Actually, this is a post with more than one goal. I mean that literally: it contains an outline of my professional and semi-personal goals, for the purpose of giving me a reference point for the future, general peer pressure, and filling the posting void this week.
I tend to vacillate between highly specific and über-generic goal-setting, thanks in no small part to my belief that most measures of success are not quantifiable. Put another way, I don't like strict numerical goals because they scare the hell out of me. Nonetheless, here we go:
1. Give a talk/speech/lecture to a crowd of more than 10 Back in my teaching and public speaking days, this was more of a daily habit than something to work towards. But with a new industry came a change in role and shift in opportunity, meaning I haven't been called upon to speak in a forum in a while. Not only do I miss it, but I feel that I can't continue to be a "silent contributor" if I want to make any kind of impact on my industry. This voice needs an outlet!
2. Publish something longer than 500 words, with a byline And no, a long-winded blog post on here doesn't count. I'm talking about a paying gig that more than 5 people might actually read.
3. Finish my G.G. Kind of obvious, but I want that knowledge and those skills under my belt. On your mark, get set, study!
4. Meet new people I originally wrote "make new friends," but that felt a bit limiting -- why do these new people need to be my friends? They could be mentors, clients, associates, maybe even a new barista. I enjoy networking and generating great conversation out of thin air, but I don't do it enough.
5. Talk about what I do, what I love, who I am
And eliminate the word "just" from my vocabulary. I'm just going to leave this here... thanks, Uma.
6. Embrace my personality I stopped apologizing for my quirks a long time ago, but I continue to downplay the aspects of myself that I fear might resurrect the middle school bullying days. I'd say that's far more uncool as an adult than any of the things that made me uncool back then.
7. Improve the quality of my downtime Golf with husband. Music with Dad. Shopping with mom. Coffee with those new people I plan to meet. Hiking and reading and singing and shooting (photos) and all of those things I love that have lately fallen by the wayside.
It's a lot to pursue, but I don't intend to limit myself to the upcoming calendar year. I like to think of long-term goals as "life improvements." (Not to be confused with history's notorious Five Year Plan, despite the five-stone diamond pendant in the featured image.)
What do you think of my goal-setting skills? Do you have any insight or advice for me? I'm all ears!