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Goals: SMART and meaningful

Why this matters

Alice asks the Cheshire Cat which way she ought to go. "That depends a good deal on where you want to get to," the Cat answers. Alice says she doesn't much care. "Then it doesn't matter which way you go," says the Cat. Goals are the way you stop being Alice. Covey's Habit 2 puts it as a rule: begin with the end in mind.

"Read more books" isn't a goal; it's a feeling about books. "Read one Masonic monitor a quarter, finishing each by the last day of the quarter, sharing one page of notes with my mentor" is a goal. The first won't survive a busy week. The second will, because it tells you exactly when it's failing. Doran's 1981 SMART checklist named the five tests; forty years of replication says they still work. The Craft's expectation is the same: the rough ashlar gets a shape, on a timeline, judged by a measure.

What this chapter is

A goal without a definition is a wish. The SMART framework, coined by George T. Doran in a 1981 issue of Management Review, is the published shorthand for what a goal actually is: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound. Paired with role-based goal-setting from Covey, SMART keeps each role's goals honest and prevents one role's success from costing another's failure. Drucker added the test that puts the SMART acronym to work: "What gets measured gets managed."

S · SPECIFIC M · MEASURABLE A · ACHIEVABLE R · RELEVANT T · TIME-BOUND A WISH "Read more books." A GOAL One monitor a quarter, by quarter's end, notes shared with mentor. GOALS · SMART AND MEANINGFUL

How to practise it

A lesson walks the same seven steps every time. Read the intro, study the material, then drill it through Quick Fire, Matchup, Sequence, Flashcards, and the Mix capstone. Each step opens to the next; no choices to make in the middle of the work.

Learn, plan, do, reflect, teach

The lesson itself is only the first fifth of the pattern. Carry it through the full loop so the work becomes habitual.

  • Learn

    Work Goals: SMART and meaningful

    Move through the seven-step lesson until recognition becomes recall and use.

    Continue the lesson
  • Plan

    Turn values and roles into real goals

    Keep the goal work tied to the full arc so SMART stays attached to values and roles.

    Open self-leadership path
  • Do

    Rewrite the goal until it passes SMART

    Work the wording until the goal is specific, measurable, realistic, relevant, and time-bound.

    Open personal planning
  • Reflect

    Check whether the goal is really yours

    Notice whether the goal still serves a named role and a named value, or whether it is just borrowed pressure.

    Open the gauge log
  • Teach

    Explain one good goal out loud

    Use one example to show another brother the difference between a wish and a real goal.

    Open Teach
What if · take it further

Sit with this

  • Take a goal you've been carrying around in your head. Run it through the five SMART letters out loud. Which letter is it failing on? Rewrite the goal so it passes all five.
  • Look at the goal you wrote. Which role does it serve? Which value does it advance? If you can't answer either question in one sentence, the goal probably isn't yours yet.

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