Category Archives: Life’s purpose

Goal Setting 2020

I am writing this blog post at the end of June 2020. Wow! We are already half-way through the year. Time flies! This is an opportune time to reflect on goal setting 2020. Especially since this is no ordinary year and everything has changed drastically in the last 6 months. If you think back to January 2020 and your new year’s resolutions and plans. That seems like a decade ago by now! No matter where you are reading this in the world our lives have all been affected by Covid 19. The effects of the pandemic really took off in March when much of the world went into lock-down including in Ireland, where I live. Schools, colleges, businesses etc. shut and we were told to stay at home. We all learned new skills such as how to use Zoom!

Goal setting 2020 and Covid 19

Nature is in control

By the end of June the lock-down has eased considerably here and businesses are starting to reopen. Our infection rates are now low and the virus has been largely suppressed for the moment. However as we are seeing now in other parts of the world there is an ever present danger of a resurgence of the virus. We have all learned that the futures is uncertain. The best made plans from the new year and goal setting 2020 in January went out the window. Nature is really in control after-all. Therefore we have no option but to re-plan and go with the flow. Nobody knows what the next 6 months will bring. Will schools and colleges reopen in the autumn? How many businesses will never re-open? How many people will have no jobs to go back to? So many questions and so much uncertainty.

Impacts in poorer countries

In poorer countries I am especially conscious of the impact of the pandemic where there are little in the way of government supports. Livelihoods have been badly impacted. People are suffering. To take one specific example the Malala Fund estimates that 10 million girls might never go back to school after the crisis. Out of school they are vulnerable to teenage pregnancy, child marriage, abuse, child labour etc. The Malala fund made this calculation based on what happened in countries like Sierra Leone when schools closed due to Ebola. Ten million girls losing an education and all the negative consequences of that into the future. The sad part will be that the resultant poverty will be passed on to a new generation – their children. These are some of the real long-lasting and very negative consequences of this crisis.

The second half of 2020?

This is a good time to start thinking of goal setting 2020 and the remaining 6 months. What do you want to have achieved by the end of the year? Six months is a long time (especially the last 6 months!) and you can transform your life is so many ways by December 2020. However its hard to know what the world will look like by December. We are in uncertain times. However you can decide how each of your days will look like. You can set input goals. For example you can set an input goal to learn the guitar or learn Spanish (two of mine :-)). At this uncertain time we don’t have to focus so much on results (Output and Outcome goals). I cover all these types of goals in my new goal setting course.

Mind Movie

One of the things I am working on right now is to transform my own life’s purpose, vision and key goals into a mind movie which I watch at least once per day. A mind movie is a fun way to keep your goals front and centre in both your concious and sub-concious minds. I have included the current version of my own mind movie below. Perhaps it will inspire you to make your own! In the next two weeks I am actually working through my own Goal Setting 101 course as a student to plan the next 6 months of the year. The course contains some wonderful exercises to help me get clear on what I am about and what I want to achieve. I am proud of my own course when I take it from the student perspective! Goal setting and planning are topics we must constantly come back to throughout our lives. As we have seen the world will change around us whether we want change or not. It’s better to be in the driving seat of your own change rather than have change just happen to/be forced on you.

Best wishes, Tom

PS Check out my Goal Setting 101 Course for more ideas. You can watch the free preview video and there is a 30 day money back guarantee so you cannot lose!

Tom’s Mind Movie – Enroll Here – Goal setting 101 – How to set and achieve goals

Find Your Life’s Purpose in 10 Minutes!

Life's purposeWhat is your life’s purpose?

This is a big question and a question most of us ask ourselves from time to time.  I think it is a question that we all need to reflect on frequently.  The alternative to not asking the question is to go through life on auto-pilot and not live up to our true potential.  Both ourselves and the world will be worse off as a result.  I have had the diagram in figure 1 (below) on my office wall for the past two years.  Every so often I would look at the diagram and contemplate my life’s purpose.   The reflection on the questions has helped me to get a clearer vision of my own life’s purpose.  I believe that even if you only spend 10 minutes now reflecting on figure 1 and the three questions, they will bring you closer to being clear on your life’s purpose.

The Hedgehog Concept

The questions in figure 1 are based on a business book called Good to Great by Jim Collins.  The book describes the results of research in the US into companies and what makes a company become great and stay great.  The research showed that one of the factors which helped good companies become great companies was when they found what Collin’s calls their ‘Hedgehog’.   The Hedgehog Concept was originally based on an ancient Greek parable which stated, “The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.”  Jim Collins, used this concept as a metaphor for business in his influential book.  The three components of the hedgehog concept are:

  1. What is the company passionate about
  2. What can the company be the best in the world at and
  3. What drives the economic engine (makes money).
Personal Hedgehog

I think Jim Collin’s hedgehog concept/questions used for companies can also be adapted to people.   If you take  questions and adapt them to people they become the 3 questions below:

1. What do you love to do?

What are the things that you enjoy doing?  Passion is a huge motivator. If you don’t have a passion for something then how can you possibly be great at it?  Passion will drive you to work harder and stay at something longer that others.  This reminds me of a quote from the great Physicist Albert Einstein:

Life's purpose

2. What are your really good at?

What can you be the best at, not what you want to be the best at.  I bet you know some of the things that you are really good at through experience.  If you want more ideas on what you can be the best at I suggest you take the Meyers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) personality test if you have not done so already.   If you Google this test then you will find the test online for free.  The MBTI test will give you very good ideas about the types of things you are naturally great at – the things that will come natural to you.

3. What pays well?

I think question number 3 is very important because if what you are naturally great at and love to do doesn’t pay well then you are not going to be very happy being broke!  You will have a great hobby!  You need to hit the target in figure 1 and get something that you love to do, you are naturally great at and also pays well.  That is a recipe for finding your life’s purpose and contentment in your life.

Life's Purpose

Figure 1:  Three key questions to ask yourself

Can I suggest that you print out the above diagram and reflect on it often.  I suspect that you already have ideas on something that hits the above target for you (the confluence between the 3 circles in figure 1).  If not don’t worry – allow your sub-conscious mind to reflect on the diagram in the coming weeks and months.

Example:  My Own Hedgehog

To help clarify the hedgehog concept I have shared my own example below.  I answer the three questions for myself and then I state what my own hedgehog is for my life.

1. What do I love to do?

  • Help others
  • Teach
  • Share knowledge and ideas

2.  What am I really good at doing?

  • Researching
  • Learning
  • Adapting, changing and transforming myself
  • My MBTI is:  INFJ – Introverted, Intuition, Feeling, and Judging.  Favourite career choices for INFJs point towards meaningful, humanity-based causes that contribute to others’ well-being.  INFJ personality types are good at helping others such as counselors, teachers and clergy.

3.  What pays well?

  • New technology
  • Solving problems
  • People needing to learn new skills, knowledge and ideas in a fast changing world

4.  My Hedgehog:

To research, create and market great information products such as books and online courses on personal development and technology.  Information products which will satisfy the needs of  my clients and significantly enhance their lives.  In return my clients will be willing to pay me well for my work.

I invite you to share your feedback/ideas on your own hedgehog concept in the comments under this blog post.  Sharing your own examples can help and inspire others.  Thank you.

Best wishes,

Tom

PS. If you are looking for new ideas or information to take your life in a new and exciting direction then have a look at my online course ‘Reinvent yourself: 30 Experiments in Personal Change‘.  Learn how to visualise your ideal future and set great goals.  Click the link below to get the course for the discounted price of €12.99.  You can take the free course preview.  The course comes with a 100% money back guarantee if you are not satisfied.  Please click here for further course details.