Vision #2 – I have a dream

Dr Martin Luther King Jr, August 28th 1963

 

I am happy to join with
you today in what will go down in history as the greatest
demonstration for
freedom in the history of our nation. [Applause]

Five score years ago, a
great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand signed the
Emancipation Proclamation.
This momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions
of Negro
slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice. It
came as
a joyous daybreak to end the long night of captivity.

But one hundred years later,
we must face the tragic fact that the Negro is still not free. One
hundred years
later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles
of segregation
and the chains of discrimination. One hundred years later, the Negro
lives on
a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material
prosperity.
One hundred years later, the Negro is still languishing in the corners
of American
society and finds himself an exile in his own land. So we have come
here today
to dramatize an appalling condition.

In a sense we have come
to our nation’s capital to cash a check. When the architects of our
republic
wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the declaration of
Independence,
they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to
fall heir.
This note was a promise that all men would be guaranteed the
inalienable rights
of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

It is obvious today that
America has defaulted on this promissory note insofar as her citizens
of color
are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has
given
the Negro people a bad check which has come back marked “insufficient
funds.”
But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt. We
refuse to
believe that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of
opportunity
of this nation. So we have come to cash this check — a check that
will give
us upon demand the riches of freedom and the security of justice. We
have also
come to this hallowed spot to remind America of the fierce urgency of
now. This
is no time to engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take the
tranquilizing
drug of gradualism. Now is the time to rise from the dark and desolate
valley
of segregation to the sunlit path of racial justice. Now is the time
to open
the doors of opportunity to all of God’s children. Now is the time to
lift our
nation from the quicksands of racial injustice to the solid rock of
brotherhood.

It would be fatal for the
nation to overlook the urgency of the moment and to underestimate the
determination
of the Negro. This sweltering summer of the Negro’s legitimate
discontent will
not pass until there is an invigorating autumn of freedom and
equality. Nineteen
sixty-three is not an end, but a beginning. Those who hope that the
Negro needed
to blow off steam and will now be content will have a rude awakening
if the
nation returns to business as usual. There will be neither rest nor
tranquility
in America until the Negro is granted his citizenship rights. The
whirlwinds
of revolt will continue to shake the foundations of our nation until
the bright
day of justice emerges.

But there is something that
I must say to my people who stand on the warm threshold which leads
into the
palace of justice. In the process of gaining our rightful place we
must not
be guilty of wrongful deeds. Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for
freedom
by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred.

We must forever conduct
our struggle on the high plane of dignity and discipline. We must not
allow
our creative protest to degenerate into physical violence. Again and
again we
must rise to the majestic heights of meeting physical force with soul
force.
The marvelous new militancy which has engulfed the Negro community
must not
lead us to distrust of all white people, for many of our white
brothers, as
evidenced by their presence here today, have come to realize that
their destiny
is tied up with our destiny and their freedom is inextricably bound to
our freedom.
We cannot walk alone.

And as we walk, we must
make the pledge that we shall march ahead. We cannot turn back. There
are those
who are asking the devotees of civil rights, “When will you be
satisfied?”
We can never be satisfied as long as our bodies, heavy with the
fatigue of travel,
cannot gain lodging in the motels of the highways and the hotels of
the cities.
We cannot be satisfied as long as the Negro’s basic mobility is from a
smaller
ghetto to a larger one. We can never be satisfied as long as a Negro
in Mississippi
cannot vote and a Negro in New York believes he has nothing for which
to vote.
No, no, we are not satisfied, and we will not be satisfied until
justice rolls
down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.

I am not unmindful that
some of you have come here out of great trials and tribulations. Some
of you
have come fresh from narrow cells. Some of you have come from areas
where your
quest for freedom left you battered by the storms of persecution and
staggered
by the winds of police brutality. You have been the veterans of
creative suffering.
Continue to work with the faith that unearned suffering is redemptive.

Go back to Mississippi,
go back to Alabama, go back to Georgia, go back to Louisiana, go back
to the
slums and ghettos of our northern cities, knowing that somehow this
situation
can and will be changed. Let us not wallow in the valley of despair.

I say to you today, my friends,
that in spite of the difficulties and frustrations of the moment, I
still have
a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream.

