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  • Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of Goals

    In Goals, Habits, Achievements, Organization, Planning, Productivity, Life Planning, Projects, Feature, / 24 May 2012 / 0 comments

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsSetting goals is easy, but prioritizing them is hard. Humans suck at properly weighing what we need to achieve our goals. We take on too much, skip steps, and often, as a result, we give up. Once you commit to a framework to prioritize your goals and cut the junk, achieving your goals gets a lot more realistic. Here's one way to do it.

    If you're anything like me you have a ton of goals. Unfortunately, compulsive goal setting can be a major roadblock to actually achieving goals. Applying a rigorous approach to your goal setting is not only a great way to help you along the path to meeting them, but it's also a way to prune out all the junk you don't really need. We've talked before about how writing down all your goals is a good way to prioritize and that's essentially what we're doing here. However, instead of listing them we're going to categorize and compare them with a simple pyramid structure. (Think a little like Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, but for your goals.) By the end you'll have weeded out unnecessary steps and ditched goals you don't really care about.

    Consider this a system of life designing that helps you question assumptions and figure out what you really want. I've put together a Google Doc you can copy and fill in on your own (File > Make a copy). Here's how I divided the different goals up.

    Level 1: The Primary Goals

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsYour primary goals are the base of all other goals—the one or two things you aspire to do before you die. Nearly everything above this bottom level should help you to one day complete these goals. Write in the goals that will truly matter to you in 20 years. It might be something like: live happily into your 90's or become the CEO of a company. You should only have two or three high stakes goals listed here that you'll design the rest of your life around.

    Level 2: Long Term Goals

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsYour long term goals are the major goals that are required to get to the primary goals. These might be the sustainable habits you need to form over the years or the achievements you want to reach in order to get to your primary goals. Say your primary goal is to still be healthy and mobile in your 90's. You can't get to that point without working for it so a long term goal would be to lose (or gain) a certain amount of weight or improve your diet by your 50's.

    Level 3: Short Term Goals

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsThink of short term goals as weeks or months out. Consider goals like: finish a drawing, build a deck addition, or cut cookies from your diet. The important part to remember is that these goals are short term, not short-sighted. So if you're primary goal is to lose weight think of what you can do now to make that happen. If it's to put on a show in an art gallery you need to finish a picture first.

    Level 4: Recurring Goals

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsYour recurring goals are what you want to do daily/weekly/monthly regardless of what else is going on. Consider goals like: hit up the gym, jog, write a page a day, or anything similar. These aren't quite the same as short-term goals because they're to form a habit. Say one of your primary goals is to lower your daily stress level. Ask yourself what you need to do on a daily basis to make that happen in the long run (if you need some starter tips be sure to check out post on what you can do about your stress).

    Level 5: Immediate Goals

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsThese are the goals and to-dos that you can and want to accomplish right this second. As you write your list out you probably notice a few things you could be doing instead of writing your list. This is the ever-changing but necessary part of your pyramid because it allows you to measure your daily duties to see how they have an affect on your overall life goals. This could be as simple as cleaning the bathroom, or making a phone call. The purpose of including these here is to see where they affect other aspects of the pyramid both positively and negatively.

    How to Use Your Pyramid to Weed Out Junk and Accomplish Your Goals

    Now comes the hard part: turn this pyramid into an actionable living plan where you can prioritize and use your base goals as a foundation for everything else. As author David Foster Wallace points on in his Kenyon College commencement speech, life consists of what you pay attention to and you can structure your goals the same way. When you have too many goals conflicting with each other your attention is shifted too often. Trim away junk goals to get things done and find an actionable path.

    Trim the Junk Away and Focus On As Few Goals as Possible

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsThe goal of the pyramid is to ensure that every aspect of your goals work together. In that way it works a lot like the old food guide pyramid. The benefit of the pyramid is that you can see where your ideas fail and aren't coalescing. Let's get rid of everything that doesn't play nice together.

    1. Start at the bottom of your pyramid and draw lines up through goals that match each other. For instance, at the bottom in your primary goals you might have "Publish a novel." In the long term goals you have "Write a novel," and near the top you have something like, "Write the first sentence of a novel." The line should move through each level and hit one or two different goals along the way.
    2. Do this with all your goals moving upwards through the pyramid.
    3. When you're done you'll probably have a few outliers scattered about. Ask yourself a couple questions about them: Why do I want this? Does this relate to anything else I want? If you don't have a good answer, cut them from the list. If you want to keep goals then focus them to help you with another goal.
    4. Finally, go back through your levels and see what goals you can outsource to other people. You might be surprised at how many unnecessary steps you give yourself.

    As an example, here's what I did for one of my goals. The primary goal at the bottom is: make and publish a video game. Along the path I had all sorts of pipedream goals: learn how to do pixel art, improve my shotty programming skills, write design documents, and more. When I saw all this in one image I realized I made it impossible for myself. I looked at each level and cut away everything I knew I wouldn't do. Did I really need to learn programming? No, because I know plenty of people who do it. Art? Nope, I know people who do that as well. Instead of learning five new skills I reduced it one goal: work with people I know.

    By the end of this you should have a cohesive underlying framework where all your goals and wants work together in a manageable fashion. It's time to get started on accomplishing your goals.

    Formulate a Plan and Get Started

    Focus Your Ambitions with the Lifehacker Hierarchy of GoalsYou've trimmed away all the fat and nonsense so it's time to formulate a plan to achieve your goals. It's thought that smaller goals lead to a higher success rate and being very specific with those goals helps you achieve them. Thankfully your pyramid should already be filled with specifics so it's just about management now.

