Craft Mini-Goals
Jennifer Dunham Starr
Profitable Lifestyle Designer, Automation Strategist, Author & Speaker. Are you ready to work smarter, not harder?
Goals are something that can be used to improve your life.
By having goals, you can check to see if you’re on track for how you want your life to turn out.
Goals are helpful tools that can keep you headed in the right direction when you need to make a decision that involves changing some aspect of your life.
When long-term goals seem too far out of reach, you can craft mini-goals along the way to help you achieve your end result.
Welcome back to part 2 of our Goal Setting Series! In part 1 we talked about how to?know your end result !
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Craft Mini Goals
Encouragement is a by-product of having goals. Whenever you have a setback,?goals can encourage you to keep going. By seeing?how far you’ve already come, you realize that you’ve already made some strides forward.
Most success-minded people will focus on?short-term goals?over long-term goals because these are?easier to make come true. Living in a results-oriented world causes people to lean toward short-term goals more often.
Dreamers who do very little action taking often focus on?long-term goals, forgetting that they need a?specific path to get them there. They stay paralyzed, feeling the long-term goal is?too far out of reach.
Having short-term goals means that these are things that you?do in the present or in the very near future?– such as within a week or a month. An example of a short-term goal might be setting up an email autoresponder system within the next 14 days so that you’re ready to build a list.
A long-term goal is usually something that you can’t reach as fast as a short-term goal. A long-term goal is one that you?plan to reach within a few months or a year?or longer after making it.
Long-term goals will be realized over time as each of your shorter milestones are achieved.
For instance, your long-term goal might be to have a list of 100,000 subscribers.
So your short-term goals might be:
…and so on.
Each time you’re able to look at your list and cross off an item that you achieved, it helps you?build momentum toward reaching your ultimate goal.?Whatever your goals are, you shouldn’t let them just sit there as nothing more than an internal dream that you have.
You need them around?visually?so that they can help remind you of what you desire out of life. You need to be able to see whatever it is that your goals are so that you’re?reminded to take action.
Create a vision board?with pictures that will help?keep you motivated. Or you can write them down in a notebook and list the reasons why you want that goal.
Studies have shown that?goals that are visualized or written down are reached more often than goals that are not. It spurs you forward into?doing all of the small steps needed?to send you up the ladder of success.
Reaching any goal will require you to understand?what it is that you already possess?that can help you meet that goal.
Need some help? Grab your free copy of my goal-setting guide by clicking the image below.
It also takes you?understanding what you lack?in reaching that goal so that you can level up your skills to achieve it.
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If you wanted to run a marathon and you were in fairly good shape, you would understand that your physical condition was something you already had. But if you were out of shape, you would understand that you couldn’t run a marathon until you got into shape.
You would understand that you lacked the physical conditioning. Defining that would?help you set mini goals?of getting fit, so that would then?feed into your larger goal?of the marathon accomplishment.
You can dig down and?create mini-goals for as many sub-levels?as you want, too. For example, physical conditioning is a mini goal to competing in the marathon. But what are some mini goals for the physical conditioning?
Creating mini-goals helps you?focus all of your energy?on the bigger goal. Focusing on the bigger goal can make you feel overwhelmed and cause you to talk yourself out of trying.
Making mini-goals takes the overall goal and reduces it in size so that it’s manageable and doable.
You?won’t allow yourself to have excuses?as to why it can’t be achieved.
Each mini goal that you set?needs to be specific, too. This means that you?divide these up into tasks. You would need to use a calendar in order to?set a date?for reaching each task that falls under your mini-goal heading.
You then break down the date by the time that you have to work on the goal. When you have goals that have a conclusion date, it helps you?stay on track to reach the bigger picture.
Goals, even mini goals with a conclusion date of “whenever” rarely get finished. You need to know?when you should start?that mini goal and?when it needs to be completed.
Give each task under the goal?a deadline. For example, a mini-goal of walking a 15-minute mile within 15 weeks might require you (if you’re starting from a 30-minute mile) to shave one minute off your time each week.
That’s a doable mini-goal, and?the timeline is specific enough?for you to have clarity in reaching it. Everything that you do under a mini goal should be something that matters. The more specific it is, the better it will be?keeping you on track.
Mini goals need to be created in such a way that?you’ll be able to see progress. If your goal is to start your own business, then one of your mini-goals might be to write a business plan.
Next, you would write down when you need that plan finished by. Another mini goal could be having a mentor look over the plan and give you tips on how to further polish it up.
Each step that you take should have a purpose that propels you toward the end result of your bigger goal.
If you can?remove the mini-goal without it impacting the overall goal, then odds are high that the mini goal?may not be needed.
You need to have an?order of importance?in place before setting mini-goals. After listing the mini goal, write down?what you gain?from reaching that goal. Write down?what you have to do to make it happen.
List the deadline?that it needs to happen by. Make notes under the mini-goal that tell you?what you must learn?to reach that goal. Is there a class you need to take? A book you have to read or a seminar you must attend?
All of those should be listed under the mini-goal. Make sure that you understand if completing the mini-goal can be done alone or if you’re going to need someone else’s help with it.
You should list?all of the possible roadblocks?that could happen during the course of trying to reach each mini-goal. After you list the roadblocks, write down all of the?ways around them.
What this does is help you?be prepared for whenever a setback crops up. They will – and it’s always best to have your offensive strategy in place before you need it.
Now that you have learned how to?know your end result ?and craft mini-goals, you can move on to the next step and?brainstorm action steps !
How can you craft mini goals to help you along the way to a long term goal? Share with me in the comments below!
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