As a marketer or savvy business person, you understand that in order for things to get done, you have to set goals at work.
But the problem probably isn’t defining your objectives, it’s actually achieving them. You might get your team all hyped up, but at the end of the quarter, the numbers have barely moved.
Sounds like you haven’t been "smart" about goal setting, or rather, you haven't been developing or writing formal SMART goals— just vague, broad nice-to-have's, with no real path to achieving them.
Whether you need better structure, trackability or to establish clear milestones, we’re here to help you to not online define, but to also hit your marks— head-on. Let's write some kickass SMART goals at work!
As a marketer, you have three general concerns. You want to get more visitors to your website, convert more prospects into leads and nurture more leads into customers. The right marketing goals can help you achieve these.
In order for your ambition to be SMART, your work goal should following the five parts of the SMART acronym.
Your marketing objectives should be:
Let’s explore each of the core parts of the SMART goals acronym to develop, and actually achieve, your marketing objectives.
Goals often fail because they are too broad to work towards. It’s easy to say you want to increase sales, but announcing “This quarter, our goal is to bring in more customers!” at a staff meeting won’t have any tangible impact.
Without a specific benchmark, your statement won’t be very motivating. Of course you want them to sell more, but how much more?
Outline what you want to achieve to communicate what exactly is expected of them.
Let’s say your marketing team is developing a set of workshops to teach clients a new software. For this SMART goal example, let’s say you want your clients to take away real value from your HubSpot tutorials.
It’s not enough to say you want to do more workshops this quarter. You need to address the specifics:
Sometimes in business, it’s easy for a marketer to base interactions on feelings about relationships. At the end of the day, your boss wants to know your clients are happy with the work you do and continue to write their retainer checks.
Although it can be helpful to gauge your client’s disposition, feelings can be ambiguous and a dangerous way to drive decision-making.
You know what’s not ambiguous? Data. Assign a number to your goals to break them down into measurable results.
What metrics are relevant to your industry? For marketers, we often track website visits, number of leads and customers, clicks, opens— all sorts of interaction and engagement metrics.
Maybe your KPIs for SEO are around your organic traffic, keyword density, backlinking profile and more. These metrics all have numbers like daily visits, percentage you used a phrase per article and number of referring domains and links.
But, there are things in any field that take some smart strategizing to assign a value to. For example, search engine results page (SERP) rankings can be tricky to measure. Some SEOs assign values to ranking on page one of Google based on the “position” it appears in, say in the number three slot out of eleven links.
SEO stuff not relatable? If you're the Muffin Man and chocolate chip muffins cost more to make than plain vanilla (because that's more relatable), you need to track the fact that one purchase is more valuable than the other. No matter how you assign value to each metric, it’s important to set a standard for quantifying your data.
Your goal should be lofty, but not unrealistic. It should be something that you look at and think, “Yeah, I’m going to need to buckle down and really commit to get this done,” but not something that would require you to work crazy extra hours or jump through hoops to complete.
It’s all too easy to look at a goal through rose-tinted glasses and bite off more than you can chew. Avoid this by mindfully accessing every word of your proposition.
The SMART objective should be attainable around your sense of time, money and talent. Let’s explore these:
Goals that are too intimidating will deter participation (both for you personally and all those involved), so do your homework before committing to an ambition that is low-key delusional or #extra.
Relevance often starts with accessing your big “WHY.” Why does your company exist? What is the jet-fuel behind every action you take?
Look at your goal and ask yourself, “at the end of the day, does achieving this goal align with our overarching purpose?”
This part of the SMART acronym starts to break down within companies who lack a strong vision. If your company doesn’t have a formal mission statement, think of your own why. Why do you wake up everyday and go to work? If it’s to help people, assess how this goal helps your company at large by supporting this initiative.
For years, the iconic tech junkies at Apple have stood behind this statement:
“Everything we do, we believe in challenging the status quo. We believe in thinking differently. The way we challenge the status quo is by making our products beautifully designed, simple to use, and user friendly.”
If Apple were to release a product mimicking another company’s design or made a flashy, complicated interface, it would be completely against all their brand has built. Look at your own business and ask yourself how relevant your goal is to your brand.
Do you need help developing a powerful mission or vision statement or defining a set of core values your employees can be inspired by? Download our Ultimate Guide to Creating a Brand Plan.
Relevancy can certainly be more micro rather than macro, or specific around your goal instead of your overarching brand. Does it make sense for you to waste your time measuring eight metrics when only two of them are really valuable?
When assessing the "M" in the SMART acronym, pair it with the "R." If your customer doesn't care at all about measuring "Likes" on their social media posts, and instead is concerned about conversions from a downloadable offer, why the heck are you wasting time counting reactions on a spreadsheet?!
Simply put, set an exact day (sometimes even time of day) to have your goal completed by. Your plan should have a clearly defined deadline that everyone involved must comply to.
Don’t forget that your timing must be something that is realistic and achievable. Although it’s nice to be ambitious, like the other elements of the SMART goal acronym, make sure your timeline is "R"elevant and "A"ttainable.
Let’s say you have a big presentation coming up and need some data to prove the success of a long-term project. If you need a certain deliverable for a meeting, it heightens the importance of planning!
If your goal is stretched out over the course of a few months, it’s imperative to set mini deadlines along the way to keep up your pace and nurture the team with “micro wins.” Consider incentivizing these finish line markers with small prizes.
With a smart goal of “Handcraft 200 mermaid tail necklaces by September 1, 2018 to sell at the weekend Jewelry Expo,” treat yourself and your business partner to drinks after you each create 50. The incremental steps will help everyone feel like they are making progress and keep the morale strong.
Another reason adding an "end-date" is so important is because it grants your team the gift of DONE. You have a mark you meet and celebrate (or reassess and reset with more realistic expectations). Either way, there's a finish line in sight, which motivates everyone involved, unlike a tiring, never-ending hustle.
Setting SMART goals at work starts with a well-established marketing plan. Make sure you’re only putting effort into specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and timely objectives.
This can sound overwhelming, but it’s something that’s ingrained naturally in most inbound marketers. Once you master the five elements of the SMART goals acronym, it’ll become a fluid part of your monthly planning and reporting.
It ain’t so hard. Download The Beginner’s Guide to Inbound Marketing to learn how you could implement a successful marketing campaign to support your goals.