I have a dream that one
day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its
creed: “We
hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal.”

I have a dream that one
day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons
of former
slave owners will be able to sit down together at a table of
brotherhood.

I have a dream that one
day even the state of Mississippi, a desert state, sweltering with the
heat
of injustice and oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of
freedom and
justice.

I have a dream that my four
children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged
by the
color of their skin but by the content of their character.

I have a dream today.

I have a dream that one
day the state of Alabama, whose governor’s lips are presently dripping
with
the words of interposition and nullification, will be transformed into
a situation
where little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands
with little
white boys and white girls and walk together as sisters and brothers.

I have a dream today.

I have a dream that one
day every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be
made low,
the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be
made straight,
and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see
it together.

This is our hope. This is
the faith with which I return to the South. With this faith we will be
able
to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. With this faith
we will
be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a
beautiful symphony
of brotherhood. With this faith we will be able to work together, to
pray together,
to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand up for freedom
together,
knowing that we will be free one day.

This will be the day when
all of God’s children will be able to sing with a new meaning, “My
country,
’tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing. Land where my
fathers died,
land of the pilgrim’s pride, from every mountainside, let freedom
ring.”

And if America is to be
a great nation this must become true. So let freedom ring from the
prodigious
hilltops of New Hampshire. Let freedom ring from the mighty mountains
of New
York. Let freedom ring from the heightening Alleghenies of
Pennsylvania!

Let freedom ring from the
snowcapped Rockies of Colorado!

Let freedom ring from the
curvaceous peaks of California!

But not only that; let freedom
ring from Stone Mountain of Georgia!

Let freedom ring from Lookout
Mountain of Tennessee!

Let freedom ring from every
hill and every molehill of Mississippi. From every mountainside, let
freedom
ring.

When we let freedom ring,
when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every
state and
every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s
children,
black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics,
will
be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro
spiritual, “Free
at last! free at last! thank God Almighty, we are free at last!”

Vision #1 – What is Vision all about?

See your future in your mind firstYou step up to the tee on your least favourite hole on the course. You prepare for the shot, you utter to yourself “I will make this drive, this time it will be different, this time, I will strike the ball square on, the ball will soar through the air, and following a graceful arc it will land right smack in the middle of the fairway exactly where I’m aligned”. Your unconscious mind is informed by this belief and promptly provides you with a swing that will support your belief.

How do you train yourself to do this?

  • You spend several practice sessions building a new belief about your ‘nemesis’ hole (any hole for that matter).
  • You visualise making the stroke, sending the ball to exactly where you want it.
  • You do this in your mind’s eye, calmly, cool-ly. Not only have you seen what you will see with your own eyes, you’ve heard what you will hear with your own ears, you’ve felt how you will feel having made the shot, you’ll taste victory and smell success, exactly as if you had achieved it.

I’ll repeat that, exactly as if you had achieved it.

Let this be true, and it will be so.

By doing this, you are stepping into the future and acting as if you had conquered the hole and provided your unconscious with new images and new neural pathways to access now and in the future.

This is altering your belief. With practice, you will indeed step up to that tee and your unconscious self belief is of someone who has conquered that hole and will do so now.

This is why, in visualisation, we go beyond simply ‘seeing’ a picture of our success to the full range of senses – building a rich, realistic, high fidelity experience as if it were real. This is stepping into the future.

And you all know that it is much easier to look back into the past and see what happened to get here than it is to see the future.

Hindsight is 20/20 – and stepping into the future provides you with just that. Now that you believe in the tangible, real, success of winning that competition, striking that perfect drive, chipping that perfect lie onto the green and sinking that 50ft put – you can look back and see how you got there – that’s your training plan.

“Yes, but, it isn’t actually real!”. Who says that it isn’t real? It is a perception certainly.

