Goal Setting Secret – How to Achieve Any Goal
This article looks at how a deliberate shift in our views on goal setting can net drastic cumulative results in the long run.
Whether it’s career goals or personal goals, we’ve all been there – setting aggressive and sometimes overtly ambitious goals, chasing after it, hitting road bumps and eventually become de- motivated to never see the goal come to fruition.
Nobody likes to be stuck in a plateau. You might spend months working hard towards a goal without seeing any progress. It can be incredibly frustrating to feel your motivations go unrewarded.
How you react to a plateau will decide whether you’re going to eventually be successful. While many people react by burning themselves out or quitting, some people continue showing up, every day. The people that show up, through sheer patience, will eventually break through their plateau.
Why Get-Rich-Quick Schemes Fail
I see this as a blogger. A new writer will start a blog, often with great content, but after 8 months they stop blogging. Some expressed ideas that the blog would become their future business, so they can’t claim they weren’t committed. While they stopped writing, the soon-to-be successful bloggers continued to write, every day.
I see this as a gym-goer. Every January the gym is full. After a few weeks it’s quiet again. People purchased year-long memberships to use them for 3 weeks. Sure, they can claim they were too busy, or that they didn’t really need to exercise, but that’s a rationalization. While they quit, the truly healthy people continued to show up, every day.
I see this as a student. There are a lot more pre-med students than medical students. There are more people at the beginning of an academic program than at the end of it. While some people cram for exams the last minute, other people develop studying habits that last them their entire degree program.
Getting rich quick doesn’t just fail because the methods are scams. They fail because the people they attract were never interested in what it takes to succeed to begin with. They wanted an immediate solution to a problem that requires a lifetime of dedication.
The Secret to Goal Setting: Deliberate Slowness
Instead of offering the fastest path to success, I want to offer the opposite: the slowest path to success. Instead of promising you can get rich quickly, I’d like to suggest that you can get rich over several years or decades. Instead of promising to lose 14lbs in a week, I am suggesting that you can be healthy for a lifetime.
Deliberate slowness to goal setting isn’t a popular mantra these days. In a fast-paced world, everyone is looking for shortcuts. They want to know how the superstar managed to becoming incredibly successful in a few months. They don’t want to hear about the person who meticulously planned her success for a decade.
However, despite it’s lack of glamour, deliberate slowness with goal setting is a more effective mantra. It forces you to stop craving the immediate acquisition of your goal, focus on the process and get down to the doing. This focus on process makes it more likely you’ll keep your goals once you achieve them. More importantly, a focus on process allows you to actually enjoy the path to success instead of viewing everything as an obstacle towards it.
What Are You Going to Master in 10 Years?
Think about your plans in terms of the next decade, and not the next few months. When you think in terms of a decade, your strategy changes. Instead of trying to frantically push effort into the current moment, you focus on the continuous behaviors you need to succeed. Instead of trying to achieve a goal for the moment, you focus on how to sustain it for a lifetime.
Malcolm Gladwell, in his excellent book Outliers, proposes that it takes 10,000 hours to master any skill. Virtuosos and computer hackers alike all need to put 10,000 hours of work in before they reach true mastery of their craft. If you spent 3 hours a day, for almost every day of the year, it would take you a decade to master a skill.
Instead of looking for the quickest route, look for the most sustainable route. Don’t worry about what will get you there immediately, look at what will keep you there in five to ten years.
As a blogger, this means continually outputting content, on a regular schedule. My own website (ScottHYoung.com) has over 700 articles in the archive, most of which still gain traffic and comments to this day.
As a gym-goer, this means sustaining the exercise habit, rather than adopting radical workout strategies. I’ve been going to the gym 3-5 days per week for over four years. Instead of taking on every dieting fad, I try to maintain a simple diet that is both healthy and sustainable.
My goal setting aims for the long-term. I don’t subscribe to the motivational advice saying you should manufacture unlimited confidence in yourself so you can achieve any goal. I think the downside of this approach is that whenever your false confidence doesn’t meet reality (which often happens) you crash and find it more difficult to put in the effort. I’d rather set highly realistic goals and commit to investing the energy in them day after day, year after year.
Building the Foundation
Beneath any skyscraper there is a large foundation. In order to build upwards, you first need to dig downwards, otherwise you’re resting on uncertain ground. The same is true of life. Before you can try to radically shift your blogging strategy, experiment with your gym routine or juggle a double course load, you need to build a foundation.
