important and
keep it in mind always.
- Know what is MOST important
You can't do everything. You can't improve everything. You must
choose. Decide what is most important and focus on the top few.
You will accomplish more if you tackle less. Get it done and then
move on.
- Clear the unimportant off your plate
Delegate, outsource, find a more efficient method, and simply
stop doing things that aren't necessary. Examine your activities.
Which ones support your most important goals? Minimize or eliminate
the rest.
- Be specific about next steps
Be clear about the specific, concrete steps needed to make progress
toward your goals. What exactly will constitute success at each
step? Vague tasks suck up time. You don't have to have a completely
detailed plan reaching far into the future but you better know
exactly where B is before trying to get there from A. Otherwise
how will you know you have arrived?
- Assess prerequisites
In order to complete your next task, do you have the knowledge,
skill, process and resources required? If not, get them. Otherwise,
you are just kidding yourself and the task will remain on your
to-do list far too long.
- Schedule time for the important
If a task is important, schedule a reasonable block of time for
it just as you would for a meeting with an important customer.
- Remove distractions
Silence the phone, shut the door, turn off the email alert, hang
a sign. These precautions should eliminate most external distractions.
The self-imposed distractions are tougher. Put everything away
except the project at hand. Close unnecessary computer applications.
Keep a small pad handy to jot down distracting thoughts.
- Be intentional
Just as you would start a meeting on time with a predefined agenda,
start your task on time with a predefined outcome. Note the clock
and the reserved block of time. Tell yourself that you need to
accomplish X by the scheduled end time. You may wish to set a
timer at the halfway point to ensure progress.
- Check your progress
If you are not making progress as expected, what step did you
skip? Are you clear about the specific outcome? Do you have the
knowledge, skill, method and resources necessary to complete the
task? Did you set aside a block of time and eliminate distractions?
Did you review the agenda mentally and commit to finishing the
task?
- Avoid perfectionism
Keep the purpose in mind and when you achieve it, quit. The last
20% may satisfy your pride but is probably not even noticeable
to anyone else. If the last 20% of every task is excessive and
unnecessary, you could be wasting the equivalent of one whole
work day every week.
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