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My 2021 Strategic Business Plan

My 2021 Strategic Business Plan

 

“A goal without a plan is just a wish.”
~ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

What is it that I really need my business to do in 2021?

To put in place the systems, services and products to scale the success I’ve achieved in 2020 to double my annual income without working any more hours.

My Overall Plan for 2021

Strategic Priority 1 — Systems + Processes

Goal 1: To streamline tech systems/software to reduce expenses and minimise overlap.

Goal 2: Write out all the SOPs for my business. (if you don’t know what an SOP is, this definition from Tara Mcmullin is helpful: “A Standard Operating Procedure is the process you use to complete a given task in the same way, every time. Every business has unique processes that are core to its administration, marketing, value delivery, team management, etc.”

Goal 3: Create email templates for all of my most commonly used emails:

Goal 1: Create and deliver a schedule of low-cost workshops over the course of the year.

Goal 2: Create and execute a launch/marketing plan for the workshops.

Goal 3: Launch one new 5 week group program

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Once a week, in the form of an e-letter, I share the best of what I know about building a business with integrity for conscious business owners.

The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

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Learn From My Mistake

Learn From My Mistake

“Each person deserves a day away in which no problems are confronted, no solutions are searched for. Each of us needs to withdraw from the cares which will not withdraw from us.”

                                       ~ Maya Angelou

As I write this blog post, I’m feeling grateful for my new morning routine that means I’ve just spent the last 30 minutes sat in my office enjoying a cup of coffee, meditation music playing, incense burning, having just read another chapter of the non-business book I’m reading (A Course in Miracles Made Easy). My office is clean, tidy and organised and my schedule and tasks for the day and week ahead are set. My only task for this morning is to write this article. Once finished, I’ll be heading out for a long walk.

This is not how mornings have started lately, which brings me on to the topic of this post.

Back when I first started out in business I was fortunate to have the guidance and support of a coach who taught me, amongst many things, the importance of building a business that supports our preferred lifestyle from the get go versus trying to fit our desired lifestyle around our business retrospectively.

Two things he had me build into my schedule, back when my schedule was wide open, were time to work on my business as well as in it (more on that below) and time off from my business to include breaks from work on a daily, weekly, monthly and annual basis.

Seeing the absolute wisdom of this, I put several things in place in service of that idea:

  • I scheduled Wednesday and Fridays as call free days so that I had time on a Wednesday for working on my business and Fridays were kept free of calls for creativity which meant I could use them to do creative work for my business (such as web and graphic design and designing new products or services) or to spend the day painting (just for the fun of it) if my heart desired it.
  • I only scheduled coaching sessions for 3 weeks out of every month so that I could hibernate during those days in my menstrual cycle when I was feeling low in energy and mood or to do business activities that suited my more internal mood.
  • I purposely made my coaching programs shorter because I wanted the flexibility to take long trips between clients should I want to.
  • I planned in two whole months off work a year, to use that time to travel.

In short, I set my business up so that I could enjoy plenty of free time, flexibility and space to enjoy my life as I wanted to enjoy it.

Fast forward a few years and those boundaries had started to slip. When you’re not fully booked up, it’s easy to think that you’ll always have all the space you’ll need for rest, relaxation and creative time. The truth is much like the fable of the frog, who if placed in boiling water will jump straight out, but if put in tepid water which is then brought to a boil slowly, will not perceive the danger and will be cooked to death.

When you’re in the midst of growing a business, you don’t always see the time slowly getting taken up until one day you realise that you’ve become so busy working in your business that you barely have time to look up from the computer. In danger, not so much of being cooked but rather, of being worked to death!

Towards the end of 2020, I started to realise that I was getting so booked up with coaching calls that I was in danger of losing the ability to have even one call free day a week. I quickly blocked Fridays off for the whole of 2021 and now have every Friday dedicated to what I call my CEO Day (more on that below).

Also, for the first time (perhaps ever!) I’ve gone through my calendar and booked off a whole host of special days, family birthdays, school holidays, anniversaries (me and my love celebrate 7 years together in June! :)), national holidays, regional holidays (I’ve always just worked these in the past) and time for us to have our annual family holiday and other trips (Covid permitting!). These dates are booked into mine and the family calendar and I’m excited to have this time off.