That foundation is your habits. The things you do, regardless of your motivation or feedback, every day and every week. I write articles for my website twice per week, regardless of whether my traffic spiked or it crashed. Regardless of whether I made a thousand dollars or a dime. I write because writing is the foundation of my work, and it comes before everything else.
If you can build the proper foundation, you can build almost anything on top of it. Because your foundation will continue to put effort in for you, even when you’re stuck in a plateau, too busy or exhausted, it is the most valuable part of your goal setting strategy. With a foundation, you can then try all the experiments and tricks you want to use to speed your success.
Figure out what you would need to do, every day or every week, in order to sustain your goal. What’s the bare minimum output level you’d need to meet. Once you define this level, make it a habit. Commit to it for at least thirty days without stop. Then commit to continuing it for another ninety days.
Once your foundation is set, you are far less likely to quit out of exhaustion or frustration. You can experience virtually any setback, and continue to show up, every day.
Goal Setting Motives – Lifestyle? Or Means to an End?
One major difference between people who continue and those who quit, is the way they approach their goals. The people who continue see the path to their goal as part of a lifestyle. The people who quit see the path to their goal is just a means to reach their objective.
If you go to the gym, is that because going to the gym is part of your lifestyle, or only because you’re trying to lose thirty pounds? Are you blogging because writing every day is part of your life, or is it just a stepping-stone in order to become wealthy?
Integrate your goals into your lifestyle. While part of this is the same as setting habits, it’s also an attitude. Ask yourself whether you would continue to work this hard, once you’ve reached your goal? If the answer is no, then you probably won’t be able to continue in the long run. If you get stuck or your goal takes longer than you realized, you may never reach it.
Set Aggressive Goals, Realistic Deadlines
Set big, world-changing goals for your life. Just be patient with the deadline. I’d rather have world-changing goals for myself that I foresee taking decades, than minor goals I anticipate accomplishing well ahead of schedule.
Your deadline is more than just a motivational tool. It also frames how you view your goal. Setting longer deadlines forces you to pick sustainable, deliberately slow strategies for success. Setting unrealistically short deadlines forces you to cut corners, take shortcuts and scam your way to the top.
Goal Setting Sustainability
Sustainability is a popular word for the environment. It means choosing solutions that will continue to work in 50 years, just as they work today. But, sustainability also applies to your life and goal setting. If you take on paths that aren’t sustainable, you’re violating the principle of deliberate slowness.
Ask yourself how long you can continue this current path. When will you give up after not seeing any results? If the answer is less than “forever”, your strategy isn’t sustainable. If there is a clearly defined quitting time, you aren’t pursuing a sustainable strategy.
I’m not saying you need to continue the same strategy forever. But, if you have the potential to do so, then you greatly increase the odds that you won’t quit for the wrong reasons.
Don’t Pursue Half-Committed Ventures
The side-lesson of deliberate slowness is that you shouldn’t pursue half-committed ventures. If you want something, you should be committed to realizing it whether it takes only a month or a decade. If you aren’t willing to wait ten years to complete your goal, then you probably don’t have the persistence it takes to see it through to the end.
When Deliberately Slow is Surprisingly Fast
In my life, I’ve taken on goals from a deliberately slow perspective. When I started my business, I set my first important income goal for three years, not six months. When I started exercising my fitness targets were measured in months, not weeks. When I set out changing habits, I did so, one at a time, for at least one month each.
Talking to a short-term thinker, and my approach seems painfully slow. They will point out how I might be able to double my business in a few months, or increase my strength within a week.
But if you actually look at the track record, deliberate slowness is the faster approach. If you only focus on one habit change per month, you can completely rewrite the behaviors of your life in less than a year. Three years to build a business looks painfully long in the future, but after it’s done, people comment on how amazing your success is.
Just Do It. (Every Day)
The current motivational mantra is “get started.” Nike says, “Just do it.” Guy Kawasaki’s book focuses on the Art of the Start. But I think a better mantra than get started would be to “show up, every day.” Instead of just trying to get started, show up every day so that you have a chance to finish.
* What are your goal setting secrets to achieving your dreams? Share your thoughts and stories in the comment section. See you there!
Hi,
I really love the “When Deliberately Slow is Surprisingly Fast” part. Well, most article that I read about “Setting Goal” always said about achieveable and reasonable goal.