So let’s pop back in time to the moment when you accomplished something extraordinary, something that beforehand you thought was genuinely impossible for you. It matters not what it is, perhaps, the moment that you took your first steps (if you remember at that age), or perhaps, the moment you successfully struck your first golf ball and it actually went towards the hole, or perhaps you cooked a delectable meal, or got a promotion, or was headhunted for a position. Whatever that moment is – you have a picture in your mind, you can generate how it felt, what you heard, what you could taste, smell – and how you felt. You know that it is real – it happened… but. my friend, what you just experienced was a perception – you perceive your reality to be true – indeed, your perception is your reality. Just as everyone else’s perception is their reality. It doesn’t matter whether you agree with the same perception or not – you are experiencing it from a different viewpoint remember – it is your perception, and it is your reality. Believe in your perception and you will thrive.

What we’re doing with altering self-beliefs through our version of visualisation, is creating neural pathways that are real (your brain cells grow and create real new pathways), that your unconscious mind will use as both the quickest route and the route that doesn’t incur conscious objections.

Your visualised experience becomes the route that generates the physiological response – which is, yep you guessed it, the one that makes success the reality (but there again, you only perceive reality, so is it true?)

A study in Switzerland wired up downhill skiers to record their muscle movements and nerve triggers. The study discovered that the muscles used during the actual ski run were primed in exactly the same order during the pre-run visualisation that the skiers went through. The skiers practiced the entire run in the heads before the run and their muscles responded to the impulses required for the actual run.

When interviewed after the run, the skiers were asked to describe their pre-run visualisation and then the run itself. The impulses and muscle responses were again recorded, the only differences between these was the pre-run visualisation was always a perfect run, and some of the skiers had fallen during the actual run.

Well, that just goes to prove that visualisation doesn’t mean perfection in reality doesn’t it!

Yes, you are absolutely right. Real world circumstances can, on occasions, disrupt the best laid plans. But if you don’t visualise the achievement beforehand, how do you know that you achieved what you set out to do?

Having a vision of your goal, your plan whatever you intend to do enables three very important things:

  • By creating a rich sensory picture or movie beforehand, you are actually preparing your muscles (those things that do the actual work of your body) and practicing whatever you need to do.
  • By having this rich sensory picture or movie of the goal, you are now able to communicate this to others much more easily.
  • You will know when you have achieved what you set out to do.

One of my favourite speeches that is a rich, sensory vision is Martin Luther King’s”I have a dream” speech.

Watch the whole thing next, and enjoy the deep sensory experience of listening to this powerful speech.

Eight key drivers of profitability

GAINMORE Leadership Advantage Learner ToolboxLocal and international research has found that there are eight key drivers that can improve the productivity, efficiency and profitability of any business. They are:

  1. Creating a productive work culture based on shared values. Positive relationships between staff, teams and managers are the foundation of improving workplace productivity.
  2. Shared Goals and Vision. Productive organizations know where they are going, what they will achieve and how everyone in the organization contributes to achievement and success.
  3. Show positive attitude and superior alignment. The skills and knowledge of people are a company’s biggest asset. To put it simply what people know and can do is the difference between success and failure. Making sure that the right resources are optimally used creates profitability. The attitude that people show each day radically impacts an organizations ability to align their resources effectively and efficiently.
  4. Influencing, networking and collaboration. Productive workplaces keep abreast of new ideas and technologies and network regularly with others. Effectively influencing stakeholders is key to revenue, collaborations and overall business success.
  5. Nature of leadership and management. Research shows leadership needs to be developed at every level of an organisation, not just amongst managers. The flexibility of individual leadership style is the difference between an engaged or involved workforce and a high-stress, low morale, ‘jobsworth’ inefficiency.
  6. 6. Outcomes and tactics. Productive workplaces have structures, systems and processes that are well-organised and adaptable. Successful organizations find the optimum balance of (urgent) tasks and (important) goals.
  7. Learning and Review. The organisation that continually learns and shares is agile, flexible and successful.
  8. Measuring what matters. Productive workplaces understand and measure the things that make the biggest difference to their business, whether it’s customer satisfaction, employee morale or feedback from suppliers. These indicators make it easy for everyone to share goals and work towards them.

All of these drivers are the responsibility of the organisation’s leadership. At CELSIM, we have more than 20 years experience in developing targeted development for individuals that impacts the organization.

balanceIn designing appropriate development interventions, our approach is to uncover the needs of the organization in the business environment, and the personal development needs of the individuals.

Finding the best balance that addresses these needs within your budget and your timeframe results in an effective solution.