On a day to day basis I’ve also started to schedule in daily walks. Not short walks — a long, one hour plus, walk right in the middle of my working day because a) it’s the only time I can do it because when I’m not working I have my two boys with me and b) taking that hour out to walk, even when it feels impossible, given how much work I have on, helps me to be more effective when I am at my desk.

I’ve also been doing the important work of setting firmer boundaries around what I can and can’t do for my clients and even started changing some of my offerings on my website so that they are more manageable to deliver, now that I am serving people in greater numbers. I’ll share more on these changes/boundaries in a future article.

Having done this work, I can now honestly say that my annual business plan is complete, not just with the things I will do over the course of the next 12 months but also the times when I won’t be doing anything business related at all.

Working on the business versus working in the business

I also now have space within my working week (which is Monday to Friday in case you were wondering). to work on my business so that I don’t get lost in the weeds of running it. Making the distinction between working in and on your business is important. See below for some ideas of what this could look like.

Working in your business

  • Delivering your service (i.e. having coaching sessions).
  • Day to day admin like answering emails, scheduling calls and filing.
  • Marketing activities like content creating and social media
  • Networking and outreach.

Working on your business

  • Strategy.
  • Planning and visioning.
  • Big picture thinking.
  • Course correcting and problem shooting.
  • New creations.
  • Professional development.

What my CEO Day involves

Since the start of the year, every Friday in my schedule has been blocked off for my CEO Day and having now had 3 of these since the new year began, I can share a little bit of what they entail.

I basically have a checklist of activities that I run through and aim to do throughout the course of the day. This checklist lives on my CEO dashboard inside of Notion (a new tool I am using for my business hub). You can see that checklist below and you’ll notice it mainly contains tasks that will allow me to start my following week with everything organised and planned so that I can simply show up and do what needs to be done rather than waste time trying to organise and prioritise on the fly. Of course it could be argued that some of these tasks might not be considered CEO tasks but it’s more that doing these tasks and the space that they create allows me to show up as a CEO for my business.

My CEO day is fast becoming my favourite day of the week! What I love about these days is that I can lie in a little if I need to (and with my one year old who rarely sleeps for more than one hour in a row — you can bet I need those lie ins). I don’t have to shower first thing or do my hair and make-up because I’m not doing any video calls. Instead, I can simply potter around my office in my PJs and take things at my own pace. Doing the tasks in whichever order I feel called to do them. Given that the rest of my working week is scheduled up to the hilt, this is oh so necessary for my health and happiness.

Now this all might sound super organised and jolly responsible of me but I let my schedule get far too gruelling before I put these measures in place. In reality I took my eye of the work/life balance ball and let things get out of hand before I pulled things back. I share this because I want you to avoid making the same mistake. If you haven’t done so already, I encourage you to carve out some time to plan in these same two things:

1. Time to work on your business (instead of in it)
2. Time off from your business.

Your future self will thank you for it, I promise.

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Once a week, in the form of an e-letter, I share the best of what I know about building a business with integrity for conscious business owners.

The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

If you want to receive the Soulful Strategies Weekly, simply share with me your name and email address below and you’ll start recieving emails right away.

The Importance of Reconnecting to Your Big Picture

The Importance of Reconnecting to Your Big Picture

“Learn to see the big picture. Often times we get tunnel vision and lose sight of the big picture and what we’re really trying to accomplish.”

~ Robert Cheeke

It’s mid-September and it’s precisely this time of year, as we near the end of quarter 3 and the start of 4, that I like to check in with my life and business to see if I’m on track to have the year I set out to have and more importantly to make sure that I am living the life, I want to live.

There are a few reasons I like to do this now. Firstly, the back-to-school vibe that’s in the air gives me renewed energy and excitement for the season ahead and also let’s be honest, trying to do our reviewing and planning in December (along with the holidays and all the stress that can bring) is sort of bonkers.

Instead, starting in September, I like to take my time and spend an hour, here and there, looking at the big picture of my life and business with plenty of time before holiday season hits. That way, when the year ends, writing up my goals and business plan for the year ahead is a pretty quick and simple task.

As I do this work, I thought it might be helpful to share with you what I’ve been up to.

Reviewing my offerings 

Over the last few weeks, I’ve been mapping out some new products and services for 2020. I’m super excited about this because this year, I intentionally didn’t create anything new because I wanted to go deep on what I already had, in order to simplify my life and business.

