How To Set Goals Like an Olympic Champion
How To Set Goals Like an Olympic Champion
© Copyright 2005 Stephen Kraus
Virtually every Olympic athlete shares the same goal:
winning the gold medal. But the interesting finding
from research by sports psychologists is that the most
motivated and successful athletes set goals in a very
specific way that is far more precise and detailed than
just setting one big goal.
The best news: we can all use the goal-setting
strategies of elite athletes to achieve more motivation,
success and self-improvement in our everyday lives.
Here's the most crucial principle: supplement the big,
long-term goal with specific, challenging, near-term
goals. Then focus more of your psychological effort
and attention on those near-term goals.
An athlete who wakes up each day to focus only the
gold medal (or the Super Bowl, or the World Series,
etc.) will quickly become overwhelmed. Their
motivation will wane. He or she will start to wonder:
How can I get from here to there? Is this level of
success really possible for me? As two experts on
sports psychology, May and Veach, put it: "Repeated
daily focusing on long-term goals is often counter-
productive. The focus is too far into the future and
prevents the athlete from completing the intermediate
steps essential to ultimate success."
What happens when you focus on near-term goals?
According to the research in the field of positive
psychology (the scientific study of happy, successful
people), lots of good stuff, includingˇ
- Heightened performance, success and motivation
- Greater likelihood of accomplishing goals and making
life changes
- More success in initiating and sustaining self-
improvement efforts
- A stronger psychological sense of confidence and
self-efficacy
- More determination and persistence, particularly
after setbacks
- More enjoyment and intrinsic interest in the topic
What happens when you don't set near-term goals, or
focus too heavily on long-term goals? I call it "goal-
mismatch," and psychologically, it's a perfect recipe for
low motivation, procrastination and rumination ¨C
thinking about goals, but not taking action toward
goals. It's also a recipe for general unhappiness, failed
attempts at self-improvement, and a lack of success.
People who focus too much on their long-term goals
view those goals as more difficult, more pressure-filled,
and less enjoyable, while their near-term goals seem
less motivating, relevant and satisfying.
Who avoids the psychology of goal-mismatch, and
successfully leverages the psychology of near-term
goals? Again, research in positive psychology points to
many examples, includingˇ
- Successful and motivated athletes, as I described
above
- Successful students. Research conducted at
Stanford University found that students struggling in
math significantly improved their grades, as well as
their motivation and psychological well-being, by
focusing on near-term goals.
- Successful business and military leaders. Effective
leaders often "segment" or "compartmentalize"
complex tasks or missions into smaller, "bite-sized"
sub-missions.
- Resolution-keepers. Less than 20% of New Year's
resolution-makers become resolution-keepers. One of
their key success strategies for maintaining their
motivation and self-improvement efforts: focusing on
near-term goals.
- Happy people. Those who are most satisfied with
life are those working toward enjoyable, moderately
challenging goals of high short-term importance.
It's easy to use the power of near-term goals to
achieve more motivation, success and self-
improvement in your everyday life. Just don't go
overboard by making goals "too near-term." For
example, students asked to make general monthly
plans and goals perform better than those asked to
make highly specific daily plans. They spend more time
studying, study more effectively, are more motivated,
procrastinate less, and get better grades. Monthly
planners experience more flexibility in crafting
strategies for accomplishing their goals. They achieve
more success and self-improvement in part because
they more easily adjust "on the fly" and are less easily
"derailed" by changes in circumstance. A daily planner who gets a
mild case of the flu quickly finds his daily goals unattainable,
resulting in disappointment and a loss of motivation. General
planners enjoy the process of planning more, gaining a sense of
designing their lives via self-improvement, while highly specific
planners get the sense of their lives being controlled by their
appointment books and PDAs.
The bottom line: Set weekly or monthly goals, and work
aggressively toward them while giving yourself some flexibility
about how to achieve them. Do this, and you'll not only get the
maximum boost in your performance and motivation, but you'll also
enhance your success and self-improvement efforts. And you'll be
using the psychology of success to set goals like an Olympic
champion.
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Harvard-trained psychologist Dr. Stephen Kraus separates the science of success from self-help snake oil. Get his free 7-day Real Science of Success e-course, and report on Becoming More Resilient & Persistent at www.RealScienceofSuccess.com
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