Thursday, July 23, 2020
Moving Beyond Goals
Moving Beyond Goals You canât manage what you donât measureâ"this was the corporate mantra by which I lived for a long time. And itâs total bullshit. We used to measure everything at my old job: There were 29 metrics for which we were responsible every single day (even on weekends). There was morning reporting, 3 p.m. updates, 6 p.m. updates, and end-of-day reporting. I was consumed by numbers. After a while, I even started dreaming in spreadsheet format. Then I realized something: it didnât really matter. The goals were never as powerful as someoneâs internal motivations. People work hard for two reasons: they are externally inspired, or they are internally motivated. Sometimes itâs a combination of both. Some people can be momentarily inspired by goal attainment, but that kind of inspiration is impermanent, and it doesnât last beyond the goal itself. Conversely, intrinsic motivationâ"such as the desire to grow or contributeâ"carries on long after the goal is met. It often carries on in perpetuity. External inspiration can be the trigger, but internal motivation is what fuels someoneâs desire. When you discover your true motivation, you donât need an arbitrary goal. Goals are for the unmotivated. This is one of the reasons I got rid of mineâ"so I could focus on whatâs important, so I could focus on living a life centered around health, relationships, passion, growth, and contribution. I donât need goals to focus on these aspects of my life, because Iâm already motivated by these values. Having goals for these things would be irrelevant; I simply need to live my life in accordance with these principles. Read this essay and 150 others in our new book, Essential.
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