How to set goals that you can actually achieve?
Or are you just dreaming? You want to lose 30 pounds… eventually. You
want to save up $20,000 for a down payment on a house … at some point. You want
to make enough money to live comfortably … somewhere down to the road.
Set a deadline for your goals
To make your dreams into reality, you need to have a
deadline. You need to set actionable steps each day, each week, and every month
to make it happen.
Write it down. This Goal Planner will help you break down your goals into small steps.
Without an end date, you have nothing to shoot for. It’s nothing more than a daydream.
In other words, start at the end, and then figure out
what it will take to get there.
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How to break your goals into smaller steps
Let’s look at an example. Let’s say you want to get out of credit card debt this year. You own $6,000 on your cards combined. That means you need to pay $500 a month in principal to wipe out your entire credit card debt over the course of a year.
Making a $500 payment each month sounds a lot more
doable than looking at the entire sum, doesn’t it? And by setting an end date
of December 31st, you know exactly what you need to do each month to get there.
From there you can work on an action plan. You can
pick up a little extra work each month to make the extra money to pay it down.
Or maybe you cut out Cable TV for the year and skip your daily Starbucks trip.
The point is when you have a resolution or a goal and
an end date you have something to work with.
You’ll reach your goal much faster
than if you just make a resolution of paying off your credit card debt and
paying whatever is left in your bank account at the end of the month. Chances
are that isn’t going to be much and you’re less likely to keep your resolution
month in and month out.
If you have an end date and break your goal down into
monthly (or weekly or quarterly) chunks you start to see some progress. And
that will keep you motivated to make it to the next milestone and then the
next.
Before you know it you’re getting pretty close to your goal. Doesn’t that
sound like a much better strategy?
Give it a try. Instead of “just” making a resolution,
make a goal, and plan it out. It doesn’t have to take you the entire year. If
you can reach your goal sooner, all the better.
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