Table of Contents
⚡ Quick Summary
Vague goals produce zero results — and most people are writing wishes, not goals. The fix is specificity, a 90-day sprint structure, and external accountability that doesn't depend on motivation. Write your goal in present tense, attach a deadline and a measurement, and find one accountability partner this week. That single shift will do more than any amount of inspiration.🎯 Key Takeaways
- ✔Write every goal in present tense with a specific number and deadline u2014 vague goals produce vague results
- ✔Use 90-day sprints instead of annual plans u2014 one primary goal per quarter keeps execution focused
- ✔Add an identity layer to your SMART goal: write down who you need to become, not just what you want to achieve
- ✔Break your 90-day goal into weekly milestones and review progress every Sunday for 20 minutes
- ✔Build external accountability with one partner u2014 share your Monday commitment and Friday results, no excuses
- ✔A goal that doesn't make you uncomfortable is a to-do list in disguise u2014 the discomfort is the point
- ✔Track your primary metric on a visible scoreboard daily u2014 what you see consistently, you act on consistently
💡 Recommended Resources
📚 Article Summary
Most people don’t have bad goals. They have vague wishes dressed up as goals. I’ve reviewed goal sheets from hundreds of clients across my coaching and training work in Dubai, and the pattern is the same every time: the goal sounds ambitious but it has no teeth. “I want to grow my business” is not a goal. “I will close 4 real estate deals in 90 days using a GoHighLevel pipeline I build by the end of this month” — that’s a goal.The difference isn’t motivation. It’s specificity. When I train real estate agents in Dubai on automation and AI, the first session is never about tools. It’s about what exactly they’re trying to achieve. Because a GoHighLevel workflow built for someone who wants 2 deals a month looks completely different from one built for someone closing 20. The goal shapes the system, not the other way around.A goal needs four things to actually work: a clear outcome, a deadline, a measurement, and a reason that matters to you personally. I’ve seen agents set a goal to “use AI more in my business” and six months later they’ve watched 40 YouTube videos and changed nothing. Compare that to a client of mine who said: “I want to respond to every lead within 5 minutes without touching my phone, by the 1st of next month.” She had a GoHighLevel AI chatbot live in 11 days. Specificity forces action.The other thing I tell every student in my courses: your goals need to be uncomfortable but not impossible. If you set a target you know you can hit in your sleep, you’re not setting a goal — you’re setting a to-do list. The goal needs to require a version of you that doesn’t exist yet. That’s the point. I set a goal in 2023 to launch three courses in one year while running my consulting practice. I had never done more than one. It forced me to build systems, delegate, and say no to a lot of things. I hit two out of three. But those two produced more revenue than anything I’d done in the previous two years.The format of your goal matters too. Write it in present tense, as if it’s already happening. Not “I want to earn AED 50,000 a month” — write “I earn AED 50,000 a month from my online courses and consulting.” This sounds like a small thing. It isn’t. The brain processes identity statements differently from wish statements. When your goal is written as who you already are, your daily decisions start to align with it automatically.
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