Three top strategies for setting goals you can actually achieve

Setting goals for yourself and your business is sometimes easier said than done. Productivity coach, Chelsea Pottenger, shares some handy tips to set effective goals – and achieve them!

A new financial year is a great time to pause, review and evaluate your goals. Asking yourself and your team if you are on the right track? If your daily activities match your goals? Whether you even set up the right goals to start with?

A mistake we can all fall into is setting up big goals, only to discover we aren’t following through to achieve them. You can stop that happening by using a framework that will not only help you set up your goals but achieve them as well.

So, what is a goal?

A goal is simply a future desired outcome. Your goal could be to ‘increase yearly revenue by 25 per cent’ or ‘to create a more connected culture’.

Whatever your goal is, it’s important to consider how you want to feel, the specific action of the goal and how you are going to achieve it.

Clearly articulated goals help trigger new behaviours, which prompt new habits, allowing you to work more efficiently and effectively towards achieving your goals.

Three steps to successful goal setting

Step 1: Start with your values

Your values are your ‘why’. They are the things you believe are important. They determine your priorities and help measure whether you are fulfilled. Your values will help guide why you are making the goals you are, and ensure they are aligned with the purpose of the business.

Write down three values and then process why they are important.

Step 2: Determine how you want to feel

This part may not seem that important, however cognitive therapy tells us that when we can harness the emotion we would feel by achieving our goals, we will better understand our ‘why’ and intrinsic motivation, prompting us to put more energy into achieving them.

Ask yourself:

  • Do you want to feel successful?

  • Do you want to feel abundant?

  • Do you want to feel energetic?

Before writing down your goals, clearly identify how you want to feel and return to this feeling when finding your intrinsic motivation.

Step 3: Set S.M.A.R.T Goals

S.M.A.R.T goal setting is a widely proven formula for success. The acronym ‘S.M.A.R.T’ stands for Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Timebound.

Writing goals in this format prompts you to be crystal clear about what the desired outcome is and how you are going to achieve it. For example, if your goal is to support employee wellbeing, we would break down the goal like this:

  • Specific: Introduce a twice a week wellbeing program for my employees.

  • Measurable: I will survey my employees on what types of fitness and mindfulness they would like to be included in the wellness program.

  • Attainable: I will outsource a fitness trainer and meditation/mindfulness coach. I will spend two hours per week working with them to curate sessions for the program.

  • Relevant: Supporting my employees’ wellbeing will increase their happiness, productivity and performance at work.

  • Timebound: I will start working on the program tomorrow and have it up and running in six weeks time.

Now you have set your goals, you need to achieve them.

3 strategies to help you stick to your goals 

1. Treats and rewards for the brain

Reward yourself along the way. Celebrate each milestone that gets you closer to your goal.

2. Pre commitment and accountability

Consider getting an accountability partner. This could be a spouse, friend, colleague – someone to celebrate the wins along the way and offer a fresh perspective.

3. Intrinsic motivation

Check on your ‘why’ and what motivates you. When our behaviours match our values, it means our goals are aligned with our purpose and we feel a stronger drive to achieve them.

Source: Flying Solo August 2022

This article by CHELSEA POTTENGER is reproduced with the permission of Flying Solo – Australia’s micro business community. Find out more and join over 100K others https://www.flyingsolo.com.au/join.

Important:
This provides general information and hasn’t taken your circumstances into account. It’s important to consider your particular circumstances before deciding what’s right for you. Any information provided by the author detailed above is separate and external to our business and our Licensee. Neither our business, nor our Licensee take any responsibility for any action or any service provided by the author. Any links have been provided with permission for information purposes only and will take you to external websites, which are not connected to our company in any way. Note: Our company does not endorse and is not responsible for the accuracy of the contents/information contained within the linked site(s) ac www.flyingsolo.com.au 

Buachailli Pty Ltd ABN 57 115 345 689 atf Harlow Family Trust t/as Queensland Financial Group is a Corporate Authorised Representative of Synchron AFS Licence No. 243313 This advice may not be suitable to you because it contains general advice that has not been tailored to your personal circumstances. Please seek personal financial advice prior to acting on this information. Investment Performance: Past performance is not a reliable guide to future returns as future returns may differ from and be more or less volatile than past returns.

Making your savings work harder

With tax cuts and stimulus payments on the way, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg is urging us to open our wallets and spend to kick start the national economy. But if your personal balance sheet could do with a kick along, then saving and investing what you can, also makes sense.

One positive from this COVID-19 induced recession, is that it has made many of us more aware of the importance of building a financial buffer to tide us over in lean times. Even people with secure employment have caught the savings bug.

