Goals are great to have, especially when they are jotted
down on a piece of paper or the occasional napkin wrapped around your Starbucks
coffee. They help keep people on track with achieving their desired outcome; however,
it is the structure of the goal which will help determine how effective the
goal will be.
"Starbucks passion for reducing cup waste did not start with the Green Project. Since 1985, we have offered a discount to customers who bring in a reusable travel mug and will continue doing so. This is just one of the ways we are fulfilling our commitment to environmental stewardship while we work towards a long-term goal of 100% reusable or recyclable cups by 2015."Sounds like a pretty sound goal right? Wrong…I believe the goal is too vague when they state the company plans to be using “100% reusable or recyclable cups by 2015.” Why the option of reusable or recyclable cups? They should be more precise and pick one or the other. Here is an example of a precise goal…“By 2015, it is Starbucks goal to reduce cup waste by 100% by requiring customers to provide their own reusable cup.”

Goals which are too vague enable goal mutation, which means the goal mutates into a different goal and veers off-track from the original desired outcome. (Attention visual learners…I created a diagram that depicts the problem.) In order to stop a goal from mutating, individuals need to create goals that are precise as possible.
Remember: it is okay to have multiple goals; just not vague ones.
Thats a good point Lance, goals have to be focused or "SMART"! It is also important that you prioritize when you have multiple goals.
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