To make space for these, I will also be retiring some of my existing products and services, which is equally exciting but also a little nerve-wracking as I know that as a result of this I may lose some current customers along the way.

What has informed my thinking here is looking at my business model to figure out what makes most sense from a sustainability point of view. That means looking at my offerings from the point of view of how much time and effort they take versus the income they bring. If the former greatly exceeds the latter, I know that it’s time to make a change.

Getting up to date with my finances

I’m not someone who is on top of my finances on a daily, weekly or even monthly basis. But I am someone who believes that spending and income must be tracked and reviewed if we are to see those finances grow over time. Like anything, our finances thrive when we give them our loving attention and whither when we bury our head in the sand and pretend like they don’t exist.

So every few months or so (at least quarterly) I sit down with my calculator (iPhone) open up my Paypal, Bank Account, Credit Card Account, Stripe Account and my online accounting software, Freshbooks (affiliate link) and I do the work to figure how much I’ve made and how much I’ve spent. This helps me to set future financial goals that are rooted in reality rather than setting pie in the sky targets that I inevitably never reach.

I’ve also been doing the math to figure out what I want to make next year and how many of each of my products and services I would need to sell to make that happen.

Planning my maternity leave

Because I’ll be giving birth to my second son in December, I’ve also been considering when I’ll stop working this year, what my priorities are for the next few months before that happens, how I’ll cover my maternity leave without dropping my clients and my audience and when I’ll start back to work in the New Year.

Having gone through this before in 2016/17, I do feel somewhat prepared although with different circumstances this time around (my partner doesn’t currently work from home, like he did with our first born), I do have to figure out how to manage both motherhood and the running of my business next year. Once this plan is complete you’ll be the first to know, I promise!

Loosely thinking about my vision and goals for 2020

I’ve also been giving myself permission to tap into my goals and dreams for 2020. Not just business but generally. Asking myself questions like: where do I see myself and my family next year? What are my priorities? What didn’t work this year that I would like to change? At the same time as this, me and my love have been having some long and deep conversations about where we see ourselves in 1-3 years time and discussing what our individual and joint priorities need to be in order to get there.

And so far that’s it. I love doing this kind of thinking, nothing gets me more excited than a fresh page in a note book and the intention to make new plans. I do know, however, that not everyone shares my same passion for planning.

With this in mind, if you are someone who typically avoids planning, I would encourage you at the very least to spend some time tapping into what isn’t working for you right now and what needs to change as well as what has worked well over the course of the year and how you can best make the most of that going forward.

Above all I would suggest that you give yourself permission to dream. I truly believe that we are all powerful creators and that when we put our minds to whatever it is that we want to create, magic happens.

SIGN UP FOR MY SOULFUL STRATEGIES WEEKLY

 

Once a week, in the form of an e-letter, I share the best of what I know about building a business with integrity for conscious business owners.

The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

If you want to receive the Soulful Strategies Weekly, simply share with me your name and email address below and you’ll start recieving emails right away.

How I Structure My Working Day

How I Structure My Working Day

“A plan is what, a schedule is when. It takes both a plan and a schedule to get things done.⁣⁣

~ Peter Turla

At the end of last year, the call to simplify my business was loud and clear and I knew that if I wanted to see a boost in business growth at the same time as being able to spend less time in front of my computer, things would have to change. After working too hard in 2018 and suffering the consequences, a top priority for me in 2019 has been to master the art of getting more done in less time. In this post, I want to share with you the process I went through to find a daily schedule that not only works for me on a personal level but that allows me to manage a pretty busy workload. 

Identify key areas of work

The first step I took was to get down on paper, those key areas of work in my business that I need to work on on a daily/weekly basis. For me these were:

  • My Female Business Academy (Live calls, Office hours, Creating Classes)
  • 1-2-1 Coaching Clients (Sessions and between-session work)
  • Other client/project work
  • Audience Outreach
  • Content Creation (blogs, social media, web copy, newsletters)
  • Answering emails
  • Professional development

Identify key areas of life

Because this exercise was for me a way to manage my time better so that I can ensure that I get adequate time to do things during the day other than work, it was important for me to make a similar list for my life (during the working week). For me these were:

  • Exercise
  • Breaks / Rest
  • Time off
  • Time to make art / other creative endeavours / read
  • Spend more time with my husband and son

Plan it in

With these lists written I was better able to see how I needed to split the time I had available to me and allocate slots on my weekly calendar. It felt like the ultimate puzzle but I got there in the end. Once I had it figured out on paper, I created this weekly schedule (click the link to see exactly how I’ve fit all of the above into my schedule).