According to the latest ME Bank Household Finance Confidence Report, 57 per cent of households are spending less than they earn. This is the highest percentage in almost a decade.i

More troubling however, was the finding that one in five households has less than $1,000 in savings, and only one third of households could maintain their lifestyle for three months if they lost their income.

Whatever your financial position, if saving is a priority the next step is deciding where to put your cash.

Banking on low interest

Everyone needs cash in the bank for living expenses and a rainy day. If you’ve been caught short this year, then building a cash buffer may be a priority.

If you have a short-term savings goal such as buying a car or your first home within the next year or so, then the bank may also be the best place for your savings. Your capital is guaranteed by the Government so there’s no risk of investment losses.

But with interest rates close to zero, the bank is probably not the best place for long-term savings. So once your need for readily accessible cash is covered, there are more attractive places to build long-term wealth.

Pay down your mortgage

If you have a mortgage, then making extra repayments can reduce the total amount of interest you pay and cut years off the life of your loan. This strategy has the most impact for younger people in the early years of a 25 to 30-year loan.

If your mortgage has a redraw or offset facility, you can still access your savings if you need cash for an emergency or home renovations down the track. This may be a deciding factor if retirement is a long way off.

Boost your super

Making extra super contributions is arguably the most tax-effective investment, especially for higher income earners.

Even so, super is likely to be more attractive as you get closer to retirement, the kids have left home, and your home is close to being paid off. (see Mortgage or super below).

You can make personal, tax-deductible contributions up to the annual cap of $25,000. Be aware though that this cap includes super guarantee (SG) payments made by your employer and salary sacrifice amounts.

You can also make after-tax contributions of up to $100,000 a year up to age 75, subject to a work test after age 67.

Mortgage or super?

A question often asked is whether it’s better to put savings into super or your mortgage. Well, it depends on factors including your age, personal circumstances and preferences, interest rates and tax bracket.

Mitch is 35 with 25-year, $500,000 mortgage and monthly repayments of $2,300. If he increases his repayment by $400 a month, he could cut five years off the term of his loan and save almost $40,000 in interest.ii

But what if Mitch were to salary sacrifice that extra $400 a month into his super? He currently earns $85,000 a year which puts him in the 34.5 per cent tax bracket, including the Medicare Levy. By age 60, his super balance would be around $138,000 higher than if he relied on his employer’s SG contributions alone.

Mathematically, Mitch would be better off putting extra savings into super than his mortgage. But he and his partner Grace are planning to marry and start a family, so getting on top of the mortgage and having access to his savings to upgrade their home and fund their kids’ education is a bigger priority than retirement right now.

It’s different for Gail, who at age 55 has $200,000 and 10 years left on her mortgage and just $100,000 in super. If she puts an extra $400 a month into her mortgage, she will save around $5,800. But if she salary sacrifices $400 a month into super until age 65, she will boost her balance by around $48,000 and still manage to pay her home off by the same time.iii

Invest outside super

If you would like to invest in shares or property but don’t want to lock your money away in super until you retire, then you could invest outside super.

If you are new to investing, you could wait until you have saved $5,000 or so in the bank and then buy a parcel of shares or an exchange-traded fund (ETF). ETFs give you access to a diversified portfolio of investments in a particular market, market sector or asset class.

First home buyers might consider the Federal Government’s expanded First Home Loan Deposit Scheme with as little as 5 per cent deposit. There are limited packages available and price caps on the home value, depending on where you live.

With tax cuts set to flow and a new appreciation of the importance of financial security, now is the perfect time to start a savings plan. Contact our office if you would like to discuss your savings and investment strategy.

i https://www.mebank.com.au/getmedia/c27b0a0d-cc4e-470e-8a37-722d6f00af98/Household_Financial_Comfort_Report_July_2020_FINAL.pdf

ii Calculations using the MoneySmart mortgage calculator, 14 October 2020, using default assumptions.
https://moneysmart.gov.au/home-loans/mortgage-calculator

iii Calculations using the MoneySmart super calculator, 14 October 2020, using default assumptions.

https://moneysmart.gov.au/how-super-works/superannuation-calculator

Buachailli Pty Ltd ABN 57 115 345 689 atf Harlow Family Trust t/as Queensland Financial Group is a Corporate Authorised Representative of Synchron AFS Licence No. 243313 This advice may not be suitable to you because it contains general advice that has not been tailored to your personal circumstances. Please seek personal financial advice prior to acting on this information. Investment Performance: Past performance is not a reliable guide to future returns as future returns may differ from and be more or less volatile than past returns.