After I read that part, it remain me with my mentor. He always said,”You have to create a stretch goal!”. Stretch goal is a goal that you cannot achieve by just simply work harder. For the example, if your business profit per month is $1,000, so your stretch goal should be $2,000. Double your business profit is not a achieveable and reasonable, because you can’t simply working harder or spending more time.
This goal will stretch your mind, because you cannot achieve it by using the simple strategies that you are using currently. So, we have to use our potential to develop different strategies to achieve it, such as, look for partners to expand your business, invest in research, etc.
And I think that it can really motivate us. That is why we need to make sure that our goals must be able to stretch our mind.
So true. It is the journey that matters as much as the destination. However so many times people laugh or scoff at others who like to work with slow, steadiness. Yet like you say it is more realistic. Thank you for this great reminder that slow and steady does win the race and enjoys it :-)
Very interesting article with many different bits of useful advice. However there is one more question I’d like it to answer.
There is a lot of emphasis in the text on internal motivation – trying to achieve a goal, regardless of the progress, forever, simply requires a passion for something.
At the same time, there is little about external factors – should we even consider our chances in achieving the goal we are so passionate about? Or is working towards it a sufficient reward?
To put it in an example… when Scott set up his blog, did he consider the fact that there are already numerous similar blogs and that he might not succeed?
Writing a blog is not risky (in terms of how much you risk, not in terms of probability of failure). However, I’d say there may be a lot of people whose “sustainable” goals would include a more significant risk.
Great article and such a true point.
Just take the example of the lottery, lots of people dream of winning the lottery and buy lots of tickets (often spending many, many thousands of dollars during their lifetime) and of course the company selling the tickets is all the time making a profit.
But of the lucky few who get the short-cut and all of a sudden find themselves millionaires, how many stay rich?
The answer, next to none.
People hoping for the lottery don’t know what to do with their new found wealth and therefore end up spending all of it during the next few years often ending up in worse shape than when they won.
Just as you say, the answer is to move slowly.
Now depending on the goal it doesn’t have to take decades to reach your goals but it will take years if you have set up a challenging goal.
What is most important is that all you learn in getting there is knowledge you will be able to use once you have made it.
Like when trying to loose weight, an operation doesn’t earn you the habits of eating less and exercising more meaning you often end up right back where you started.
Thanks for the article!
What a great article! Love the mention of Malcolm Gladwell and his fantastic book. I can’t believe it could take that long to master a skill. After you’ve done it for a year, you feel like a pro, right?
Love your post. “Deliberate slowness” is a great concept.
I like to work with my clients on 12-month goals. When you have an annual goal, each month you determine the activities to which you’re committed… the activities that will take you closer to the achievement of your annual goal. Then you break your monthly goals into weekly action items and those items can then go on your daily to-do list.
Small steps on the way to big change.
Very interesting article.
We live in a fast paced society, and everybody wants instant gratification; however, if you look at any route of mastery, you would see that it takes YEARS of hard work for somebody to become a virtuoso at anything.
I do disagree with one part of your article: “I’d rather set highly realistic goals and commit to investing the energy in them day after day, year after year.”
– I don’t like the “realistic” mindset. I think the greatest people the world has ever seen were actually passionately, completely unrealistically (by current standards), optimistic. And, they were so ahead of our times.
These were the Edisons, the Teslas, the Franklins, the Marconis, the Bells.
The greatest innovators and contributors to society were those who had unrealistic dreams and unrealistic expectations.
Their desire for manifesting their visions forced them to continue when everybody else told them to give up.
i think you ve given me the missin link
Hi Scott, I think you’re onto something here… ;) Slow and steady wins the race right? You’re taking this one step further by making it a conscious decision to focus on doing things with deliberate intent. I love it.
This article is really great – ALL of your articles are. I really love this one.
Definitely agree, particularly with two points, one around the sustainable route and the second being the adopting of lifestyle related goals not means to an end goals.
My japanese learning goals are like this. Just learning a few more kanji everyday.
But I truly enjoy the lifestyle of stepping along towards these goals, playing games with myself as I do :)
Thanks for a post that’s so passionate — and practical — about how to follow through on our dreams (rather than having them remain just dreams or intentions). I would offer up an additional technique that’s helped me become a better, more consistent writer, dancer and runner: http://www.diamondcutlife.org/how-to-follow-through-on-new-years-resolutions/
I agree — it’s all about sustainable results and getting up to bat.
