Goals and Plans, Not Dreams, Lead To Career Success
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It’s very difficult --no, it's impossible-- to get there if we don’t know where we want to go.

Do you know of anyone who disagrees with the common sense wisdom of setting a final destination and having a plan for the journey before beginning a trip?

Then why do many of us act as if we can drift along day to day, thinking somehow we can achieve our dreams of career success without defined personal goals, as well as plans to reach them? Dreams won't make the car payments.

Five Excuses For Not Setting Goals

If you are stymied in setting personal goals, a look at five of the excuses people use when they fail to make plans for their futures should help.

1. Goals are not necessary. Research conducted by Yale University of one of its graduating classes found that only 3 percent of graduates had taken all the steps necessary to set career goals and plans; 10 percent had done some of the necessary things; 87 percent very little or nothing. A study 20 years later, revealed the 3 percent had accomplished more than the remainder of the group combined in terms of career positions and financial rewards.

2. Fear. We are afraid that if we set goals and don’t reach them, we will be seen as failures. We are afraid to commit ourselves for fear we will go down the wrong path to a dead end of frustration and unhappiness from which there is no escape. Or we dread the accountability inherent in a stated goal.

3. We simply may not believe it is possible to plan ahead. We tell ourselves, “There are just too many variables and imponderables in life. Besides, successful people are just lucky or have 'pull'."

4. We have so many options and can’t decide among them. We are like the proverbial blind dog in the meat locker. But common sense tells us we can’t have it all. We have to decide on a few specifics and go for them.

5. We may be paralyzed by the feeling that our hopes are so enormous that they are beyond our reach. The first step seems so insignificant, so we sit there, mesmerized by our dreams and overawed by the enormity of it all, hoping something will happen. It is at this point that we start to believe we have goals when what we really have are wishes.

I wish you career success!