5 Simple Steps To Creating An Effective
Organizing Goal
Creating goals is one way of making
empowered changes in your life. But how do you create an
effective organizing goal? Here are a few simple steps to help
you.
1. Write it down.
Writing down your organizing goal makes it more real to you. We
tend to stick to our written commitments better than our verbal
commitments. Saying you are going to do something is one thing.
It creates more resonance with you and a better likelihood that
you will stick to your goal if you write it down. Even better,
write it down every day from now until you have actually
accomplished it.
2. Make it a goal that will make you feel better about
yourself.
Think for a moment about the number one thing in your life
right now that if you got it organized, would make you feel 10
times better about your life. You know what it is, that one
thing that would change how you feel if you got it organized
today. Maybe it is an area of your home or of your office.
Maybe it is getting your schedule organized or getting your
morning routine to go more smoothly.
The reason why it needs to be something that will make you feel
better about yourself is because you will be a whole lot more
likely to take action on that goal if it is something that will
make you feel better about you. It is one thing to be happy
that your living room is organized. It is a whole other
ballgame to feel better about who you are as a person because
you finally got your schedule organized and you are no longer
showing up late everywhere.
3. Make it specific.
Writing down a goal like "I want to get my life organized" is
not going to help you. Get specific with your goal. The more
specific you can make it, the better off you will be. Something
along the lines of "I am going to organize my kitchen" is much
better and gives you a clear idea of what you are going have
actually accomplished once you meet your goal. What exactly
does an organized life look like anyway? I know I have not
accomplished this one and I am a professional organizer!
The one caution I have here is that you not make your
organizing goal too specific. So having a goal of getting the
kitchen utensil drawer organized would not be a good one.
Setting organizing goals like this means you would be setting a
new one every day! Your target here is to have an organizing
goal that is general enough so that it is going to take you at
least one month to reach it but specific enough so that you
have a definite end in sight.
4. Make it measurable.
This goes hand-in-hand with getting specific about your
organizing goal. The best way to make your organizing goal
measurable is to give it a specific timeframe. So if your goal
is to get your kitchen organized, then give yourself a date for
when you will have that organizing goal accomplished. Then
circle that date on the calendar, put stars on it, whatever you
need to do to make that date stand out for you.
My caution on this one: make it a realistic date. Don't
overestimate what you can do. You are better off overestimating
the time it will take you to get it finished than
underestimating it. Yes, there is psychology at work here. If
you get your organizing project done in less time than you
estimated that it would take you, you will feel better about
yourself and about the organizing project. It will also help
keep you motivated so that you do more!
5. Believe you can do it and get excited about it!
If you don't believe that you can accomplish your organizing
goal, guess what, you won't be able to do it. And if you know
with certain knowledge that you can do it, that's even better.
When you know, and I mean really KNOW you can do something, you
get the power to do it. If this is an organizing goal that you
have set for yourself repeatedly but that you have yet to
follow through on, ask yourself why. If it is a goal that isn't
really all that important to you, if you can't get excited
about accomplishing it, then don't bother because you're not
going to get it done anyway. The way that you stay motivated
towards achieving any goal in your life is by getting excited
about it, by getting excited about how your life is going to
look and feel different once that goal is accomplished. If you
can't work up some sort of passion for this organizing goal,
pick a new goal.
Jill Borash is a professional organizer who believes in
empowering people to take charge of their lives, homes and
offices through organization. Jill's company, Empowered
Organization, offers home and office
organization consultations (in the Denver, Colorado metro
area only) and coaching to help you in your organizing journey.
You can find out more at www.YourHomeIsOrganized.com.

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