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// framework

SMART Goals

George Doran, 1981 (various expansions since)

SMART Goals convert vague intentions into actionable commitments — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound. Use them as milestones on the path to bold ambition, not as a constraint on the ambition itself.

// description

A goal-setting framework requiring goals to be Specific (clearly defined), Measurable (with defined criteria for success), Achievable (realistic given resources), Relevant (aligned with broader objectives), and Time-bound (with a clear deadline). Converts vague intentions into actionable commitments.

// history

George Doran introduced the SMART acronym in a 1981 article in Management Review: "There's a S.M.A.R.T. Way to Write Management's Goals and Objectives." The acronym was quickly adopted in management by day and was expanded and adapted by various authors (the letters now have numerous alternative interpretations). SMART goals became the default goal-setting framework in corporate management, education, coaching, and personal productivity — used by HR departments, coaches, and productivity systems globally.

// example

Vague goal: "I want to grow my email list." SMART version: "I will grow my email list from 1,200 to 2,000 subscribers by 31 July by publishing one lead magnet per month and promoting it on Pinterest and YouTube." Specific (2,000 subscribers). Measurable (subscriber count). Achievable (800 new subscribers over 4 months via defined channels). Relevant (list growth supports course sales). Time-bound (31 July deadline).

// katharyne's take

SMART goals are a foundation, not a ceiling. On their own they can produce very uninspiring goals — small, safe, totally achievable. I use them in combination with backcasting: start with a bold, ambitious destination (not SMART), then set SMART milestones along the path to it. The SMART test is your reality-check on each step, not a constraint on the overall vision. Also: always write your SMART goals down. Unwritten goals are just wishes.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Take this vague goal I have for my [Etsy shop / KDP business / digital product] — "[write your goal here]" — and rewrite it as a properly formed SMART goal. Then break it into 4 weekly milestones I can use as check-ins, and flag which criterion was weakest in the original.
I want to reach [specific revenue or output target] from my [creator / KDP / Etsy] business by [timeframe]. Help me reverse-engineer it into a SMART production plan: how many products do I need, how many per month, and what's the minimum weekly action that makes it achievable without burning out?
Here are 5 goals currently on my to-do list: [list them]. Run each one through the SMART criteria and tell me which ones are genuinely SMART, which ones are missing a criterion, and rewrite the weakest one so it passes all five tests.
See also: GROW Model · Ikigai · Parkinson's Law
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