Our paradigm is experiential learning because this accelerates the learning process and enhances immediate, sustained business impact.

You are invited to undertake the GAINMORETM DNA (Development Needs Analysis) for your organization to help understand the most pressing business development needs. We will then follow up with you to recommend an approach that will make you and your organization more successful.

Contact us to start driving your profitability forward.

GAPPS Analysis


Copyright © 2009 CELSIM. Rights Reserved

Goal setting advantage – Legend or Logic?

For far too long, consultants, trainers, guru’s and leaders have been misleading us about goal setting. We keep hearing the same myth that people with written goals achieve greater success in life. I fell foul of this story myself – after all, it cam from the pages of a famous author and I’ve seen it repeated again and again. Most recently in an article published by the Professional Golfers Association. The trouble is, that this story becomes linked with the concept of setting SMART goals, for which there is some evidence, but written goals? So, I felt that it was time to set the record a little straighter and based on just a little bit of real research…

Goal-setting is one of those things that people, it seems, are near unanimous on its importance to life, career, success, achievement. And there are a great many speakers who advocate goal-setting. The latest ‘fad’ in this is The Secret – Rhonda Byrne’s now famous TV/Film Documentary which, in a nutshell, purports that people who envision what they want will attract its actualisation into their life. Now, I’m not going to detract from this appealing idea because there is something in it – but it isn’t new by any means, it’s been written in the Bible for several hundred years. There are others including Zig Ziglar and Anthony Robbins – both of whom quote an oft-used story about the effectiveness of goal-setting: This is the Yale Study of 1953 – some say it is Harvard, and some challenge the year – it matters not, since the study is an urban myth. Let me remind you of the story, you may have heard variations and the precise percentages vary:
Yale researchers surveyed the graduating class of 1953 to determine how many of them has specific, written goals for their future. 3% of them had. Twenty years later, the researchers followed up with the surviving members of the class and discovered that the 3% with written goals had accumulated more personal wealth than the remaining 97% combined!

I repeat – this ‘study’ is an urban myth – whilst it is quoted by some ‘authorities’ and famous gurus on management and self-leadership, there is NO record of the study and NO paper on it. Yet it’s allure is understandable – it feeds beautifully into the concept that in order for you to accumulate wealth (aka be successful) not only must you have specific goals, but you must write them down. For someone selling a process on written goal setting (see Zig Ziglar and Tony Robbins) it ‘proves’ the process.
So is goal-setting really important, or is it just a load of twaddle? To answer this question, rather than rely on stories of spurious origin, it’s important to have some robust research to find out if there’s anything in it.

What is a goal?

Hold on just a moment though, what do we mean by a ‘goal’? Everyone at some point in their life has heard that it is important for us to have goals. Goals provide you a map to your future, whether in business, life, career or indeed sport. It seems obvious, but a football team playing without a goal to aim for is just kicking a ball around. But, other than the more obvious physical goals as the target of a particular game, what exactly is a goal? And how do you know when you have achieved it? Is it even very important to have goals? A sporting goal is a useful analogy though, here we are more interested in the non-sporting variety.
The OED definition of a goal is “an aim or a desired result”. That’s useful, but I prefer the Wikipedia version which defines a goal as “a specific, intended result of strategy.” They amount, ultimately to the same thing: the intended achievement of a desired result. The dictionary definition, however, suggests that the goal exists with or without you. Why is this important? I hear some question already. Let me share an example:
On the horizon is a mountain, its peak visible on this glorious day. It is your goal. You are aiming to reach the peak of this mountain.

According to the dictionary the goal is the mountain peak. According to the encyclopaedia, the intended result is that you reach the mountain peak as a result of the journey (intended strategy) you are making.
What’s important, the existence of the goal or the journey to its attainment?

Let me refer briefly back to soccer… Is the existence of the goal at the end of the pitch the thing that makes the game, or is it the strategy (and tactics) employed by players to score (reach) the goal?
The reason for being pedantic at this stage is to stress that we refer (in English) to goal as both an entity and as the intended result of our actions. For the purposes of this article, I refer to goal as both – an entity that we are able to describe in one or more of the five senses we enjoy and as a specific, intended result. I believe that it is critical that a goal can be described in one or more of our senses – otherwise we will never know what it is.

