Goals are an essential component of productivity. It’s important to know what you are striving for if you want to achieve it. Goal-setting is not just an activity for the beginning of the year; it’s a year-round necessity. Goals should to be looked at daily, and revised and restated weekly, monthly‚ whatever it takes to get to your personal finish line.

Setting Goals:checklist;
– Set a personal goal, as well as a professional one, especially when you are setting your annual goals. Yes, articles, short stories, pages, outlines, etc., are important. But so is self-improvement. You are more likely to achieve your writing goals if certain things in your personal life are in order. If your desk is a mess, then organizing it should be on the top of your goal-list.

– Look at your goals every day. It’s easy to neglect your goals when you do not bother to look at them. Conversely, if you look at your goals frequently, they stay in your mind, and you are much more likely to accomplish them. Post your goals in a place you go to frequently: the bathroom mirror, the fridge, your computer “wallpaper.” I know one person who puts her goals as the wallpaper on her cell phone. That way, whenever she goes to make a call, she has to look at them.

– Set realistic goals. It’s okay to overshoot and to even change them if your project goes in another direction. If you want to write an hour a day, but you think 30 minutes is more doable, then that’s the goal you should set. When you are under less pressure, you are more likely to sit down and write.

gold starAccomplishing Goals:
– Join a writers support group or have a goal-buddy. Set weekly or monthly check-in times. Accountability is a key motivational element in getting your goals done. If your buddy and/or the people in your writers group make their goals, you certainly will want to. There’s a huge incentive in feeling if your friends and peers can make their goals, so can you!

– Set a plan. Break down your project into doable parts, and put deadlines in your calendar. If you are writing a book, set due dates for the outline, each chapter, and rewrites. If you are trying to sell your book, novel, or screenplay, come up with a number of queries to send every week to agents and publishers—and stick to it. If you cheat on your goals, you are only cheating yourself—and prolonging your potential success.

– Make writing-time a priority. If you cancel a doctor’s appointment—or hair appointment—without notice, what happens? You get charged. If you cancel writing-time because something else comes up, you are only neglecting yourself. There are exceptions: sick child, day job, emergency. Yet, for the most part, writers tend to forgo their personal projects for other priorities. You can start penalizing yourself for missing your goals—have a money jar and pay yourself for missed writing-time. Or better yet, just sit down and write!

Celebrate Wins:
The biggest win is finishing your passion-project, whether it’s an essay to submit to a magazine, a book proposal, or full-length manuscript. But there’s nothing wrong with treating yourself to a fancy meal out, a new DVD, or that sweater you have been eyeing for weeks. Set goals, accomplish them, reward yourself. The biggest reward is the pride in accomplishment! Congratulations in advance!

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This article was originally posted on Carolyn Howard-Johnson’s website: Sharing with Writers and Readers.

Debra Eckerling will be teaching Basics and Beyond: Goal-Setting & Productivity on Saturday, January 30, at The Writers Store in Los Angeles. For details and to register, go to http://www.writersstore.com/product.php?products_id=4440.

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  1. […] fun instead! That’s why it is so important to post goals where others can see them or have a goal-buddy. Although the biggest reward is getting your writing done, there’s nothing wrong with […]

  2. […] Article on Goal Setting and Productivity. […]

  3. […] Write On! Meeting on Blog Talk Radio, we talked about setp one in the productivity process: Setting Goals. You need to set goals, and look at them on a regular basis, if you expect to achieve them. You […]

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