I remember when I was in school and the lecturer would say your communication must be “Concise” and “Clear”. Now more than ever the need for Clarity is “clear” to meJ. Clarity in terms of Vision, purpose and goals cannot be overemphasized. In my search I came across this article on www.stevepavlini.com. I found in very informative. Some new ideas and other old ideas re-enforced. It’s a long read but worth your while. Enjoy it.
The Power of
Clarity
Clear
Goals Are Essential
Clear goals and objectives are essential to the success of any
business, and this is no less true of building your own career. If you don't
take the time to get really clear about exactly what it is you're trying to
accomplish, then you're forever doomed to spend your life achieving the goals
of those who do. In the absence of a clear direction for your life, you will
either meander aimlessly or you will build a career that you don't feel good
about. You may make some money, and you may do some interesting work, but the
end result will not resemble anything you ever made a conscious decision to
build, and ultimately you will be left with the sinking feeling that maybe you
took a wrong turn somewhere along the way. Do you ever look at your career and
think to yourself, "How on earth did I get here?"
If setting goals is so critically important, then why is it that
so few people take the time to define exactly where they want to go? Part of
the reason is a lack of knowledge about how to set clear goals. You can go
through years of schooling and never receive any instruction on goal setting at
all. A failure to understand the immense importance of establishing clear goals
is also common. But those who truly know what they want often outperform
everyone else by an enormous degree.
A frequent deterrent to goal setting is the fear of making a
mistake. Teddy Roosevelt once said, "In any moment of decision, the best
thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing,
and the worst thing you can do is nothing." Setting virtually any goal at
all is better than drifting aimlessly with no clear direction. The best way I
know to guarantee failure is to avoid making clear, committed decisions. Every
day is already a mistake if you don't know where you're going. You're probably
spending most of your time working to achieve other people's goals. The local
fast food restaurant, TV advertisers, and the stockholders of the businesses
you patronize are all very happy for that. If you don't decide what you really
want, then you've decided to hand your future over to the whims of others, and
that's always a mistake. By taking hold of the reins yourself and deciding
where you'd like to go, you gain a tremendous sense of control that most people
never experience in their entire lives.
Many people assume that because they have a direction, they must
therefore have goals, but this is not the case and merely creates the illusion
of progress. "Making more money" and "building a business"
are not goals. A goal is a specific, clearly defined, measurable state. An
example of the difference between a direction and a goal is the difference
between the compass direction of northeast and the top of the Eiffel Tower in
France. One is merely a direction; the other is a definite location.
Be Detailed
Be as detailed as possible when setting goals. Give specific numbers, dates, and times. Make sure that each of your goals is measurable. Either you achieved it, or you didn't. Define your goals as if you already know what's going to happen. It's been said that the best way to predict the future is to create it.
Objectify Subjective Goals
What if you need to set subjective goals, such as improving your own level of self-discipline? How do you phrase such goals in binary terms? To solve this problem, I use a rating scale of 1 to 10. For instance, if you want to improve your self-discipline, ask yourself on a scale of 1 to 10, how do you rate your current level of self-discipline? Then set a goal to achieve a certain specific rating by a certain date. This allows you to measure your progress and know with a high degree of certainty whether or not you've actually achieved your goal.
Goal
Setting Is an Activity
Setting clear goals is not a passive act. It doesn't happen
automatically. You must take direct conscious action in order to make it so.
Everything counts, and nothing is neutral. You are either moving towards your
goals, or you're moving away from them. If you do nothing or if you act without
clarity, then you are almost certainly a victim of "being outgoaled."
In other words you are spending your time working on other people's goals
without even knowing it. You are happily working to enrich your landlord, other
businesses, advertisers, stockholders, etc. Each day you spend working without
a sense of clarity about where you're headed is a step backwards for you. If
you don't actively tend your garden, then weeds will grow automatically. Weeds
don't need to be watered or fertilized. They just grow by themselves in the
absence of an attentive gardener. Similarly, in the absence of conscious and
directed action on your part, your work and your life will automatically become
full of weeds. You don't need to do anything at all to make this happen. And
when you finally get around to taking a serious look at where you are and where
you want to go, the first thing you'll have to do is pull out all those weeds.