Once I had that down, I headed to my online calendar and recreated the schedule there (making sure to leave certain slots free so that people can book them via Calendly).

In order that I could squeeze everything I need to do into less time, I had to think long and hard about which things I needed to let go of. I did this by identifying those activities that have the greatest impact on my audience and clients and those that bring in the greatest revenue and then let go of all the rest.

You’ll see that the areas that have the lion’s share of time are: Content Creation and Client Work and Coaching/Outreach. Content creation and outreach form the basis of my entire business growth strategy for 2019 and client work is the necessary time needed to serve the clients I have.

I’m fully aware that for some people seeing this level of scheduling in their calendar might fill them with dread but to those people I say this:

If you don’t get organised, you risk wasting precious time and resources on things that don’t matter.

And what a crying shame that would be because life really is too short. By scheduling my days and weeks in this way, I’ve been able to allocate, not only, adequate time for my business priorities, but I’ve also managed to find plenty of time during my working day for ME, my family and my personal fulfilment above and beyond the fulfilment I get from my work.

What I love most about my schedule is that of the 11 hours between the start and end of my working day, exactly 50% of those have been allocated to working and the other 50% to resting and living. Finding this kind of balance, was exactly what I was hoping for when I began the process of crafting a schedule for my week and I didn’t plan for it to be such an even split, it just happened to turn out this way when I set about scheduling in both my life and business priorities.

So now how about you? Would you benefit from identifying your priorities and and then scheduling those in? What can you let go of that will have the time you do spend on your business bring the greatest rewards? 

SIGN UP FOR MY SOULFUL STRATEGIES WEEKLY

 

Once a week, in the form of an e-letter, I share the best of what I know about building a business with integrity for conscious business owners.

The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

If you want to receive the Soulful Strategies Weekly, simply share with me your name and email address below and you’ll start recieving emails right away.

My 2019 Strategic Business Plan Laid Out

My 2019 Strategic Business Plan Laid Out

When it comes to my business plan, I’m super mindful not to fall down the trap of simply setting an unmanageable set of goals, in fact what I’ve spent the last few years refining, is a more strategic approach to my business planning, which allows me to focus specifically on the goals that support my overall business aims and that details how exactly I plan to achieve those goals.

To begin (after reviewing 2018), I identify what my overall business aim for the forthcoming year is and I try to answer the question:

What is it that I really need my business to do in 2019?

For me the answer to that question and my overall business aim for 2019 is: 

To create regular, predictable and sustainable income from my business that covers all of my financial needs.

With this in mind, I then set about identifying the three priority areas, I believe I should focus on, in order to achieve this overall aim. I call these my strategic priorities and for 2019, these are:

  1. Content (to create and disseminate more content in order to share my expertise, grow my audience and serve more people)
  2. Outreach (to be more organised in my outreach activities so as to serve and connect with more people)
  3. Revenue (and to increase overall revenue, both active and passive)

Next I think about which goals it makes sense for me to set under each of these priorities and then under each goal I write out the system(s) I will put in place to achieve it (hat tip to George Kao for the idea of creating systems to support goals). Then I schedule time in my calendar to implement the system. See below for an example:

The strategic priority is: Content

The goal is: Follow a regular and consistent schedule of creating and sharing content with my audience

And one of the systems under this goal is: To write one new blog post every week.

For details of my full plan, including my three strategic priorities, the goals that sit under each and the systems I will follow to achieve these goals, keep reading.

My Overall Plan

Strategic Priority 1 – Content

Goal 1: Follow a regular and consistent schedule of creating and sharing content with my audience

The system(s) by which I’ll achieve this goal: 

Goal 2: Repurpose all appropriate existing content

The system(s) by which I’ll achieve this goal: 

  • Create a Free Resources library on my website to share existing resources.
  • Re-purpose old newsletters for social media posts and blogs.
  • Re-run Spring Clean Challenge.
  • Re-run Turning Pro Challenge.
  • Re-run Facebook Live Challenge.

Goal 3: Disseminate content widely and regularly

The system(s) by which I’ll achieve this goal: 

  • Create and execute a FB Ad campaign to promote and share free content and low-cost offerings.
  • Re-share popular content on Facebook each week.

