Whenever I ask my workshop
delegates who has goals, most people put up their hands. Then I ask ‘who has
written, regularly reviewed goals that you’ve broken into sub goals with
time-frames?’ Usually less than 5% of the group can put up their hands to that.
Yet research suggests that this less than 5% off the population tend to be
wealthier and perform significantly better in fields as diverse as sport and
business.
Yet most of us have had goals at
one time or anther that came to nothing. Why? There are six main reasons.
Number
1: Most people
don’t achieve their goals because they don’t have any. Or at least, they don’t
have clear, well-formulated goals. They’ve just got some vague notion of what
would be nice. (I see people who don’t know where they’re going and are
prepared to go through hell to get there!)
Number
2: They had goals
once, but they failed to achieve them, so they gave up. These people don’t
realise that success usually only happens after a string of setbacks. Failure
is only terminal when you don’t get up. Entrepreneurs fail on average 3.8 times
before they finally succeed. Ironically, not achieving your goal is often the
best lesson you can get for achieving it next time. That’s if you’re prepared
to learn the lesson.
Number
3: They set a
goal that deep down they don’t believe they can achieve. If you don’t believe
it’s possible, you can do affirmations and visualisations until you’re blue in
the face, it’s unlikely to happen. You’ve got to build your self-belief.
Number
4: They set a
goal that they don’t really want or want enough. If it doesn’t fire you with
passion, you’ll have no reason to put in the hard work necessary to achieve any
great goal. Desire is the fuel that drives your follow-through. You’ve got to
really want it.
Number
5: They put their
faith in their goal-setting plan rather than in themselves. Correct goal
setting may just be the most powerful tool you have to get what you want, but
it is just that, a tool. You are the real power, you are the success strategy
you’ve been waiting for. The truth is goals don’t work. You work. But working
without goals is like sailing the high seas without a sail - wherever you think
you’re headed, you’re going to land up somewhere else. When you set your goals,
you set your sail. But you’ve still got to do the sailing.
Finally, the reason people don’t
achieve really big goals is because they have, really small thoughts. The size
of your accomplishments is directly proportional to the size of your thoughts.
The thing is big thoughts and little thoughts take up the same brain space, so
why not go big?
In setting your goals don’t underestimate what you’re
capable of. Maybe you think you don’t have the intelligence, well both Einstein
and Edison were kicked out of school because they were thought to have learning
disabilities. Maybe you’re concerned that you don’t have enough formal
education. Of the world’s top ten richest people they have three degrees
between them. Let’s face it, the world is run by dropouts, Bill Gates of
Microsoft, Larry Ellison of Oracle and Richard Branson of Virgin are just a few
of the worlds’ business leaders who never completed their formal education.
Maybe you’re concerned that you don’t have enough experience. Neither do first
presidents of great nations. Think about it, when someone is first elected
president of a country, they arrive with zero experience of leading a Nation,
most of them manage, they draw on the expertise of the people around them and
they learn as they go along.
Maybe your goals seem too
ambitious, or perhaps even impossible. Well the impossible is only impossible
until somebody makes it possible. Few people thought that a heavier than air
flying machine was possible. In 1903 the
New York Times implied that an
attempt to create and fly such a machine would be a waste of time and money,
that such an invention would most likely take the combined efforts of thousands
of the world’s top scientists and as many as quote: ‘ten million years.’ Yet
months later Orville and Wilbur Wright – uneducated, unknown, and unfunded – flew
their plane “Flyer 1” over the sand dunes of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, flying
right through the smoke screen of impossibility.
How did they do it? They
were clear about what they wanted and they developed a plan to achieve it. What do you want? What kind of
body, bank account, business or relationship? On what great adventure do you
want to embark? Get a clear objective and a plan and you can have it. The size
of a building depends on the size of the foundation. A great life needs a great
foundation. Your goal achievement plan is that foundation.
Goals are the vision around which
great organisations rally. Sadly, one study shows that just 15% of people can
identify their companies top goals. I do conference speaking and training for
Edcon, I’m always amazed at how often I hear staff at grass root level talk
about the share price. These guys have no doubt about what the goal is and it
informs everything they do. It also increases their sense of purpose.
During the Middle Ages a
traveller came upon a large building site. He asked a couple of workers: ‘What
are you doing?’ The one grunted back: ‘I’m cutting stone. It’s hard, boring and
my back is killing me.’ The other responded, with shining eyes, as he pointed
up to the heavens: ‘I’m building a cathedral!’
What is your cathedral? What is
your great, big hair-raising goal?
A group of people over the age of
ninety were asked what they most regretted about their lives. The two most
common responses were ‘I didn’t take enough risks’ and ‘I didn’t reflect
enough’. Why not take out three hours of your life to reflect on the calculated
risks required to sew the seeds of your greatness?
© Justin Cohen
Justin Cohen is an international speaker, trainer and author.
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