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Using Brain Science to Set Smart Goals

The SMART Goals (or Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Time-bound Goals) concept came out over 30 years ago. Think about all of the things that have been developed in the last 30 years and then think about if we’re still trying to set goals in the same way.

I actually think SMART Goals are a good framework for setting and achieving goals. It provides a real, understandable and researched formula for what actually can drive people to achieve. That is after all the reason we set goals. We want to think about big things and actually accomplish them. Certainly, 30 years old or not, there is a very strong case for being Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Time-bound.

If those are the characteristics of good goals, the nature of business now is on the doing. But it is not enough to set goals that will drive a person, a team, a project or an organization forward. You have to put your performance where your plans are in order to ideally reach and exceed your goals.

That’s why SMART Goals only go so far—the parameters are there, but the execution comes down to an individual or a team. And that gets to the heart of the unique ways people actually think about their goals. Neuroscience and the way our brains work [1] play a role in everything we do, from the way we communicate to the way we process ideas to the way we put our plans into action (and hypothetically, achieve our goals).

Relating smart goal achievement back to the brain [2], means that the different ways people think will focus on different aspects of the goal—but all of these are critical. Luckily, whether employees, managers or leaders have a preference in these aspects, they can develop the skills to make it happen. Or…you reach out to others whose thinking comes naturally in areas that your’s does not.

Think about the Analytical aspect of goal setting—goals aren’t just about getting things done on time.

The Structural component of goal setting is about creating and sticking to a process

Social goal setting is dependent on people and relationships—in today’s business world, nobody accomplishes goals by themselves anymore.

The Conceptual element of goals is setting the big-picture and achieving it

Communicating, Implementing and Tracking goals are the action items—every person needs to exhibit the behaviors that will drive achievement.

Expressiveness plays a big role in setting smart goals

Assertiveness ensures that achieving smart goals happens

Flexibility defines the achievement process of smart goals