Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines?

By Mike Morrison - Last updated: Wednesday, December 23, 2009 - Save & Share - 13 Comments

Knowing the route can be as valuable as the goal

Goals and routesThis morning as I sat clearingout the spam from the email box, I noticed an update from one of the LinkedIn groups I am a member of. Its title was:

“Why are you running?”

In the article the author shared their story of some thoughts they had while out on a regular run, highlighting that this was a great strategy for creating thinking time. This all come about because the individual was reflecting on the question “why do I run?”. His own reflections were of health, thinking time, competition etc.

In the article he poses an interesting thought:

“Imagine showing up at the starting line to run a marathon in the city of New York without any indication of where the finish line is located.  No signs, no mile markers, no volunteers to guide you.  All you know is that the finish line is 26.2 miles away. 

How many extra miles will you end up running to find the finish line?  How many additional hours will you spent trying to make your way to the tape?  Will you even find the end?  Will you stay motivated enough to continue on, or will you eventually quit?”

How often do we undertake work assignments, projects and other activities and know the goal or destination, but start without appropriate guides, structures or boundaries?

As consultants many of us focus on the goal, we ensure it is SMARTer, understood and communicated, however one trend I have noticed over the past few years is the trend to ignore process and the feeling that offering “step by step” instructions or guides is seen as undermining empowerment. certainly if we dictate the steps then that is undermining empowerment and local creativity and innovation, however we at the same time throws the baby out with the proverbial bath water and so not work with the teams enough to help them develop their own route around the course.

The next time you are involved in a project think about the steps you can take to help teams develop there course and route to the desired and required organisational goal.

Knowledge – Understanding – Action

About Mike Morrison


Mike Morrison is a consultant and change agent specialising in developing skills in senior people to increase organizational performance. Mike is also founder & director of RapidBI, an organizational effectiveness consultancy.


RapidBI is an organizational effectiveness consultancy based in the UK but working internationally.
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5 Trackbacks to Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines?

8 Responses to “Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines?”

Comment from Farscape Development
Time December 23, 2009 at 08:48

RT @rapidbi: Blog article – as the year end approaches we start to thing about goals http://bit.ly/73U3Gd

Comment from Neil Ryder
Time December 23, 2009 at 08:58

New blog from friend Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines? http://bit.ly/4RtgSi I hope it is useful

Comment from Tracy Brinkmann
Time December 23, 2009 at 10:20

Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines? » RapidBI … http://bit.ly/5vz1yO

Comment from Gary Gorman
Time December 23, 2009 at 11:30

RT@rapidbi Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines?: Goals ans objectives – Knowing the route can … http://bit.ly/4RtgSi

Comment from Paula Jones MCT
Time December 23, 2009 at 12:03

RT @Rapidbi Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines?: Goals ans objectives – Kn.. http://bit.ly/4RtgSi

Comment from Efrosyni Adamides
Time December 23, 2009 at 15:03

Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines? » RapidBI … http://bit.ly/4TJ58X

Comment from Daily Choices
Time December 23, 2009 at 16:58

Personal & business goal setting – where are the lines? » RapidBI … http://bit.ly/4RtgSi

Comment from Sample Hardship Letter
Time January 2, 2010 at 18:36

Thank you so much, there aren’t enough posts on this… or at least I cant find them. I am turning into such a blog nut, I just cant get enough and this is such an important topic… i’ll be sure to write something about your site

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