“A man without a goal, you are like a ship without a rudder.” Thomas Carlyle

You know people, perhaps yourself, who would be lost without a “To Do” list. Daily, weekly, monthly tasks that result in specific intended results. Many people will consider this as their goals. Indeed, you can call them ‘goals’ if you wish. But I want to distinguish this concept further. I call these daily, weekly, monthly tasks “Outcomes” – they are important steps on the way to achieving goals but they are a small part of the overall intended result.

I’ll borrow from my own To Do list for today. It includes, strangely enough, writing the first three sections of this article. Now, is my goal to write three sections of an article? Is it to write an article? I can answer yes to both yet it doesn’t tell us the full story – my Goal is to develop my business and as a part of that, I want to reach a wider audience for the purpose of building my brand, building my reputation and establishing myself as a trusted expert that you will now consider to design and run a training programme or undertake coaching in your organisation. This article is just one part of that strategy, and this section, just one part of this article. The primary and secondary research I’ve undertaken to be in a position to write, I trust, knowledgeably about goal-setting has been another part… and so on.

It is the goal that helps us determine the appropriate outcomes necessary to reach the goal, the specific outcomes help determine the actions we undertake to achieve them. The whole series together, makes a strategy.

For ease and clarity, I consider a “Goal” to be longer-term and the intended result of a strategy. “Outcomes” are the result of the steps, milestones or activities that we achieve en-route to achieving the goal.
When I was a child, schoolteachers and relatives would often ask “And what do you want to be when you grow up?” I honestly didn’t have a clue. My friends seemed to have got the hand of this and I discovered that the expected answers seemed to be focusing around jobs or careers “I want to be a Fireman/Doctor/Train Driver”, or perhaps something bolder like “Rock Star/Famous Actor” – or around money… “I want to be a millionaire”. Apparently it didn’t matter what you wanted to be – it still required that you studied hard, preferably got all A Grades – oh and it was critically important that you “eat all your greens”. Quite how Brussels Sprouts are a necessity for success has never been answered fully to my satisfaction. By the time I was a teenager, I was at the “I dunno” stage. And by the time I was choosing my A level subjects it seemed that my options were becoming limited. Artist was ruled out on the recommendation of my delightful art teacher who claimed that my lovingly crafted painting “hurt her eyes” and Author was ruled out because I had little taste for over-analysing Jane Austin’s Northanger Abbey.

To my knowledge, none of my friends answered “I wish to be a wage slave pushing paper from one side of a building to another, politically manoeuvring myself into a position of power and authority, attending useless meetings each day and commute for 4 hours” so what went wrong?
Well, perhaps it is the goal-setting process.

What is goal setting?

Inadvertently, or deliberately, people asking us when young “what do you want to be…” have set us on a process of goal-setting. They are asking us to peer in our mind’s eye into the distant future and describe our goal. With little worldly experience, we most likely think of people we admire that through their job demonstrate what is valuable to our young minds.

What would you like to achieve in X years that having achieved it will satisfy your personal values? Would you ask a ten year old that question? No? It’s unlikely that they would understand – but with the massive leaps in education and increasing pressure on children to know a whole lot more than the current generation of mature adults, they may well be asking you that question and be surprised if you can’t answer it. I digress, but we are effectively asking that when we say “what would you like to be…”

Goal-setting is a process by which we choose our intended result, decide what we want to achieve in the longer-term AND determine HOW we are going to attain the goal (i.e., the strategy). Therein lies the problem for many people in regard to goal-setting… the process necessarily includes the strategy to achieve the goal. When relatives with kind intentions ask “what do you want to be…” the strategy they advise to achieve whatever you said, invariably refers back to the need to study hard, be a good child, don’t answer back and above all… “eat your greens!” As you get older, the advice may become more specific and even, more useful. You begin to discover which areas of knowledge and skill you most enjoy and are better equipped to clarify your personal goal as you become increasingly aware of what is important to you.

Goal-setting for your career, life and business is strongly advocated and endorsed in hundreds of books and papers and articles. Most emphasise the importance of writing your goals down as part of the goal-setting process.

Is goal-setting important?

