enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

accomplishing BIG goals

I have shared a lot about goal-setting over the years and something I mention often is that I like to have a few little goals and a few BIG goals in progress at any given time. Variety helps keep me interested and interesting and I work best with a few different things on my plate.

What I have not done, is really explained how I accomplish the BIG goals.

So here's my very obvious and easy secret – I take a BIG goal and I chop it up into as many separate small action items as possible. And then I schedule out those tasks onto my daily to do lists.

2014goals

FOR EXAMPLE: I set the goal this year to get my newsletter off the ground. On January 1st I had no idea how to actually MAKE a newsletter, but I did know that I was going to use MailChimp (because I had seen other people with small businesses use it effectively). This is how my to-do list for that goal broke down:

  • open a MailChimp account
  • create a sign-up form*
  • make a banner for the sign up form
  • open up the newsletter to subscribers (I did this with a tweet on twitter) and make sure it works before sharing on the blog
  • share the newsletter on the blog
  • add a sign up link to the blog sidebar
  • write my first newsletter*
  • experiment with graphics for the newsletter
  • send a few test emails to make sure it worked
  • send out the first newsletter

To actually launch a newsletter, I had to go through the ten steps above. Of the ten, only two (the starred ones) were actually "hard" because they involved me doing something I had never done before. Let's be clear, the MailChimp service is fool-proof and so simple to use, but I didn't know that going in and I was nervous about how I would accomplish a few of these items. Breaking it down helped me to just put one foot in front of the other (cross one thing off the list at a time) until I was done.

Patiodecking

I used this same process with our backyard. I set the goal to "finish off the backyard" and then I listed everything I wanted to accomplish (in this post). After that it was just about crossing things off.

Whenitdoesnotpanout

Sometimes, like in the newsletter case, it really matters that you accomplish your tasks in order because you can't move on to step 2 until step 1 is complete. Other times, like in the case of the quilt eCourse (a huge project I tackled last fall), it didn't matter at all the order in which I worked, but when I was done I needed to have all the little boxes checked (literally).

Goalsbreakdown2

Above is a mock-up because I lost my original breakdown sheet, but this is exactly what it looked like when I started. This sort of chart is very common for me and my type-A tendencies. I often break down big projects (like eCourses or new blog re-designs) so I can see all the tiny steps. The process of actually making the chart helps me to organize my thoughts, think through my idea thoroughly and (maybe most importantly) helps me to see my progress.

Goalsbreakdown

When a project isn't quite so intense, I like to just set up my goals breakdown on paper (and skip the spreadsheet). I have a Behance Action Book that I use for this. I love that each page gives me space to break down my to-do list and extra room to write other notes, draw sketches, etc. The photo above shows my "break-down" for Queen Bee Market prep last fall.

Setting and reaching goals is just like anything else; practice makes better and you get to build on your past successes. Each time I accomplish something it's added to my skill set and when I find myself up against a big project I have resources from past projects to draw on.

ps. related from the archives… the difference between goals and to-do list items & random from the archives…three business lessons from 2012.

Since writing this post, I created Get To Work Book! It's a day planner + goal setting workbook that is designed to help you take your big goals turn them into something real. Learn more and shop the brand here.

Other posts you might enjoy:

 

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32 responses to “how I tackle huge projects.”

  1. Johanna Avatar

    These are the posts I love mostest. Thanks so much for sharing your way of tackling those big ones! Now to ask my guy for a page of his Action Book … not that they are available over here in Germany – I sent my Canadian family on a hunt for this (and the stickers) as a present some years ago. πŸ™‚

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  2. Mollie Avatar

    I was hoovering the MailChimp link and I saw that it was an eepurl link, I had to google it but I thought you had figured out a way to make your own bit.ly or tinyurl to stand for your family! It was just badass luck!

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  3. andrea Avatar
    andrea

    Love these sort of blog posts. My system is very similar to yours. I’ve read a few years ago a book called “getting things done” by david allen and what I still use from that organizing system is to break down everything and list the different steps. The getting things done system is more than this, but that’s what worked for me.
    Just a quick question. Where do you store all your bigger and smaller to do lists? Do you but them in a binder or do you just put them away in a drawer? This is the most problem I have: Should I throw away those sheets, when I finished a project, or should I keep them?

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  4. Carrie Avatar

    I have been eyeing the Behance book myself after a friend suggested it. I am glad someone else also uses it and can give feedback. Breaking down my goals into smaller ones usually snags up my plans because I get bored easily with them. Maybe it would at least give me some focus!

