Small Business Goal Setting
Small Business Goal Setting
By: Ben Botes www.my1stbusiness.com
Effective goal setting is a challenging exercise. It requires self-
knowledge and courage. Remember, whatever goals you write down you
can have, provided you believe it, you are prepared to set it as a
goal, and you are prepared to pay the necessary price in advance.
Unfortunately, you always have to pay the price for success in
advance. You have to make the necessary efforts to learn the skills,
be positive and take the necessary action. Collecting information is
important, making decisions is important, but only action gets
results. A manager's job is to get results.
How do I get started on goal setting? There are 4 steps that can be
used by almost anyone for the effective setting of goals. Keep in
mind that there are many formulas for goal setting. It is up t the
person who sets the goals to make them become reality.
Step 1
Realise the importance of setting effective goals
You are the master/mistress of your own destiny. You can be, have,
or do more or less anything you want in life provided you are
prepared to:
set it as a goal;
focus and concentrate on the goal on a day-to-day basis;
resolve to pay the necessary price in advance. (Unfortunately, you
always have to pay the price in advance.)
It is generally recognized that fewer than 5 per cent of people set
goals. It is also generally recognized that fewer than 5 per cent of
people consider their lives to be successful. It should come as no
surprise that the people who do become successful are the same
people who do set goals. The vast majority of people do not realize
that goals are important. The vast majority of people do not know
how to set goals. Remember that you cannot set goals for other
people and that they cannot set goals for you. You are responsible
for setting your own goals.
We know that success is derived from both knowledge and positive
mental attitude. We also know that failure is strongly associated
with lack of knowledge and negative attitudes. Focusing on desired
goals stimulates excitement and enthusiasm, which are in turn
strongly associated with positive mental attitude. Very few people
are prepared to set goals. Most people are not prepared to learn
more or make the necessary efforts to be more positive. Millions of
people think that "education" is something that you get at school,
or perhaps university. In fact, very few people ever recover from
the damage done to their education by going to school. Real learning
is a continuous change of behavior. Winners are happy to change to
accommodate the world. Losers wish the world would change to
accommodate them.
Clear goals are the essential ingredient to success and happiness.
Clear goals make decision making very easy. With clear goals we tend
to collect the relevant information, make sensible decisions, and
take the necessary actions which achieve the desired result or goal.
We tend to avoid time-wasting opportunities. Procrastination is not
the thief of time, it is the thief of life. When you are killing
time, you are killing life. When you indulge yourself in pastimes,
you are passing life. Be wise in the ways in which you use your time
for time is the stuff of which life is made.
Step 2
Be clear of what you want from the future The vast majority of
people simply do not know what they want. Goals should always be set
in line with your values and vision of the future. This can be in
the form of a personal or business vision statement. Some questions
to ask yourself during this process are:
In a perfect world, where would you be three years from now?
What are your career goals, stated in terms of sales, profits, or
salary?
What are the skills you will need to learn?
If you were successful, what would you be, have or do?
What do you daydream about?
Answering this question should help you to identify your personal
goals.
What are the three-to-five aspects of life which you value most?
Is it health, is it the quality of your relationships, is it money,
is it some worthy goal, self-knowledge or self-fulfilment?
What would you do if you knew you had ten years to live?
This question can help you identify what you really want.
What is it that holds your attention?
This could help you to identify your area of excellence.
What were you doing in your career when you were happiest?
This also can help you to identify your area of excellence.
What do you consider to be your greatest achievements?
This should help you to identify those activities which raise your
self-esteem.
What do you consider to be your areas of excellence?
Again, this could help you identify your specialization.
If there were only one achievement you could effect in life, what
would that achievement be?
Answering this question could help you to identify your most worthy
goal.
What would you do if you won =A310 million on the National Lottery?
Answering this question can help you to establish your self-concept
level of income. In fact, most people start giving the money away as
quickly as possible.
If you have not already created a personal or business vision, then
perhaps this may be be a good time. I would like to reiterate, It is
very difficult to get anywhere if you do not know where you are
going. The clearer your vision of destination is, the easier it will
be to get there.
Step 3
Determine what you really want the outcome of your goal/s to be
Communicating without an outcome is like taking a trip without a
destination. With a specific outcome, direction is set and you are
provided with the opportunity to evaluate whether or not you are
reaching the goal. We will call this step the outcome frame. Framing
or describing exactly what you want the outcome to be. NECESSARY
CONDITIONS:
Stated in positives.
Within individual's control.
Sensory based description (testable). Aim for a specific measurable
result. Appropriately conceptualized and appropriately timed.
Ecological. Examine all consequences of achieving the outcome. It
needs to fit into the overall plan (both short and long term goals)
of the individual (or group). OUTCOME FRAME QUESTIONS:
Stated in positives.
What do you want instead of what do you not want? Within
individual's control.
Evidence Procedure: How might you get it? How would you know if you
were getting your outcome? What would you be doing to get it?
Specify the present situation and view the path from present state
to desired state.
Relevancy Challenge: Is what you are doing relevant to what you want?
Use to check relevancy of information in terms of your statement of
outcome. This keeps the planner on target. Makes distinctions
between need to know and need not to know. Too much information can
in fact distract you from a targeted action. Sensory based
description (testable). Aim for a specific measurable result.
What do you need to get outcome? (resources) What is first step you
can take now?
Evidence Procedure: How will you know if...
As If Frame: As if you could...or Just suppose..
Go into future as though person already has their outcome. Use this
viewpoint as the larger frame within which to gather information and
test for a well-formed outcome, looking backward.
Appropriately contextualized.
Context: When, where, with whom do you want it? By when do you want
it? Ecological. Examine all consequences of achieving the outcome.
It needs to fit into the overall plan (both short and long term
goals) of the individual (or group).
Ecology: How will this affect your life? Does not having this
outcome benefit you in any way? (Positive by-products?) (As If
Frame?) Is there a dovetail with the ecology of others? How do your
outcomes and another person's fit best together?To summarize, these
are the questions to ask yourself when determining a specific
outcome for your goals:
What do you want?
How might you get it?
How might you stop yourself?
How would you know if you got it?
Step 4
Set your goals
If you are unsure of this step, go back to step 2. One tip for this
step is to be honest with yourself.
Goals should be in writing, in measurable terms and have specific
timelines. This seems obvious, but you'd be surprised how many
people miss this. Phrasing is important, and defining the
measurables can be quite exciting. For example, a goal might be
that "we're going to type letters that are 97% error-free within 30
days."
Consider setting a "minimum" goal and a "realistic" goal for each
goal you write down.
In conclusion, people who do not have clear goals tend to take
whatever comes along. People who do not set goals are usually
destined to spend the rest of their lives working for people who do
set goals. If you don't know where you are going, just about any
road will take you there!
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Learn more at www.my1stbusiness.com
Ben Botes MSc. MBA, is an Entrepreneur, Speaker, Writer, Coach and
academic. He is the founder of My1stBusiness.com, South African
Business Hubs
Join the My1stbusiness.com Reseller Program and earn 40% referral
commission www.my1stbusiness.com/affiliate
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