Ask almost anyone about the importance of goal-setting and they will affirm that it is incredibly important. Here is a small selection of verbatim responses to the question “How important is goal-setting?”
“The difference between successful people [and people struggling] is the setting of tangible and measurable goals.”
“I believe goal setting does work and needs to be written down. “
“If there are no set goals, things either happen, or they don’t.”
“With measurable goals you are in action to fulfill them”
“… there’s no excuse for failing to progress if you don’t take ownership of your own goals”
“Setting yourself some goals is always going to be effective”
“I have been setting goals for myself for over 10 years. I believe that the goals enable me to achieve the things that I want”
“People who are successful tend to be the same sort that write down goals”

So there seems to be consensus that goal-setting is important, yet there is some evidence to support it, yet, as we shall see, from research undertaken for this study, having written the goal down is perhaps not the most important concern. What we will see is that the process of goal-setting is perhaps more important than the goal itself! There is some strong support for the concept of SMART goals. Goals that are Specific and Stretching, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic and Time-bound. There’s a great deal of common sense reasoning that supports the idea of SMART goals – and there’s some excellent robust research.

Why set goals?

Edwin Lock and Gary Latham have undertaken a great deal of leading research about goals and goal-setting and neatly suggest that setting goals implies dissatisfaction with the current condition and a desire to attain an outcome Locke and Latham, 2006.

Why Specific and Stretching?

In Locke and Latham’s 2006 study and previous articles, there is an emphasis on the positive relationship between goal difficulty and performance. Locke and Latham, 1990; Locke and Latham, 2002. That is, the more difficult the goal is to achieve, the higher the level of performance is manifest – allbeit moderated by commitment to the goal. Earlier studies had already identified that specific and difficult goals led to greater performance than easy and/or vague goals Latham and Lee, 1986

Commitment to achieving a goal – Attainable and Realistic

Hollenbeck and Klein, 1987 suggest that an individual’s commitment to a goal (building on Locke’s research and many others) is dependent on a combination of the expectancy that the individual has of achieving success, and the difficulty of achieving the goal. In the commonly used nemonic, SMART goals, this is usually considered as the ‘AR’ of SMART – Attainable and Realistic. Though Hollenbeck and Klein help point out that when we set a goal, it may well seem that the goal is attainable – I can do everything that I need to do to achieve this and am prepared for the cost in time, effort, etc. – and it may well seem to be realistic – Given the resources that I have and the current environment, this goal can be practically achieved.

Measurable and Time-bound?

I don’t think it would be possible to undertake research on something that had no measure nor a time restriction – how would you know that you had achieved success if there was no measure, and if there is no time limit, when would you stop measuring or even not measuring. So these remain ‘common sense’ though a post-modernist might disagree.

So there is support for the concept of SMART goals – now why is it so important that we ‘write’ them down?
There are some who suggest that writing something down increases commitment to the goal but the evidence is anecdotal. For some individuals, the act of writing something down assists clarity through a conscious process because they consider something written to be a personal commitment. Does that mean it is true for everyone? To help answer this, we undertook primary research to mirror the mythical Yale Study. Through a simple questionnaire, respondents were asked if they had set goals for themself on leaving school, college or university, when this was and if they had written it down. They were then asked to estimate their total personal wealth now. The results are quite shocking.

Results from our survey

215 individuals completed the online questionnaire over a seven week period. Respondents were mostly UK-based (80%), with further respondents from Asia (11%) and the USA (9%). This researcher invited respondents through social networks, Ecademy and LinkedIn and direct contact with companies across the UK, Asia and US. 70% of respondents are in full-time employment, and the remainder either self-employed or business owners.

Only results shown to be significant at 0.05 are discussed.

  • At the end of their formal education, 69.8% had a personal goal of whom only 11.2% had written their goal down.

Goals and personal wealth

  • Of those that had written their goal, their average personal wealth is GBP115000, whereas those who had not written their goal down, their average personal wealth was GBP295000. That’s more than two and a half times as much! Completely contrary to the supposed Yale Study.

We asked respondents when they left formal education and analysed this against their estimated personal wealth.

  • Those leaving formal education in the 1970’s have a average wealth of GBP475000, 80’s GBP195000 and 90’s… GBP325000!

