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Make Goal Setting and Measurement Work for You

What’s an easy decision? Do they exist? Perhaps, deciding whether you want chocolate or vanilla ice cream… You have two choices, which do you prefer? Seems pretty simple and straightforward. Now, what if you’ve set a goal to eat less sugar… The scale tips toward vanilla… but, you’ve also set a goal to save money and the chocolate is on sale… Now, there’s even more to consider.

Although choosing an ice cream flavor may seem trivial, is exemplifies a very important point: The more moving pieces involved in a decision, the more difficult it is to make. And while more information enables better decisions, more variables make the decision-making process more complex.

The same applies to goal setting and measurement. We all recognize their importance, but achieving accuracy is more complicated. Setting goals and measuring used to be fairly simple as they usually related to maximizing and measuring dollars in a particular period. But, as is often the case, times change and now traditional guidelines are almost obsolete and need revision.

For example, in our growing and more complex economy, millions of workers have been leaving their jobs and pursuing other options. Work at home, lifestyle expectations, stress, and work environment are all supplementing wages as key factors in employment and turnover decisions. Additionally, climate change, current events with Russia, inflation, COVID, the stock market, politics, and diversity are all experiencing rapid changes and simultaneously impacting our economy and lifestyles.

Consequently, these societal changes also affect goal setting and measuring.

So how do we improve goal setting and measurement to make them work for us?

Goals and measurement need to be a tool for business improvement rather than an end in itself. Goals are not easy to develop or measure, but the process is critical to organizational success.

Set goals to motivate you and your team to grow and use measurement to genuinely gauge where you’re at and where you need improvement. Ask yourself (and answer honestly), “What am I measuring? How am I measuring? And what is the purpose of my measurement?”

Whether it’s sales, profits, service, customer satisfaction etc., reliability and measurement over time are vastly underrated!

Make goal setting a priority and communicate your goals to those involved. Be certain to understand the different needs of different situations. Use clear and simple measurement tools, and be sure to utilize the process for improvement, rather than a tool for criticism. And remember, we set goals to make progress and even if we don’t achieve what we set out to accomplish, we still end up further along than where we started. So, stay focused on your goals, make them word for you, measure your progress, and keep moving forward.

Dr. Bert Shlensky, President of www.startupconnection.net, offers experience, skills, and a team devoted to developing and executing winning strategies. We guide your plans for business success and unlock your profits. Our strategy includes clear steps, and over 150 free articles and templates to facilitate your efforts and guide your process. We’re here to help you get on track and stay there as you move forward.

We welcome comments, suggestions, and questions. You can write us at: bshlensky@startupconnection.net or call at 914-632-6977

Summary
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Make Goal Setting and Measurement Work for You
Description
What’s an easy decision? Do they exist? Perhaps, deciding whether you want chocolate or vanilla ice cream… You have two choices, which do you prefer? Seems pretty simple and straightforward. Now, what if you’ve set a goal to eat less sugar… The scale tips toward vanilla… but, you’ve also set a goal to save money and the chocolate is on sale… Now, there’s even more to consider.
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StartupConnection.net
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