How SMART are Your New Year’s Resolutions?

If you’re like most entrepreneurs, chances are that the resolutions you’ve made for 2010 are eerily similar to the resolutions you made for 2009.  They’re probably the same resolutions you’ve been making for years.

There are certain natural milestones that seem to make us take pause and examine our small business successes and failures.  For example, when closing the books on one year, and opening the books for the next, it’s hard for an entrepreneur not to reflect on the year that was.

What were your resolutions for 2009?  How did you do?  How many were accomplished?  How SMART are your New Year’s resolutions this year?

Champagne Wishes and Caviar Dreams

The resolutions made by so many entrepreneurs remind me of this signature phrase from Robin Leach’s Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.  Merriam-Webster’s dictionary says that to resolve means “to reach a firm decision about,” or “to declare or decide by a formal resolution and vote.”

Resolutions, wishes, and dreams are a great start; however, you can’t make your business successful by resolving, dreaming, or wishing it to be so.  All entrepreneurs possess these in abundance, but the successful entrepreneur translates these into goals – not just any goals though – they must be SMART goals.

What Makes Your Goals SMART?

I posted a three part series on goal setting by Zig Ziglar a few months ago that is a really great primer on the distinction between a goal and a wish.  If you haven’t checked out this series I’d like to encourage you to do so.

Once you have gone through Zig’s Six Step Formula for Goal Setting, the next step is to evaluate your goals using the SMART mnemonic.

Is Your Goal Specific?

You need to spell out your goals in as much detail as possible.  For instance, “I want to increase my sales this year” becomes “I want to increase my sales from existing clients by 25% over last year’s sales.”  The more specific and concrete you make the goal the better – e.g., dollar amount instead of percentage.

Can Your Goal Be Easily Measured?

If you can’t measure it then it isn’t really a goal.  You can’t measure “to increase customer satisfaction,” however, you can measure “to score over 90% on customer service surveys” or “reduce the number of returns by 20%.”  Without the ability to measure and track your goals there is no accountability.  If you take these two factors out of the equation then your goals have a slim chance of becoming a reality.

Is This Goal Attainable (or Achievable)?

There is probably nothing worse than chasing after windmills.  Make sure that the goal you set is actually something that you have a reasonable chance of attaining.  This doesn’t mean that your goals can’t be hard to reach – just not impossible.

Is Your Goal Relevant?

Make sure that your goal does what you are trying to accomplish.  Increasing your sales is great, but if your profit margin or overhead is out of whack then you are probably not going to achieve the larger bottom line you are after.  In fact, setting the wrong goals can often make your situation worse.

What is the Time Frame for Accomplishing the Goal?

Unless you set deadlines for your goals they are not much better than the traditional New Year’s resolution.  When setting goals we need to make sure that we have a completion date, but also that we have various milestones( or shorter-term goals) if the completion date is more than 3 to 6 months out.  It’s hard to work on a goal today that has a completion date five years away.

How Did Your Goals Do?

How did your goals fare?  Do you follow Zig’s Six Step Formula for Goal Setting?  It’s a great formula.  If so, how SMART are your goals for this year?

I know much of this sounds just like common sense, but you’d be surprised at just how uncommon it has become among entrepreneurs today.

Laying a good foundation is rarely complicated, but it is almost always time consuming.  Any good builder will tell you that taking short cuts here will never support whatever you build on top of it.  Build your business with a SMART foundation.

Related posts:

  1. 5 Ways to Make Your Goals Even SMARTer this Year
  2. Don’t Quit!
  3. Review: The E Myth Revisited
This post was written by Brad Harmon.

Brad Harmon is the founder and editor for The Christian Entrepreneur. A former certified public accountant, he now spends his time blogging, speaking, and consulting on ways to bring our faith into the marketplace.

Brad has written 86 awesome post(s) for this site. Are you interested in writing a guest post or perhaps becoming a staff writer? I'd love to hear from you.

18 responses to “How SMART are Your New Year’s Resolutions?”

  1. Paula

    I have never been good at setting goals. But I have been listening to Tony Robbins lately and have set time to write my own personal goals. It really does work when you get them out and write them down.

    I'm going to come back Brad and have a good read of your Zig Ziglar Setting Goals posts. I've had a quick look at them once before but need to take some time out to watch the videos.
    My recent post Do Your Family and Friends Support Your Online Business?

  2. Keith

    Personally I think most important (in my eyes anyway) is if it is measurable, I put actual numbers in my goals (write 5-6 posts per week, not write more posts)

    Hope you had a good Christmas and New Years…
    My recent post Blogger Luv

  3. dana

    Great goal making tips. I think that i should re-think my resolution because it seems guilty in measurable thing.

    Btw, welcome back in blogosphere Brad.

  4. David Rupert

    I'm good at goals…but even better yet at failure.
    You gave some great advice here. I like the attainable part. I often set myself up by setting unrealistic goals. If I lower expectation, i can increase achievement.

    David R.
    Red Letter Believers blog
    http://www.redletterbelievers.com
    "Salt and Light"
    My recent post Fault Lines

  5. MikeHolmes

    Brad!!! I'm so glad you're back…I was getting ready to rescue you from Santa's grip:) Great post as always.

    My recent post If You Don’t Understand God’s Lesson You Won’t Pass His Class (a Leadership Fable)

  6. whatawebsite

    Hi Brad,

    I'm not really one for setting goals or making resolutions, preferring to just take each day and moment as it comes. My daily routine is simply to try to (a) enjoy what I'm doing (b) give my best shot at it & (c) be ready to change direction if somehow (a) goes pear-shaped!

    So I guess my "smart" goal is (a) …enjoy
    (otherwise what's the point?)

    Cheers to new years
    Will

  7. Jared P Little

    SMART goals are so important I learn a lot about this at my current work they preach it. It really does make seems whats the point if you can't measure it. My 1st year in the Internet Marketing world I had what I thought were smart and really goals but I bought a little in to the hype and didn't hit a lot of them.

    This year will be a little different I am connecting with the right people and have some nice goals and strech goals that as long as I stick to my action plan everything should fall in to place.

  8. Ms. Freeman

    I have my list and work on them everyday…setting SMART goals is imperative achieving ones dreams.

Leave a Reply

CommentLuv Enabled
RSS Feed Don't Miss a Single Post! Subscribe via RSS Feed or Subscribe via Email

Recent Comments

  • Amos Johnson: Hi Brad, this is a good article. I am having the same thoughts about twitter. It is good to connect...
  • Shabnam Sultan: Nice read :) i don’t have much Twitter followers as don’t follow everyone who follows...
  • Will: Hi Brad, Love this post – and just sent out a couple of tweets about it. I wonder if they’ll lead...
  • Kissie: You know I’ve found bloggers to be so supportive, and that might be due to the learning curve we all...
  • David: So, my blog feed should no longer include this site, but should be MPC from now on?
  • Khaleef @ KNS Financial: That is something I may have to consider as my writing branches out. I don’t have a...
  • Kissie: That’s one thing I like about blogging, flexibility. You can make and break your own rules at any...
  • Anne: I can live with the kittens one, but I agree that these singing rats (or at least they look like rats to me),...
  • Ching Ya: Well said, Brad. Along this blogging journey, it’s fascinating to see that there are more than just...
  • Khaleef @ KNS Financial: Hey Brad, this is a lesson that I am now learning. For me it is a little more difficult,...