Rome Wasn't Built in a Day
Josh Dietrich
Executive coach leveraging neuroscience, ontological coaching, and software executive experience within higher education and EdTech.
I have a request. If you’ve set any goals or new year’s resolutions, my request is that you take time within the next seven days to review those goals and identify one goal which you can break down into a series of small, incremental, achievable steps. I make this request because I’ve seen far too many resolutions fail (my own and others) because we set our sights on an aggressive target starting from day one, and quickly lose our momentum. Based on my own experience, if we can find a strategy that starts small and incrementally builds, we are far more likely to get sustained success.
If you’ve read?Atomic Habits ?by James Clear, you know what I’m talking about. This book is another one of my favorites, and it’s no surprise that it was the #1 selling book on Amazon last year. Clear outlines countless strategies for forming habits that stick, including starting small and building over time. Clear explains that the math shows if you can get one percent better each day at something for an entire year, by the end of the year you will be?37times better than you were at the start of the year.?
For example, let’s say you wanted to increase your upper body strength. One common approach is to get a gym membership. You declare you’ll go to the gym three days a week and lift for an hour per visit. Or maybe you go with a BHAG (Big, Hairy, Audacious Goal) and declare you’re going two hours per day, six days a week). Unfortunately, getting to the gym is hard, and once you miss one visit, it’s easy to miss another, and before you know it, you’ve given up on the goal. Suppose, instead, you spent 60 seconds today and did as many pushups as you can with good form. Maybe that’s 10. That’s achievable. You didn’t have to go anywhere; you probably didn’t even need to change clothes. Tomorrow, you add one. The next day, you add another. In just three months, you find yourself doing 100 pushups a day. I did this first with pushups, until I got to 100 pushups three times a week. Then I added in a core strength exercise. Then I added pullups. In each case, I started with 60 seconds, and built slowly over time.
Building a meditation practice lends itself very well to this approach. Start with one minute a day. Consider keeping it at one minute for an entire month, to build a reliable habit. Then gradually add a minute, perhaps adding one minute each week. Before you know it, you’re meditating 15 minutes a day and you’ve got a reliable meditation practice.
How can we employ this for losing weight? Again, we could take the BHAG approach. We could immediately switch from paying no attention to what we are eating and drinking to limiting ourselves to 1,500 net calories per day. Or we can look for something more gradual. I am not a health coach, so please only take this as illustrative. When I wanted to drop twenty pounds, my journey was more like this:
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One final real-world example I’ll share. Pictured at the start of this blog is a cat we’ve named Omar. Nine months ago, we first spotted Omar on our backyard security camera. To keep a long story short, over the span of nine months, my wife incrementally moved from monitoring Omar on the camera, to feeding him, to getting him acclimated to a feeding schedule, to befriending him, and finally, on New Year’s Eve, Omar was comfortable enough with us that he walked into our open door and moved into our basement. At several points along the way she reminded me to be patient. Do not to rush him. He would come around when he was ready.
So now it’s your turn. Take another look at those goals. Do you have any BHAGs that could stand being reimagined as atomic habits? Break it down!
Essentially the same approach that scrum takes. Small identifiable steps to achieve an outcome. Which is why I like it so much. I always tell my team to create a personal story(goal), with tasks, and acceptance criteria and put it in their next sprint. 2-3 weeks is a nice time frame for one step. For some it really works. I recently sent an article to my team about spending five minutes working on that thing you have been putting off. For many folks starting is the hardest part. Almost like a mind trick to get yourself going...but it works.
Helping You Navigate Life’s Journey Chief Guide at Keys 2 Action
2 年Love the incremental approach and other comments for breaking down goals…or setting them over time….to avoid being overwhelmed by them. Would add that each day brings a new opportunity to start again. Important to remember when we fall short and have the chance to decide whether to give up or start again.
Brain stroke survivor & author of the memoir “ One Fine Day”
2 年Totally agree Josh Dietrich .. I follow the 1% rule .. For anything I do, even if I improve 1% over the previous day it is great .. I don’t necessarily need to have a BHAG .. 1% improvement regularly is okay ??
Master Certified Coach with Proven Global Executive experience empowering Leaders and Teams with Design Thinking and Music to harmonize your leadership soundtrack and your team's rhythm!
2 年... an incremental approach I saw and adopted a few years ago was to make the whole process of Goals incremental. That is - pick a goal for January. Something easy and achievable within the month. Then, pick February's goal - in February. Not only do you build up success (or adapt a bit), you also don't have a long list of goals staring you in the face each day. One this month... and then... Great post!!!