Smart Goals Template to Help
Leaders Attain Success Easily
In this article, I am going to take you
through the steps of using SMART goals to achieve your goals as a leader of a
team of people and give you a SMART goals template you can use to make sure
your goals are achieved.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
a. How to use SMART goals as a leade
B. A Leader's SMART goal template
C. Summary
A. How
to use SMART goals as a leader
Unlike when using SMART goals for your
individual goals, creating SMART goals as a leader requires what is called
“buy-in” by your team. Often a leader has a number of goals they want to
achieve, they have those goals clear in their own minds, but they fail to
achieve their goals because they fail to communicate those goals in a way that
motivates their team. Without their team’s buy-in, these goals are not going to
be achieved no matter how SMART they are or how motivating they are to the
leader.
As a leader, here’s what you can do to ensure
your goals are achieved.
Make
your goals as simple and clear as possible.
A few years ago I did some work for a large
car company. That company’s goal for the year was to sell seven million cars
and become the seventh largest car manufacturer in the world. This goal was
communicated to all the company’s employees in a way that every employee was
absolutely clear how their efforts would contribute to the achievement of that
goal.
From the manufacturing plants around the world
to the purchasing, finance, sales and marketing departments; every department
bought into the goal because the leaders in the company communicated the goal
in such a way that everyone understood exactly what was required of them and
exactly what the goal was. On every department wall, there were two large
numbers— “7/7”. This acted as a daily reminder to everyone in the company that
their goal for the year was to build 7 million cars and become the 7th largest
manufacturer in the world. They achieved their goal.
Whether you are a leader of a large,
multi-national corporation or the CEO of a small start-up with five employees,
you need to make sure the goal you set for your people is crystal clear and be
specific about how their contribution towards achieving that goal really
matters. A classic mistake I often see is where each department has different
goals and none of those goals clearly reflect the company’s overall goal for
the year.
An example of this is where the HR department
has a goal of reducing the staff turnover to below 20% and the sales department
has a goal of increasing sales by 15%. On their own, these goals do not
communicate to the staff how their efforts will contribute towards the
company’s overall goal for the year. They might be clear but they do not have
any obvious relation to the company’s overall goal.
Start
with the overall goal
Instead of setting individual goals at a
departmental level, start off by making sure everyone is clear about what the
team or company’s overall goal for the year is. Let’s say the company’s overall
goal is to achieve a market share of 5%. That goal would be communicated to all
team members in all departments.
Once everyone is clear about the goal, the
next step is to get each team member or department to come up with how they
will contribute to achieving that goal. Your HR department could say “by
keeping staff turnover to below 20%, we will reduce the disruption caused by
having to train new staff and help to maintain consistency throughout the
year.”
The
“what’s in it for me?” principle
Whether we like it or not, people will always
look at a new initiative from the perspective of “what’s in it for me?” While
we might like to believe our team and the people around us are motivated by
some other higher moral purpose, our natural human reaction is always defaulted
to “what’s in it for me?”
For example, your team could be motivated by
a moral purpose, the health and welfare of your customers; but the motivation
for your staff is the way doing good for others makes them feel and that is
still a personal motive, rather than a higher moral purpose.
You need to consider your team’s motivation.
Some members of your team will be motivated by money, others by the opportunity
to be promoted and others by how the goal will affect their work/life balance.
All these motives need to be addressed in how you express the goal to your
team.
Once you accept this when it comes to
describing the specifics of the goal, you can frame it in a way that motivates
your team. For example, if your team is motivated by the opportunity to be
promoted, then you would frame the goal specifically to show your team how by
completing this goal, they will improve their career objectives.
Communicate
your goals frequently
Once you have explained the goal clearly and
specifically, you need to continue expressing the goal to your team. I often
see a hive of activity around the annual planning period of a business and once
acceptance of the goal or objective has been gained, little or no further communication
about the goal occurs. Everyone settles back down to their daily work and very
soon all thoughts and motivation to achieve the goal are forgotten. A leader’s
responsibility towards the goal is to continually reinforce the goal’s purpose
and the motivation to the team as a whole. Try reminding everyone in your team
each week about the goal. Regularly give feedback to your team about how they
are progressing towards achieving the goal and remind them of why they are
achieving the goal. Every time Tim Cook is interviewed or gives a talk, he
always states the purpose of Apple is to make great products. You just know
every department at Apple lives that purpose. Every single employee’s focus in
on making great products. As a leader, Tim Cook’s example is a great example to
follow. State your goal, or purpose, every chance you have.