Reading this article will do absolutely nothing for you unless you
turn it into some form of physical action. The best thinking unfortunately
gives you zero results. In reality, you won't even be paid a penny for your
thoughts. You can have the most creative idea in the world, but ideas
themselves are utterly worthless. You only get results from the physical
actions you take, never for the ideas you have. In order to get any kind of
tangible results at all, you must act on an idea. You must communicate it,
build it, implement it, and make it real.
Clarity Is a Choice
If you've been running your career in an unfocused manner, just waking up each morning and seeing what happens, then it is absolutely crucial that you take the time to decide and write down exactly where it is you want to go. How much longer will you continue to climb the ladder of success, only to realize too late that it was leaning against the wrong building? Just pick a point in the future, whether it's six months from now or five years from now, and spend a few hours writing out a clear description of where you want to be at that time. I know many people who aren't sure where they want to go, so they avoid committing anything to writing in order to "keep their options open." What would happen if you pursued that attitude to its logical conclusion? If you always kept your options open and never made any firm commitments, then you'd never get promoted, start your own business, get married, have a family, move to that new home, etc. except to the degree that someone else made that decision for you.
I used to have a friend like this, who still hasn't decided what
he wants to do with his life. He yields control of his life to others without
even realizing it, simply because he's unwilling to take the time to define a
vision for his own life out of fear of making the wrong choice. His life is
ruled by others who push their goals onto him, which he accepts by default. Ask
yourself if you're in the same boat. If a friend of yours became totally
committed to getting you to change something in your life at random -- your
career, your living situation, your relationship, etc. -- could s/he do it just
by being absolutely certain and committed that it's the right thing for you? Could
a business associate come along and radically alter your plans for the week
without you ever deciding consciously that such a change is consistent with
your goals? We all suffer from problems like these to the degree that we fail
to set clear goals for ourselves. There is a big difference between recognizing
and acting on a true opportunity and being knocked off course without making a
conscious decision to shift gears.
Waiting for something to inspire you and hoping that the perfect
outcome will just fall into your lap is nothing but a fantasy. Clear decision
making doesn't happen passively; you actually have to physically put in the
time to make it happen. If you don't have clear goals simply because you don't
know what you want, then sit down and actively decide what you want. That sense
of knowing what you want isn't going to just come to you in a form of divine
inspiration. Clarity is a choice, not an accident or a gift. Clarity doesn't
come to you -- you have to go to it. Not setting goals is the same thing as
deciding to be a slave to the goals of others.
Clear Goals Sharpen Present-Moment Decisions
Your reality will not match your vision exactly. That's not the point. The point is for your vision to allow you to make clear daily decisions that keep you moving in the direction of your goals. When a commercial airliner flies from one city to another, it is off course over 90% of the time, but it keeps measuring its progress and adjusting its heading again and again. Goal setting works the same way. Maintain a clear list of goals not because that's actually where you'll end up but because it will give with tremendous certainty in deciding what you need to do today. When someone contacts you with an "opportunity" out of the blue, you'll know whether it's a real opportunity or a waste of time. The long view sharpens the short view.
As you begin moving towards your goals, you'll gain new knowledge
along the way, and you'll have to adapt your plans as you go. You may also
change your vision if you get partway there and decide it's not quite what you
really want. Ill-formed goals are still far superior to no goals at all.
I was once told by someone that I should end each day by crossing
it off my calendar and saying out loud, "There goes another day of my life,
never to return again." Try this for yourself, and notice how much it
sharpens your focus. When you end a day with the feeling that you would have
lived it the same if you had the chance to repeat it, you gain a sense of
gratitude that helps you focus on what's really important to you. When you end
the day with a feeling of regret or loss, you gain the awareness to try a
different approach the next day.
You'll see a measurable difference in your life the very first day
you establish clear, committed goals, even if your first few attempts aren't
perfect. You'll be able to make decisions much more rapidly because you'll see
how they'll either move you towards or away from your goals. On the eve of his
death, Walt Disney had a reporter crawl into bed with him so he could share his
vision for Disney World, six years before its completion. When Disney World
finally opened, another reporter commented to Walt's brother, Roy, "It's
too bad Walt did not live to see this." Roy replied, "Walt saw it first.
That’s why we are seeing it now." Clear goals allow you to achieve the
first half of H.L. Hunt's success formula. By deciding exactly what you want to
accomplish, committing it to writing, and reviewing it on a daily basis, you
bring your goals into reality with the power of your focus.
Check out www.stevepavlini.com for more articles
TyF