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Goal Setting / ゴール・セッティング
Goal setting is the process of defining specific, measurable objectives that direct effort, focus attention, and motivate performance.
Goal setting translates strategy into concrete targets with deadlines, owners, and measurable outcomes. Clear goals help align teams, clarify priorities, and provide a basis for feedback and evaluation. The concept supports accountability by making expectations explicit and progress visible.
Determines which outcomes matter most and how success will be measured. Guides resource allocation and sequencing by clarifying priorities. Enables performance management by defining expectations and review criteria.
- Determines which outcomes matter most and how success will be measured.
- Guides resource allocation and sequencing by clarifying priorities.
- Enables performance management by defining expectations and review criteria.
- Specific and challenging goals tend to improve focus more than vague targets.
- Goals should be achievable with resources but still push improvement.
- Alignment across teams prevents conflicting objectives and wasted effort.
- Progress tracking and feedback loops keep goals relevant and actionable.
- Overloading with too many goals reduces clarity and execution quality.
A customer support team is told to “improve service,” but performance remains flat. The manager resets the goal to “reduce average response time to 2 hours and increase satisfaction scores to 4.6 by quarter end.” With clear targets, the team changes scheduling, adds templates, and tracks daily progress. Response times drop and satisfaction rises within two months.
Compare Goal Setting with adjacent concepts before deciding. Goal Setting | Current concept | Use when the team needs the primary decision lens Adjacent metric or framework | Supporting lens | Use when the team needs evidence or process detail General vocabulary | Broad explanation | Use only for orientation, not final decision-making
| Metric | Difference | Why read together |
|---|---|---|
| Goal Setting | Current concept | Use when the team needs the primary decision lens |
| Adjacent metric or framework | Supporting lens | Use when the team needs evidence or process detail |
| General vocabulary | Broad explanation | Use only for orientation, not final decision-making |
- Setting goals is enough; execution requires monitoring and adjustment.
- More goals create more progress; too many goals dilute attention.
- Goals should never change; they should adapt when conditions shift.
When should I use Goal Setting?
Use it when the team needs to decide scope, priority, owner, or trade-off, not when it only needs a short definition.
What makes Goal Setting useful in practice?
It becomes useful when it is tied to evidence, a decision owner, and a concrete next operating choice.
What should I avoid?
Avoid using the term as a label without clarifying assumptions, boundaries, and how success will be judged.