Strategic Priority 1 – Outreach

Goal 1: Implement a CRM solution and populate with business contacts.

The system(s) by which I’ll achieve this goal: 

  • Add in 25 contacts a week.
  • Update contact notes in Capsule daily.

Goal 2: Create and execute an outreach strategy.

    • Reach out to 10 people each week (new and existing contacts, former clients, people who engage with my content on social media etc).
    • Send 2 referral emails a week.

3. Revenue

Goal 1: Generate more passive Income from existing products

The system(s) by which I’ll achieve this goal: 

Goal 2: Enrol 2 new coaching clients a quarter

The system(s) by which I’ll achieve this goal: 

  • Content Plan and Outreach strategy represent the system for this goal.

Goal 2: Enrol 30 new members into the Female Business Academy

The system(s) by which I’ll achieve this goal: 

  • Share details about individual classes on a weekly basis on Facebook and Instagram.
  • Conduct and share interviews with all of the guest teachers on blog and social media.

You see how it works? It’s not enough to simply set the goal, what we must do is to identify how we’ll achieve it and then focus on that system above all else. It’s the system that we want to schedule into our diary and truly commit to getting done.

So you see, when we’re clear on our business aim for the year and we create a context for our goals with strategic priorities and systems, our business plan starts to look a lot more supportive of our business success rather than an unwieldy and overwhelming list of goals.

Do how about you? Have you written your strategic plan for 2019 yet? Are you planning to? I’d love to know in the comments below. 

SIGN UP FOR MY SOULFUL STRATEGIES WEEKLY

 

Once a week, in the form of an e-letter, I share the best of what I know about building a business with integrity for conscious business owners.

The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

If you want to receive the Soulful Strategies Weekly, simply share with me your name and email address below and you’ll start recieving emails right away.

Three Essentials Your Business Plan Must Include

Three Essentials Your Business Plan Must Include

It’s a brand new year and as such many of you are likely to have given some thought to business planning. You probably have a list of ambitious goals that you would love to achieve over the next 12 months and why not, the start of a new year is the perfect time to think about what you want to accomplish in your business this year.

Personally, I love nothing more than the blank slate a new year represents and creating a plan for my business is one of my favourite things to do. There is, however, a fundamental problem with the approach I see many people taking when it comes to business planning. What I see, more often than not, is an alarming absence of strategic thinking and an over-simplistic focus on goal-setting. 

I’m here to tell you that there is so much more to your business plan than goals.

When we focus, first and foremost, on the goals we would like to achieve, we fail to create a strategic context for those goals and miss out on so much, like:

  • Recognising the overall aim of our business.
  • Strategic thinking about why we’re choosing the goals we’re going to work on (and whether or not they will support us to achieve our overall business vision or aim). 
  • Important details around the how of what we’re trying to do.
  • Joined up thinking between our desired business outcomes and our preferred lifestyle. I.e. How is your business going to support you to have a happier life this year?

In this post I want to share with you just three strategic essentials that you can bring into your business plan for 2019 that have the power to increase it’s effectiveness ten-fold.

 

The importance of strategic thinking

Before we dive in to these, I want to say a few words about what it means to be more strategic in your business. Strategy is a word that gets thrown around and most people, if asked, would be hard-pressed to clearly define what it means. Let’s just get some clarity around that before we begin.

The dictionary defines strategy as: a plan of action designed to achieve a long-term or overall aim” and strategic as: “relating to the identification of long-term or overall aims and interests and the means of achieving them.”

Sounds simple enough right? Well for the purposes of our annual business planning, lets unpick this a little. Let’s start with: “the identification of long-term or overall aims and interests.” When we jump straight into goal-setting, we fail to remind ourselves of the long-term or overall aim of our business. Some business owners, fail to ever clearly identify this in the first place but knowing the big picture of what you are are aiming for lies at the heart of being more strategic in your business. So getting clear on your vision for your business is an absolute must.

Next let’s consider this part: “the means of achieving them” which in essence relates to how exactly you’re going to achieve your overall aims. Taking time out to consider both of these before you start to set goals is crucial.

You might be surprised how often I’ve coached people who are working on goals that in no way support their overall business aims.