    Planning out the process depends on how you like to do things. We've pointed out before that broadcasting your goal progress in public is a great way to keep yourself on track, highlighted some great goal tracking services, project management tools, and pointed out that sometimes you just need to suck it up and start. Find a system that works for you and get to it.

    However you choose to plan your goals the point remains the same: focus only on the goals that matter, break them into smaller steps, and start work immediately. This is a one-time exercise that isn't about constant organization. You can tinker and tweak with each level as you go along, but stick with the basic high stakes structure if you really want to accomplish everything. Photo by Dan Zen.


    Goals are ambiguous things that we as humans struggle to define and work toward. Hopefully the above method will provide the framework to create a path to where you want to end up. Be sure to share your own tips for organizing goals in the comments.

    Title photo by Olivier Le Moal (Shutterstock.

  • Schedule a Weekly Review to Get Proactive About Your Commitments, Projects, and Responsibilities

    In Productivity, Organization, Weekly Review, Planning, Decisions, Follow-up, Management, Scheduling, Feature, / 04 May 2012 / 0 comments

    Schedule a Weekly Review to Get Proactive About Your Commitments, Projects, and ResponsibilitiesSchedule a Weekly Review to Get Proactive About Your Commitments, Projects, and Responsibilities The "weekly review" is a core component of many productivity techniques, including Getting Things Done (GTD), but in this interview, David Allen explains that the weekly review doesn't have to be a complicated, monolithic event that you organize for yourself—all that's truly necessary is that you take some time to examine your commitments on a regular basis and make some notes about things you don't want to forget.

    Allen calls the process "managing the forest instead of hugging the trees," a pretty apt metaphor for how we tend to walk through our day to day life at the office. If your work, or even your personal life, feels more like a thing that happens to you passively instead of a series of events you have some control over, then you may need to clear out a little time every few days—Allen suggests an hour or two every six or seven days—where you can clear off your desk and review what you've done, what you have to do next week, who you have to call or reach out to, and reflect on your overall progress.

    Note that this isn't a time for you to actually do anything, just a review, as the name implies. Take a look at the video above for some more tips on setting up your weekly review, and why it's so important that you do. Do you already take some time to review your progress and projects? How do you do it? Let us know in the comments.

    David Allen Talks About the GTD Weekly Review | YouTube via David Allen (Twitter)

  • Streak Supercharges Gmail with Text Expansion, Scheduled Emails, Event Planning, and More

    In Gmail, Webapps, Text Expansion, Send Later, Organization, Planning, Productivity, Projects, To-dos, To-do Manager, / 22 March 2012 / 0 comments

    Streak Supercharges Gmail with Text Expansion, Scheduled Emails, Event Planning, and More Chrome: Streak is a new web service and Chrome extension that adds a ton of useful features to your Gmail account, including the ability to compose messages and schedule them to be sent at a later date, text expansion that works by menu or keyboard command, and the ability to manage your personal projects, whether you're planning an event with multiple people, scheduling a vacation, or otherwise just want to keep track of a project that involves lots of people and even more emails in your inbox.

    Streak was built as a CRM-tool for business types who want to track their sales and leads, but the service has strong personal appeal as well. The "send later" feature integrates completely with Gmail, and your composed message lives in the Drafts folder until its scheduled time, when it'll be sent without you having to be logged in to Gmail to see it go. The "snippets" feature is essentially Gmail-only text expansion, and it works just like canned messages—you can create expanded text and save it, and then toggle it from the menu, or by pressing a keyboard command you can specify when you configure the snippet.

    Beyond the basics, Streak also allows you to create "pipelines," or different types of projects you want to use Streak to manage. The company has tutorials where people use the service for everything from bug tracking to fundraising to event planning. Inside each pipeline is a "box," or an individual to-do or sub-project. You can kick off a box by selecting a message or conversation from your inbox, giving it a name, and the box will be created with all of the necessary people added to the contacts for that box. This way you can keep track of who's involved in your project and what they're doing. Adding new to-dos and assigning them to the right part of your project is as simple as clicking "new box" and typing in the details. When you've added all of your to-dos, you can group or filter them based on tags, the stage of your project they're in, who's responsible for them, and more.

    Streak is completely free to use, and it does require access to your Google account in order to work. You don't give Streak your password—you grant it access via OpenID, and the service's privacy FAQ makes it clear what they can and can't see. If you're looking for a to-do manager or project tool that's more robust than Google Tasks but still integrates with Gmail like a dream, Streak is seriously worth a look.

    Streak

  • "An Ounce of Action Is Worth a Ton of Theory"

    In Quotables, Quotes, Motivation, Action, Work, Getting Things Done, Preparation, Planning, Thinking, To-do Manager, / 15 February 2012 / 0 comments

    "An Ounce of Action Is Worth a Ton of Theory""An ounce of action is worth a ton of theory. Don't be too timid and squeamish about your actions." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

    We spend a lot of time trying to make things perfect, making excuses, getting permission, and just thinking too much. It's good to be prepared and to have a well-thought out plan, but not at the cost of exhausting yourself before you have a chance to take action. It's better to make mistakes and seek forgiveness than to endlessly prepare. You learn by doing, not thinking about doing.

    Photo by OneO2 (Shutterstock).

    8 Tips for Highly Productive Entrepeneurs | Shopify Blog

 
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