Create
achievable milestones
As obvious as it sounds, I see very few
companies and leaders creating clear, specific milestones around their goals.
Most goals are broken up into quarters and as a quarter nears its end, the
leaders in an organization run around panicking because they are not on track
to achieving their quarterly milestone. This is caused by not maintaining a
focus on what the goal is through regular communication.
Instead, break the goal into weekly and
monthly milestones. Remind your team every day, if necessary, of what you want
to achieve that week and month so that as a quarter closes, you will be very
clear what needs to be done to make sure you hit the overall milestone.
Regularly
motivate your team members
When I was a young car salesperson, our sales
manager had a large whiteboard in his office. On that whiteboard was the team’s
monthly target, the quarter’s target and the yearly target. Each salesperson’s
current sales both weekly, monthly and annually was also on that whiteboard.
Every morning, we had a fifteen-minute team
meeting to discuss what sales we expected that day and the best approach to get
the sale. The sales manager’s focus was always on the current situation and
always reminded us of where we were and why we were doing it. During the two
years, I was a member of that team; we broke all the company’s sales records
and we were the best sales team in the group.
This was down to the clarity of our goals and
the daily reminders of where we were and where we needed to be. Every time I
visited my sales managers’ office, I was reminded of my goals, our team’s goals
and what needed to be done to achieve our goals. It was a great incentive.
When it came to motivating our team, our
sales manager knew exactly what motivated each team member. Our top
salesperson, Claire, was motivated by money and our sales manager incentivised
her by giving her a bonus if she sold more cars that month than the previous
month. For me, I was motivated by the car I drove.
My sales manager would often incentivise me
by allowing me the use of a ‘special’ car for a weekend if I beat my target. I
still remember working extremely hard to beat my target one month so I could
use a Range Rover Vogue SE to go to the British Rally Championship that month.
Needless to say, I beat my target and enjoyed three days driving around the
Welsh countryside in a luxurious SUV.
As a leader, it is your responsibility to
know what motivates each member of your team and using that to maintain their
focus and motivation on the goal.
Be
transparent
One of the most common reasons why goals are
not achieved is caused by a lack of transparency. The larger the company, the
larger the temptation to compartmentalise information between departments.
Often leaders think the finance team do not
need to know the sales target and the sales teams do not need to know about
HR’s staff’s turnover targets. When you compartmentalize these goals, you lose
transparency and it can damage the ability for teams to work together to
achieve their goals.
If the marketing manager and the HR manager
know each other’s goals, they are much more likely to work together to achieve
each other’s goals. The marketing manager will work hard to keep his team
motivated and less likely to leave. Likewise, the HR department will do
whatever they can to assist the marketing department to achieve their goals.
Create
an annual goal book
When we create personal goals, the best
advice is to write our goals down. A great way to ensure your team buy into
your goals and to make sure there is complete transparency is to write an
annual goal book.
This book outlines the goals you have for
your company, why you are achieving them and what will happen when you achieve
it. It will also detail how each department in your company can contribute
towards those goals and what their goals are for the year.
This book is provided to all employees so
they are clear about what you want to achieve, why and how each department in
the organization can contribute towards achieving that goal. This book will
create transparency between all departments and will remove any difficulties
caused by compartmentalisation within your organisation.
Creating the Annual Goal Book may be more
work for you as a leader, but the benefits in terms of buy-in and transparency
will more than reward your efforts.
Give
regular feedback on goal achievement
As a leader, you are responsible for the
communication of the goal. But that responsibility does not end once you have
communicated it.
Your responsibility is to consistently remind
your team of the goal and to give constant feedback on how each member of your
team is doing and how they are contributing towards achieving the goal.
Filter
your decisions
Filter your decisions through the prism of
how your decision will best help towards achieving your goals. One way to keep
both yourself and your team accountable for your goals is to run any decision
through the prism of your goals.