Some examples of where the means don’t align with the aims include someone who is building an online business so that she can have the freedom to travel and work from anywhere in the world yet all of her goals relate to finding clients locally and working with them in person. Or the woman building a business so that she can spend more time with her family but who is employing tactics that see her burning the candle at both ends trying to make the business work (I’ve definitely been guilty of that one!)

Setting goals that aren’t strategically sound i.e. they don’t support the achievement of your overall business aims, is more common than you might think. To avoid this, use the following three methods to ensure that your goals are truly aligned with what you are trying to achieve.

1. Identify your overall business aim

Before you can even thinking about setting goals, you need to know your destination, right? Your goals don’t exist in a vacuum, they exist to support you to achieve your overall aim or vision.

With that in mind it’s crucial that you take some time to consider the question:

What is it that I really need my business to do in 2019?

In essence, where do you need your business to be by the end of the year? Do you need to be generating more income? Do you need to have created more products? Do you need to have hired a team? Whatever feels like your most important business aim, you need to have it clear in your mind before you even thing about the goals you might set to help you to achieve it.

To give you an example of a business aim. Mine for 2019 is this:

To create regular, predictable and sustainable income from my business that covers all of my financial needs.

My business is making money and covering my outgoings but it’s not doing so in a consistent way. Some months I make several thousands of dollars and then other months not as much. Overall, I’m okay financially but my goal for this year is to move myself out of the feast and famine phase that many young businesses go through. Perhaps you can relate?

Knowing this, helps me to get clear on my priorities for the year ahead.

2. Get clear on your priority areas

With your overall business aim for the year identified, you’re ready to pick three strategic business priorities for the year ahead.

Strategic priorities do a couple of things

  • They speak to solutions for your biggest business problems.
  • They focus your activities on your business priorities and overall aim.
  • They provide a strategic container for your goals.

To get to your strategic priorities, you want to be asking yourself questions like:

  • What is the overall aim of my business in 2019?
  • Which area(s) of my business really need my focus in 2019? (hint: pick no more than 3!)
  • What, if I had it, would make my business more successful in 2019?
  • What in the long term is going to support me to build a truly sustainable business?
  • If I consider my overall business aims and objectives, what are the key strategies I might employ to achieve them?

This year I have three strategic priorities. ContentOutreach and Revenue. Other examples you might consider include: Marketing, Passive Income, Product Creation, Audience Growth, Team Building, Outsourcing and so on.

So how do my strategic priorities tie in to my overall business aim? Well, because I believe that strategically speaking, a greater and more consistent focus on creating content for my audience and reaching out to support them directly will bring about the business growth (both audience and revenue growth) I’m aiming for.

In 2019, audience growth is a top priority for me as I know that more people in my audience will translate into more consistent sales and I believe that providing quality content and building strong relationships (based on trust) with my audience will lead to long-term and sustainable growth (as opposed to using marketing tactics that erode trust and long-term viability). Having revenue as my third priority allows me to set some goals and metrics around what I’m trying to achieve, financially. 

Only now, with your priority focus areas identified do you want to turn your mind to setting goals.

3. Create systems for your goals

It’s important to carefully consider which goals make sense under each of your strategic priority areas, carefully avoiding the temptation to set too many. Trust me when I say that it’s far better to have 4 or 5 goals that you actually achieve than 20 goals, none of which you quite manage to complete. 

Which brings me on to element three. Systems.

Under each goal you’ll want to identify and schedule a system for achieving that goal. This represents the how of your goal, something that often gets overlooked.

To give you some examples:

If you goal is to get 2 new clients a quarter then you might consider creating a system that sees you reaching out to 10 new people a week. Or if you have a goal of creating $5,000 in passive income this year then your system might be to create one new online course a month.

You’ll want to make sure for every goal you set you also write out your system for achieving it.

Goal = Get 2 new clients in a quarter.
System = Reach out to 10 people a week.

Goal = Create $5,000 in passive income
System = Create 1 new online course every month.

You see how it works? It’s not enough to simply set the goal, what we must do is create a system for achieving it and then focus on that system above all else. It’s the system that we want to schedule into our diary and truly commit to getting done.

So you see, when we’re clear on our business aim for the year and we create a context for our goals with priorties and systems, our business plan starts to look a hell of a lot more strategic and with that, much more likely to succeed.

I’d love to know if you can relate to what I’ve shared here. Let me know in the comments below what comes up for you as you read this post and if you know anyone who would benefit from reading it, then feel free to share it.

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