Trouble Achieving Your Goals?

Take them one tiny step at a time.

3 min read

You’ve been told your whole life to set ambitious goals, goals that really push you. That’s great advice. You’ve probably also been told to break those larger goals down into smaller goals. Also great advice.

So why doesn’t it work?

How come no matter how hard you work, the farther away from your goals you seem to get?

Why Small Goals Sometimes Fail

Pretend that you’ve set the goal of writing a book. You do some math and realize that if you want to finish your book in a timely manner, you need to write 1000 words a day. Sounds doable, right?

The first couple days come and go and you’re trucking right along. Pretty soon you’ve got 4000, 5000, or even 6000 words written.

But then something gets in the way. Something called life: the kids are sick, you’re sick, the car breaks down, you’re extra busy at work. Before you know it, you’ve missed three days of writing and now you’re playing catch-up.

A goal that seemed so simple now seems next to impossible.

Pretty soon you start to doubt yourself. Maybe my goal was never achievable to begin with. Maybe I set my sights too high. Maybe I really can’t write a book.

Sound familiar?

Introducing Micro-Goals

The problem is not that the small goals you set weren’t good. The problem is that they were designed for the ideal scenario. They were what you could accomplish when everything else went smoothly. But life isn’t smooth.

That’s where micro-goals come in.

If your small goals answer the question, “what do I need to do every day so I can accomplish my goal?” then your micro-goals answer the question, “what small steps can I make every day, regardless of the circumstances?”

Take the example of writing a book. Here’s what your goals might look like:

Big Goal: Write a book

Small Goal: Write 1000 words every day

Micro-goal: Write at least one paragraph per day.

Micro-goals also work with fitness:

Big Goal: Run a 5k

Small Goal: Run 2 miles per day

Micro-goal: Run/Walk a half mile

With micro-goals, those large, daunting tasks start to sound more achievable. And you can accomplish them before breakfast, during a lunch break, or in the quiet moments before bedtime.

What Micro-Goals Are Not

Let’s get one thing straight: Micro-goals are not an excuse for slacking off.

Yes, you could eventually write a book if you only wrote one paragraph a day, but it would take forever.

Micro-goals are not an excuse to say, “what’s the least I can accomplish?” They’re a call to action. So even on your worst day, you can say, “I will still accomplish something.”

Micro-goals are meant to get you through a tough day so you can accomplish your small goal the next day. They’re a way to keep up momentum.

The One Question You Must Ask Every Night

Imagine lying in bed at night, after a day when you haven’t accomplished anything towards your goal. Now imagine asking yourself this question:

Can I honestly say that I didn’t have any time or any opportunity to work on my goal?

If you are truly honest with yourself, 99.9% of the time, your answer will be NO! The problem was that you didn’t make the time.

Micro-goals solve this problem by giving you something so simple to accomplish that you can’t not do it.

Three Criteria for Setting Your Micro-Goals

If your micro-goals are going to be successful, they’ve got to be really really easy to accomplish. Ask yourself, “what is something that is so simple that I can’t make an excuse for not doing it?”

After you set your micro-goal, make sure you can answer “yes” to these three questions:

  1. Does your micro-goal take less than 30 minutes to complete?
  2. Can your micro-goal be done almost anywhere (like if you got stuck at work, or if you didn’t have your computer with you)?
  3. Does your micro-goal get you closer to achieving your larger goal?
  4. Bonus Question: Can you state your micro-goal in less than 10 words?

If you answered “no” to any of these three questions, go back and refine your micro-goal until it meets the criteria.