Before making any decision ask yourself and
your team how this decision will help towards achieving the goal. Use questions
such as “what would be the best way to achieve the goal? For example, if one of
your goals is to reduce costs, but your designer’s computer is due for replacement,
ask the question “could we get another six months out of this computer?”
Often we blindly follow convention because it
has always been done that way, in this case replacing the computer every two
years, yet it may be possible to get another year of use out of the computer
without disrupting productivity.
However, if the goal is to increase the
productivity of your team, perhaps having a faster computer may help to speed
up the design process and thus improve your design team’s productivity.
Framing your decision-making through the
prism of how best to achieve your goals helps to maintain focus on the goals
and when you involve your team in the decision-making process and they
understand that the decision needs to best meet the goal’s achievement, helps
to maintain buy-in by your team.
B.
A Leader’s SMART goal template
To help you utilize SMART goals more
effectively, here’s a step-by-step guide of a SMART goal template:
1.
Be specific about your goal
Make sure all members of your team are clear
about what it is you want to achieve.
Communicate the goal in as simple language as
possible (no latinate or vague words) and make sure everyone, no matter what
their position within your team or organisation clearly understands what it is
you want to achieve.
2.
Make sure each member of your team is clear about their contribution towards
the goal and how it will be measured
Once you have communicated your goal to your
team, arrange one on one meetings to explain to each member of your team how
their contribution will be measured. Also, be clear about the milestones you
will be monitoring. Make sure that your team accept and understand how their
performance will be measured.
3.
Be very clear about what each team member will be accountable for.
Every individual member of your team needs to
be given responsibility for a part of the goal.
Whether that is asking the intern to monitor
progress on milestones or your lead designer being responsible for making sure
the artwork for the product design is completed on time. Each individual member
of your team must be accountable for something to ensure buy-in by all.
4.
Make sure everyone believes the goal is realistic
If you have a history of failure to achieve
your goals, then you need to communicate to your team that this time there will
be no failure. Everyone needs to get behind the goal and everyone needs to
know that with effort, persistence and hard work the goal can be achieved.
All goals need to challenge but they also
need to be realistic. If your team do not believe the goal can be achieved, you
will not get the required effort to achieve your goal from the team. As a
leader, you need to show your team it can be achieved.
5.
Make the deadline clear
When you expect the goal to be achieved needs
to be made very clear. Deadlines for your milestones and the eventual
achievement of the goal need to be communicated to all your team members.
Consistent feedback and reminders should
become part of your daily habit. This focus is a key element towards achieving
even the most challenging of goals.
BONUS:
Get buy-in from all your team by appealing to your individual team members’
motivators
As a leader, you need to understand what
motivates your team members. Make sure the way you communicate your goal is in
a way that stirs the individual motivation points of your team members.
Remember people are different. Some are
motivated by money, others are motivated by the desire to make the world a
better place. Understand these motivators and make sure when you communicate
with your team you push their motivation buttons.
C.
Summary
As a leader, your responsibility is to make
sure your goals are clearly communicated to your team (Specific) and you regularly give
feedback on performance and achievement (Measured). Each team member must be clear what their
responsibilities are for achieving the goals (Accountable) and they should understand how the goals will
be achieved (Realistic) and
by when (Timed).
But it does not stop there. Good leaders
understand what motivates their team and use that to get buy-in from all team
members to achieve the goal. Consistent motivation by the leader helps to
maintain focus, energy and enthusiasm for achieving the goals.
At the same time, to avoid
compartmentalization, making sure there is transparency about all the goals in
the organisation will encourage the various teams to work together towards
achieving the goals.
Carl
Pullein
https://www.lifehack.org/785434/smart-goals-template
2 comments:
Setting SMART goals gives clear direction to act to accomplish the objectives and goals they have set. By reducing the risk of unclear goals, SMART goal setting is really helpful for everyone. Moreover, SMART goal setting is really easy to use and can be used anywhere, by anyone, without any requirement of training. Even though writing is really easy but sticking to it is difficult, once achieved, one can make progress rapidly and achieve success. Thus you can use these Smart Goal Template to set goals and follow the progress thru.
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