Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Hidden Targets

Have you ever noticed that when you start really recording your workout statistics you see a lot of nice round numbers? I find that I do three sets of 10 or run for 20 minutes a day at the same pace for weeks. Lately I have been thinking that this is a sign of laziness. If I was really trying to improve myself I should see some sets where I can only get 3 reps or 7. This would indicate that I am pushing myself to my limits and seeking to expand them. If you don't push the limits you will never improve in anything, and if you are not improving, someone out there is passing you by. This is true in athletic compettition or in business.

When you work toward improvement you should seldom see round numbers in your metrics. If you are working toward selling a thousand units of something and you consistently hit one thousand on the nose, you should look at changing some aspect of the target. You could try to sell the same thousand units, but reduce your cost by half. Maybe changing the timeline for getting those thousand units sold so you can free up more time for strategic planning, or finding new markets, or just forgetting about working and doing whatever you are passionate about doing.

Another instance of this is stagnation of progress. When your metrics level off just below your target it is a strong indication that there is an unstated acceptance of this level as a success. This is particularly seen when the initial goal is audacious. If you find one of these hidden targets you should start digging into things a little deeper to root out the problem and get moving again.