5 Steps to Form New Habits for Your 2023 New Year’s Resolutions
Yoram Solomon
Trust Expert/Researcher ? Professional Keynote Speaker ? Author, The Book of Trust? ? Host, The Trust Show? Podcast ? 3x TEDx Speaker ? Trust Premium? ? Trust Habits? ? Adjunct Professor ? TV Host ? (972) 331-1490
It’s that time when you start thinking about your new year’s resolutions. You are ready to commit, but you might also be ready to give it up by the end of January. You are not sticking with a resolution because you are not trying to form a new habit that will allow you to achieve that resolution. “Losing 10 pounds” is not enough. Developing the right habits that will cause you to lose those 10 pounds is.
The author uses the process described in this article to form habits that change behaviors, build trust, and transform organizations. However, this process works to form any habits and change any behavior.
Setting your goals is only the “what.” Knowing what you want to do. We call them resolutions because of the added “resolve” that makes us committed to achieving those goals. No doubt that commitment is important to achieve the goal, but still, it’s not enough without a new habit.
Without further ado, here are the five steps to form a new habit.
Step 1: Choose ONE goal
It’s hard to choose only one goal. There are so many things that we want to achieve next year. The biggest mistake you can make is to choose too many goals. Forming a new habit is hard. Forming multiple habits is impossible, and you will not form any. Choose one goal. Form one habit. Once it becomes a habit, you can focus on another goal and form another habit.
Step 2: Make it a SMART habit
The concept of SMART goals was developed in 1981 by George T. Doran. Abstract, non-specific, and possibly unclear goals will be harder to achieve. Therefore, make your goals SMART. “Losing weight” is not a SMART goal. “Reducing the daily calorie consumption to 1,500” is SMARTer. But not SMART enough. The habit you intend to form should be:
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Step 3: Make it stick
Even if the new habit is not too hard to master, you can still make it easier. Use any or all of the following seven tools to make forming the habit easier:
Step 4: Appoint an accountability partner
Research shows that knowing your goal, committing to it, setting a timeline, and even making a plan increases the probability of achieving that goal to only 50%. Not something to write home about. However, the same research claims that having regular “check-in” interactions with an accountability partner increases that probability to 95%. Word of warning, though. Don’t consider mutual accountability partnerships (“I’ll be your accountability partner, and you’ll be mine”) because those tend to transform into mutual “cutting corners” partnerships (“I’ll let you cut corners if you let me cut corners”). Your accountability partner should be external to your goal and the habit you plan to form, someone you can trust, and someone you care about disappointing (by not meeting your goals). The interaction with your accountability partner should be regular and predictable.
Step 5: How long?
Google the term “how long does it take to form a new habit?” and the top answers will be “66 days” (although that study gives a range of 18 to 254 days) and “the 21/90 rule” (exercise it for 21 days, and then continue for 90 more days). The real answer is neither. Multiple factors play into how long it will take to form a habit, including your personality, how important the new habit is to you, how easy it is to form, etc. There is also no hard line of when something becomes a habit. Your new activity becomes a habit when it is easier to continue performing than stop it. Brushing your teeth is a habit. Wearing your wristwatch on your left hand is a habit. They are harder to stop than to continue. At some point, stopping the habit for one day will be enough to abandon it completely. Later, stopping for one day will not be enough, but if you stop it for a week, you will abandon it. It becomes a habit when you can’t stop it anymore because of how awkward it feels.
The conclusion: you are the only person who can tell when you’ve acquired a new habit. Err on the side of continuing the effort until you feel you have reached the goal, and the habit is now much harder to stop than to continue.
Illuminating your path to innovative thinking, a future-proof mindset, and leadership prowess. | An international speaker & consultant. | TED Speaker | TV Villain
1 年A great plan.
Burnout Speaker: Banking, STEM, HR, IT (Technology). Author: Banish Burnout Toolkit.
1 年My son & I are going to work on one of our new habits together beginning next week.