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Seven Steps to Achieving Your Goals
Successfully executing any personal strategic plan for change requires that as
you develop your plan, you effectively incorporate these seven steps for attaining
each and every goal.
1. Express your goal in terms of specific events or behaviors. For a dream to become a goal,
it has to be specifically defined in terms of operations, meaning what will be done. When a goal
is broken down into steps, it can be managed and pursued much more directly. "Being happy,"
for example, is neither an event nor a behavior. When you set out to identify a goal,
define what you want in clear and specific terms.
2.Express your goal in terms that can be measured. How else will you be able to determine your
level of progress, or even know when you have successfully arrived at where you wanted to be?
For instance, how much money do you aspire to make?
3.Assign a timeline to your goal. Once you have determined precisely what it is you want,
you must decide on a timeframe for having it. The deadline you've created fosters a sense
of urgency or purpose, which in turn will serve as an important motivator, and prevent
inertia or procrastination.
4.Choose a goal you can control. Unlike dreams, which allow you to fantasize about events
over which you have no control, goals have to do with aspects of your existence that you
control and can therefore manipulate. In identifying your goal, strive for what you can
create, not for what you can't.
5. Plan and program a strategy that will get you to your goal. Pursuing a goal seriously
requires that you realistically assess the obstacles and resources involved, and that you create
a strategy for navigating that reality. Willpower is unreliable, fickle fuel because it
is based on your emotions. Your environment, your schedule and your accountability
must be programmed in such a way that all three support you long after an emotional
high is gone. Life is full of temptations and opportunities to fail. Those temptations
and opportunities compete with your more constructive and task-oriented behavior.
Without programming, you will find it much harder to stay the course.
6. Define your goal in terms of steps. Major life changes don't just happen;
they happen one step at a time. Steady progress, through well-chosen, realistic, interval steps,
produces results in the end. Know what those steps are before you set out.
7. Create accountability for your progress toward your goal. Without accountability, people are
apt to con themselves. If you know precisely what you want, when you want it by and there are
real consequences for not doing the assigned work you are much more likely to continue in your
pursuit of your goal. Find someone in your circle of family or friends to whom you can be
accountable. Make periodic reports on your progress.
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