Make Your
SMART Goals WISE Goals
By Joelle
Jay, Ph.D.
As a leader,
you’re used to setting goals. But are the goals you’re setting
really as powerful as they could be? Goals help us to cut through
the clutter of a crowded mind and keep our thoughts on the things
that matter most. They help us focus. To be effective, you can’t
just set random goals the way many people do – long lists of wishes
that pop up at random and eventually fall away. You can be smarter
than that with your goals. Wiser. This article shows you how. In the
business world, we’ve been trained to set SMART goals:
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Specific
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Measurable
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Action-Oriented
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Realistic and
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Time-Bound.
There’s value
in that. “SMART” goals have helped many people move from vague
unattainable goals to clear, specific action. You might want to use
this standard to transform your commitments into powerful goals.
Here are some examples of SMART goals that meet all of these
criteria. This first example shows how you might use a smart goal at
work:
1.
Schedule (an action-oriented verb) team-building and strategic
planning off-site (specific activities) by end of January (a
time-bound date that is realistic and measurable). You can also use
smart goals to help integrate your work and home lives to find
better balance:
2.
Leave work (a specific, action-oriented verb) by 6:00 p.m. three
times a week (a time-bound commitment that is realistic and
measurable). Smart goals are just as helpful in your personal life:
3.
Go on a date with my wife (a specific, action-oriented verb) at
least twice a month (a time-bound commitment that is realistic and
measurable). All of these goals illustrate how the SMART criteria
get you to be very concrete about your goals, which makes them
easier to attain. The problem with SMART thinking is that it has a
tendency to limit instead of inspire. SMART goals can work against
you if:
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You neglect to write them and keep them fresh.
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They’re isolated from other important parts of your life.
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They conflict or compete.
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They lack spirit and conviction.
To avoid these
pitfalls, make sure your goals are both SMART and WISE.
‘WISE’ stands for:
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Written
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Integrated
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Synergistic
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Expansive
Using these
criteria to improve your goals will transform them into a more
powerful approach.
Written:
Writing your goals is a critical step – and one many people miss.
Writing forces you to be clear in your thinking. It allows you to
look at your plans with objectivity. It instills commitment and puts
your thoughts in a durable form you can revisit again and again.
Integrated:
Integrating your ideas means bringing them together in the same
place so you can look at them all at once. Allow your personal and
professional lives to intermingle. It’s okay if right under
“increase profit share” you have “get more rest.” They both improve
your quality of life. They both contribute to your definition of
success. You get to have it all. There are no rules. You make
it up.
Synergistic:
Whereas integrating your
goals means bringing them together, synergizing means
making them work together. Synergy happens when one idea
advances another. Keeping a vision of what you want in mind when you
think about your goals will help create that synergy. You really
lose something when you decouple your goals from your vision; they
become just another prioritized list. The most powerful and peaceful
way to think about your efforts is to see how they can coalesce into
one complete vision for your life.
Expansive :Think
big. Your goals should inspire you to stay on the path to your
dreams, not lock you into a pattern of ticking off bite-sized action
items from here to retirement. This may be the biggest
differentiator between SMART and WISE thinking. Spending too much
time and energy boxing your objectives into a hard and fast formula
can squeeze the life right out of them. Some examples:
SMART GOAL–
Schedule team-building and strategic planning off-site by end of
January
WISE GOAL –Transform my staff into a team of inspired, empowered
partners
SMART GOAL –
Leave work by 6:00 p.m. three times a week, organize my office and
work with my assistant to find new planning system within one month
from today
WISE GOAL – Feel in control of my life
SMART GOAL –
Go on a date with my wife at least twice a month and tell her why I
appreciate her at least once a day starting August 3rd
WISE GOAL – Fall in love again
The best goals
are both “smart” and “wise.” SMART thinking gives your goals
specificity. WISE thinking gives them heart. Every good leader has
goals. Your goals will help you stay on track to achieving your
bigger vision day after day, and the “SMARTer” they are, the more
productive you’ll be. However, make sure that your goals are also
WISE enough to inspire you, excite you, and move you in new and
exciting ways. You will find you don’t just meet your goals; they’ll
actually better you.
Read other articles and learn more about
Joelle Jay, Ph.D.
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