It seems reasonable that those who have been in the workforce longer would have greater personal wealth and so it is… almost. The anomaly appears to be those who left formal education during the 80’s.

  • Those leaving in the 70’s have generated on average 13,500 each year since leaving. 80’s grads a miserly 7,800 and those bright young things from the 90’s, a whopping 21,600!

So what’s going on?

It may have something to do with SMART goals.

SMART goals and personal wealth

  • Those who set Specific Measurable only goals average a low 25,000
  • Add Time-bound to specific and measurable and this goes up to 50,000
  • Just Attainable and Realistic goals – now this is averaging 150,000
  • Specific, Measurable, realistic and time-bound and we rise rapidly to 475,000
  • Go the whole hog, Specific, measurable, Attainable, Realistic and Time-bound – and we reach 605,000

We seem to be finding some useful answers here. Don’t worry so much about writing your goals down, just so long as they’re SMART.

So is that it?

No. There’s a couple of very interesting additional significant statistics in our survey. They deal with the type of goal.

Goal focus and personal wealth

Respondents were asked if they were willing to share their own personal goal, 60% did so and these break down into four main focuses: Career, Lifestyle,Money or Ability. We also asked how satisfied respondents were with their achievement.

  • For those with a Lifestyle goal focus, average wealth is 95,000 and ‘satisfied’ with their achievement.
  • A Career focus, average wealth is just over 100,000 and ‘somewhat satisfied’
  • A Money focus, average wealth is 162,500 and ‘satisfied’ and lastly,
  • An ‘Ability’ focus, average wealth is 780,000 and ‘very satisfied’!

Go on, have a guess on the statistical conclusion… yep, those who left formal education in the 90’s focus more on ‘Ability’, 80’s focus on career and lifestyle, whilst the 70’s predominantly Money. Surely a reflection of the environment of the time.

The great thing about focusing on what you are ‘able’ to do will help the goal-setting process be more effective. Following Locke and Latham’s findings that ability to achieve the goal moderates performance – too difficult and uncommitted individuals do not perform, whereas, stretching yet within my potential ability aids commitment to goal attainment.

Respondents were asked if they were willing to share their own personal goal, 60% did so and these break down into four main focuses: Career, Lifestyle, Money or Ability. We also asked how satisfied respondents were with their achievement. The first three are ‘Outcome’ goals – that is, they specify a particular tangible outcome. Ability focus is a ‘Performance’ goal – such goals focus on an ability or capability of the individual.

  • For those with a Lifestyle goal focus, average wealth is 95,000 and ‘satisfied’ with their achievement.
  • A Career focus, average wealth is just over 100,000 and ‘somewhat satisfied’
  • A Money focus, average wealth is 162,500 and ‘satisfied’ and lastly,
  • An ‘Ability’ focus, average wealth is 780,000 and ‘very satisfied’!

Go on, have a guess on the statistical conclusion… yep, those who left formal education in the 90’s focus more on ‘Ability’, 80’s focus on career and lifestyle, whilst the 70’s predominantly Money. Surely a reflection of the environment of the time.

The great thing about focusing on what you are ‘able’ to do will help the goal-setting process be more effective. Following Locke and Latham’s findings that ability to achieve the goal moderates performance – too difficult and uncommitted individuals do not perform, whereas, stretching yet within my potential ability aids commitment to goal attainment.

Outcome goals – some issues

The problem facing many people with regard to ‘Outcome’ goals is that there is an element that is outside the power of the individual.
An example of the potential issues with an ‘outcome’ goal comes from a rather sad testimony from one particular research participant:

“My goal was to have $3 million in the bank for my retirement by age 55. I achieved my goal with great satisfaction early at age 43. Unfortunately my bank was at the centre of a fraud and went under. 16 years later, I am still working and slowly rebuilding my goal. So, goals are important and we need to know what we want to achieve in life – just choose a goal only including yourself and don’t leave all of it in one place.”

Outcome goals are most often subject to others and to the environment. The greater the attainability of a goal through yourself only – I.e. Your own performance – the more you are in control of goal achievement. Goals that have a high dependence on others and/or external circumstances are considerably more difficult to influence.

