PERSONAL GOAL SPECIAL The Stupidly Simple Way To
Avoid Bombing On Your Biggest Goals
You have more leeway to adjust the timeline or scope of your goals than
you probably think–and still ultimately get them done.
When I was a freshman in college, I wanted to
try out for the football team. Given my 5 ‘7″ soft frame, this makes complete
sense. You can’t keep a tiger out of the jungle. I decided to become a
field-goal kicker. I bought a stand and a football at a sporting goods store.
Late at night, I’d sneak into the stadium in Birmingham, Alabama, and practice
my kicks. Had I ever kicked a field goal? No. So then why did I
think I could walk on as a field-goal kicker for a Division-I college team that
occasionally played schools like Auburn? Because I am crazy.
You’re not as foolhardy as me, but you
probably tend to overreach a bit with your goals, too, especially at the
beginning. That can cause all manner of mayhem and lead to disappointments–or
worse. So the next time you set your eye on a big goal, try this before you
take your first step toward it: Cut the goal in half.
No, I’m not telling you to do less–I’m
actually helping you do more. Here’s how it works.
HOW TO HALVE YOUR GOALS WITHOUT
DOING LESS
At the beginning, when our excitement is
through the roof, we think our achievement must be as well. This is why people
who have never run 100 yards will tell me they are going to run a marathon.
This is understandable. After all, our brains are
hardwired to be overconfident about our abilities and chances for success.
And to counter that, all it takes is a little
thought experiment right from the get-go: Let’s say for example that you have
to pay down $50,000 in credit card debt, but the thought of cutting that number
in half and only paying $25,000 still makes you want to throw up a little.
Defaulting on the remaining half (or all) of your debt isn’t a great option,
but it’s one potential outcome. So if that ultimate $50,000 target has got to
stay fixed, what’s one variable you can change? Give yourself more time.
If you doubled the amount of time you gave
yourself to pay off the debt, what’s the worst thing that would happen? You’d
pay a little (or perhaps significantly) more in interest, but you’d still pay
off the whole debt. And chances are this would still be way better than just
making minimum payments, which is exactly what your credit card company wants
you to do. Remember, we’re up against quitting completely, which in this
example might even mean declaring bankruptcy.
The options we’re talking about right now
aren’t: 1. Finish perfectly, or 2. Cut the goal in half.
The options are: 1. Quit the goal because it
was too big, or 2. Cut it in half and finish it.
And if that means extending your timeline,
then you should.
YOU CAN CUT GOALS DOWN TO SIZE
MORE THAN YOU THINK
In all likelihood, these two approaches,
cutting the goal in half or doubling the timeline, can be applied to more goals
than you suspect.
Of course, it’s unrealistic to think that you
have the power to just cut all your goals in half. If your goal is to take
medicine or something life-saving, by all means do not cut that in half. But
even for some of the work-related goals you don’t have control over (because
your boss sets them for you, for example), you may still have some leeway to
reduce the stakes, scope, or timeline so you can perform better over the long
run. The key is just making sure they’re the right size from the beginning. To
do that, ask yourself this simple question: “What’s the worst that could
happen?”
Let’s pretend for a minute that you cut your
goal in half and instead of cleaning your entire house, you cleaned just two
rooms. For years, you’ve hated how cluttered your house is, and the idea of
doing only two rooms doesn’t seem like enough, so you’ve put it off completely.
But by giving yourself permission to just accomplish half your goal, you’ll be
able to see that you can actually clean those two rooms quickly. If a
perfectionist (an “all or none at all”) mind-set prevented you from getting
started on the original goal, that same type of thinking can motivate you to
knock out a goal you’ve cut down by 50% (“I can definitely clean those two
rooms perfectly right away.”).
Alternatively, what if you doubled the
timeline instead of cutting the goal in half? If you’ve had a messy house for
five whole years, why is giving yourself an extra month to clean it so
terrifying? You’ve waited 60 months to do anything, and now it has to be done
this month?
Perfectionism will tell you it’s now or
never–that if you don’t finish it now, you never will. But by asking what’s the
worst that would happen if you cut your goal in half or gave yourself more
time, you’d improve your odds of success dramatically. And the world wouldn’t
fall apart if you did less or it took longer.
Take a look at your long-term work projects;
chances are there are plenty of opportunities to do something similar, and
still achieve great results without incurring your boss’s ire. Sure, this idea
may go against conventional goal-setting wisdom, but it might help you do the
one thing that matters, no matter what your goal actually consists of: Finish
it.
BY JON ACUFF
https://www.fastcompany.com/40461935/the-stupidly-simple-way-avoid-bombing-on-your-biggest-goals?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=6&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=09052017
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