People are remarkably bad at remembering long lists of goals. I learned this at a professional level when trying to get my high-performance coaching clients to stay on track; the longer their lists of to-dos and goals, the more overwhelmed and off-track they got. Clarity comes with simplicity.”
Brendon Burchard (author of “The Charge”)
- Feeling overwhelmed? How can you achieve focus and shorten the list of goals? Keep in mind – this likely means saying “no” to “important” things.
- Simplicity and clarity takes more work than complexity. What routine process can you start doing to improve create simplicity and keep from backsliding?
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Catagorize your goals as primary or tertiary. Then arrange these goals into logical classes. Once your goals are arranged in this manner it can be easier to maintain vision as you can see an end… as in if you’re working on a primary goal, you know what class it is in, so you’ll have the vision of knowing that once you complete all the primary and tertiary goals within that class then you’ll have obtained an overall class goal “certificate,” if you will. Obtain a few of these certificates a year and you’ll be cruising. The key I think is to catagorize and arrange your goals properly to maintain vision.