I think a lot of people fail with their goals because they didn’t have the right mental model to start — they had unrealistic expectations, whether it’s “build it and they will come” or “just do your best” or “if you follow your passion, the money will follow.”
A simple way to avoid crossed-expectations and set a better pace is to actually find three working examples and model from that. I hope for the best, but plan for the worst and finding living examples to model from helps me set my own expectations, and find a sustainable pace.
I will say though that mentors truly are the short-cut — they can tell you what works, and what doesn’t from experience, but more importantly, they can help map the insights and lessons to your specific context.
Great article Scott – that kind of thinking needs to be taught at schools, from an early age, as well as the notion that there is always more that one option. Nothing drives me more crazy than hearing “the only other option is…”
P.S. interesting to see the weight loss ads as a counterpoint to the article
Very well put Scott. I feel the biggest personal competitive advantage one could have is not being in a hurry. The tortoise and the hare had it right on from the start. The important thing to realize is you’re only competing with yourself. The more patience the better. I deliberately picked a business that was long term focused with our value investment fund which has helped keep the perspective. It’s pretty difficult to rush a 10-20+ year plan. The key is always staying motivated. I’ve experienced the same with my blog in that for now I’ve consistently kept to a post a week and guest post every two weeks. For me that’s sustainable. If I do more sometimes then that’s even better but no pressure.
Thanks Scott!
Scott
I lover your articles Tina. I have been trying hard on my weight control goal, but was not successful. I think my goal was too aggressive. I am going to follow the small steps approach and see how it works out.
Scott,
This is probably the best post I have read on goal setting for quite a while.
I especially like the goal sustainability concept you mentioned here. I feel that most goals that we don’t get to accomplish are those that aren’t sustainable for us. They may be sustainable for others, because they have reached that level of skills or mental capability that we aren’t there yet.
So I think we should set goals that are sustainable for us for now, and then as we consistently reach these smaller goals, we move on to accomplish more difficult ones, which at that point won’t seem so difficult at all, because they’ve become sustainable to us, as we have grown and become more.
Many thanks for this post – it just re-affirmed my faith on growing thiongs slowly but surely. it’s my dream to become a professional travel journalist and im devoting my time and resources towards reaching that goal no matter how hard or long it takes
Wonderful post, I really enjoyed reading it! The people you meet when you travel really are often the best part of it all. Tips are really awesome and with these anyone can get success and make their dream come true.
You nailed it. It’s those plateaus that are the hardest to plod through.
It is really hard to keep going sometimes when you see no progress. It can bring you down and make you no fun to be around. You sit and wonder what is going on and why me or not me. You just gotta keep plugging and working towards your goal. Maybe you need to reassess and change up your plan. but don’t give up.
Evan,
I think you’ve touched on a very good point. It’s so common that we tend to give up on a goal especially when we don’t “see” no progress.
Many people don’t realize that “no progress” on the surface simply doesn’t mean there is indeed no real progress. For example, say you want to lose 10 lbs, perhaps you stick to your diet and work out everyday on the first 3 days. Then you find you haven’t lost a single pound. On surface, it seems that you’re not making any progress, but in truth you indeed have initiated some kind of changes, in your body, eating behaviour, daily activities etc. What do you make of these changes? Still no progress? I bet if you keep doing it for another 3 days you will surely see progress. Actually there is always progress, but sometimes just not enough to manifest itself physically in terms of body weight.
The same is true with many other types of goals. It’s sad that many people give up on their goal too early. So I guess my point is that as long as you keep working on the goal, you are making progress.
When we just start it does several thing. First it alleviates the fear that may be buried underneath your soul. It removes the I cant and just puts you in the situation to act on instinct. This is the best way to learn the game of life is to get out there and just do it. To walk up the that CEO and tell him you want to learn from the best and that is why your talking to him. To tell your wife, she is not the one, when you have feeling for another person, rather than holding onto what is not there.
Everything takes action. It is said, the only different between life and death is our ability to take action. Is that so hard to realize and understand? Start now, today is the day of a brand new life.
slowly but surely… im guilty of hurrying things just to see results asap. but this article made me realize that yes, you get things done, but the success is temporary or it may not sustain. good article. something for me to think about..