As an extreme example, one survey participant has goal to win the lottery! Now there are certain things that you can do to increase the likelihood of this becoming reality, buying tickets is a useful component, but how many? Interestingly, another participant who had a ‘money’ goal did indeed achieve their goal – through winning the lottery! Though that wasn’t the original plan and they rated themselves ‘somewhat satisfied’ in having completely achieved their goal.

Whilst touching on monetary goals, another participant reminds us that being specific about your goal is important:

“My goal was to be a millionaire by 35… I achieved it the moment I stepped away from the foreign exchange counter at Jakarta airport!”

Following up with our survey participants revealed commonality in the way they went about setting goals and their subsequent actions to achieve their goals. We’ve already seen how those with the greatest success in terms of personal wealth had SMART goals. This isn’t to say that success can only be measured by means of personal wealth at all – the original intention was simply to test the mythical Yale Study results. An, of course, someone could have set themselves a perfectly good SMART goal – but due to their own environment, had not accumulated as much personal wealth in terms of a standard currency – indeed, a person could have less in terms of monetary wealth yet be considerably better off in terms of the value they can obtain from less money.

Performance goals

An interesting aspect that began to show itself through the results was personal satisfaction in goal achievement. People who set ‘Ability’ type goals, or ‘Performance’ goals reported to be ‘very satisfied’ with their achievements – whether completely achieved goals or not yet complete. In part, this suggests the importance of personal values and suggests a question about the process by which they set goals.
Through a random selection of fifty respondents we found that there is some commonality in the manner in which goals are set:

When we compare the groups of ‘Very Satisfied’ with their achievement and ‘Satisfied’ or ‘Somewhat Satisfied’ with their achievement. The first group were more likely to have SMART goals. The goal is described in sensory terms – what will be seen, heard and felt, and for a small number, smelt and tasted. Respondents were clear about what achieving the goal will do positively for them and the cost to themselves (and others) of achieving their goal. Their goal, they considered personally stretching yet ‘knew’ that they were capable of achieving it themselves. More than 60% stated their goal in the present tense – ‘I am’ rather than ‘I will be’.

This provides a template for a useful goal-setting process that we’ve turned into an easy-to-remember acronym: SWING.

Goal setting process

  1. A SMART and Sensory performance goal
  2. What will I positively Win and lose
  3. Am I In control of achieving this goal?
  4. Stated as Now
  5. Guarantee – this is an added psychological process to ensure personal motivation towards achieving the goal.

Final thoughts

From our survey, those individuals who set performance goals using slight variations of this process represent a small, though statistically significant fraction of the sample that have a net higher annualised personal wealth accumulation (2.15 times) and are more satisfied than individuals who use only one or two aspects of this process.

It is not the writing down of the goal that makes the difference, it seems to be the emphasis on performance or ability and the process of thinking through the goal. And for those of you, like me, who just didn’t get round to setting goals way back and worry that you might have missed out – well you can’t go back and revise history, but you can create a new one now.

Bibliography

Hollenbeck, John R. and Howard Klein, J. (1987), ‘Goal Commitment and the Goal-Setting Process: Problems, Prospects,
and Proposals for Future Research’, Journal of Applied Psychology, 72 (2), 212-20.
Loche, Edwin P. (ed.) (1986), Goal setting, Generalizating from Laboratory to Field Settings, Lexington, MA: Lexington Books) 101-17.
Locke, Edwin A. and Gary P. Latham (1990), A theory of goal setting and task performance, (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall).
Locke, Edwin A. and GaryP. Latham (2006), ‘New directions in goal-setting theory’, Current Directions in Psychological Science, 15 (5), 265-68.
Locke, Edwin A. and G.P. Latham (2002), ‘Building a practically useful theory of goal-setting and task motivation’, Amrican Psychologist, 57 (9), 705-17.

If you would like to know more about the GAINMORE Leadership and how we can help you transform your leaders – whether your business issues are Strategy, Business Planning, Teamwork, Change, Marketing, Operations, Finance – we will work with you to design a solution that will address your ongoing needs. Call us on +44 (0)207 1935218 or visit the website at www.gainmoreleadership.co.uk
We look forward to hearing from you soon.

For full references, please contact the author
john at gainmoregolf.com