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  5. Ellen Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your process for accomplishing goals. I will echo what people have mentioned earlier – I love these kinds of posts. Seeing a project is great, but I love seeing the process behind creating the project. Will definitely be sharing this with the college students who I work with.

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  6. Lynnette Avatar

    Love this Elise! I have a bit of a follow-up question because I know you’ve mentioned before you’re big on setting (and keeping!) deadlines. So how do you go about scheduling out these bigger project tasks onto your daily todo list so you guarantee you have enough time to actually meet the deadlines you’ve set, especially a hard deadline like the Queen Bee Market? I can make lists but I feel like where the lists meet time is when things start to fall apart, haha.

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  7. Brianna Avatar
    Brianna

    Oh man, did I ever need this post. I have so much on my plate right now and I love it, but I don’t feel like anything is getting done. I have a lot of big things, but I think those big things need to be broken down into smaller things.

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  8. Michelle Avatar

    What you haven’t talked about is how you proceed when you don’t KNOW what the small steps are.
    For instance, say you didn’t know about MailChimp but you knew you wanted to do a newsletter. But you weren’t sure how to set it up, how you would get subscribers at all, etc.
    I find it easy to accomplish things when I know the steps. Like, ok, I went to grad school. I knew to get my Masters I needed to take 12 classes. I knew I needed these 4 classes first as pre-reqs for everything. I knew I needed to do a symposium. I knew I needed a portfolio when I was done. etc etc I knew the steps bc the school kindly laid it out for me.
    But when I don’t know the steps… Like I had a small business idea and it’s a great idea and I can DO the idea… but I have no idea how to create the website that I would need or how to promote it (it’s not a national idea like yours so twitter is not helpful) so after I did the 2-3 ideas I knew and none of them worked… I ended up just kind of flailing.
    I’m having the same problem with another huge goal now. I don’t know what I’m doing. I ask for advice from others that have been successful and apply it, and nothing works.
    I’d love to have you address that aspect. I’m older than you and I have several situations like this in my life — really big goals where I know I MUST achieve them and I know the end result is possible but it doesn’t happen and I don’t know how to suss out what the steps are.

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  9. Michelle Avatar

    I’m thinking of an example from your life — I read your blog when you were in college and you were looking for a job. You did all the things you were supposed to do. You had done all the things you were supposed to do. You found jobs you liked, you got the big degree from the big school, you did the applications, you got the interviews — but nothing happened.
    I know in THAT circumstance (cuz I’ve read up to here) that you were able to abandon that goal entirely and go another way. But sometimes you cannot abandon the goal or find another way to go, you know you need to do it, but none of the steps you know to do are working out.
    KWIM?

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  10. elise Avatar

    LOL, cool, right?! I’ve noticed that too.

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  11. elise Avatar

    Recently I have been keeping a lot of lists in my action book as shown above. I keep daily to do lists in a paper planner. Both I will save when they are full and the year is finished. Things like the quilt to do list I file in hanging folders where appropriate (like I have an “online workshops” folder). But general notes and to dos on scratch paper get recycled when they are completed. πŸ™‚

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  12. elise Avatar

    I think this post deserves a part two to break that down, the trouble is, I am less clear on my own method for how I actually schedule things out so it’s hard to write a coherent post.
    I will continue to think on this and try and explain it as best I can soon! e

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  13. elise Avatar

    very interesting point!
    Everything that I do know (run a business, write a blog, craft fairs, etc) is just stuff that I have worked at for years. There has been trial and error and mistakes. There has been stuff that hasn’t worked and stuff that has.
    When something isn’t working I think it’s important to think about WHY it’s not. Are there not enough people interested? Are you not reaching the right audience? Is the timing not right?
    …just saw your other comment and am going to follow up there.

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  14. elise Avatar

    Good example.
    Yes, I had to abandon the goal because the other option was to stall out forever.
    I think some things are not meant to be done (on the timeframe that we expect). I would have thought FOR SURE that after the big school and the big degree that my plan was a big job. FOR SURE. there was no other option and I “couldn’t” abandon the goal.
    So I didn’t. I put it on hold while I made some money. I fully planned on returning to the big job idea in a few years, but as you know from reading that didn’t end up happening.
    My choices were do nothing because I couldn’t have what I thought I wanted or do something and I chose to do something.
    So I would say, that when you can’t figure out why the steps are not working it’s a good idea to alter the path a bit (maybe just temporarily).
    I hope that helps. I know it’s frustrating. It’s also hard to talk abstractly about it! πŸ™‚

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  15. Michelle Avatar

    I know! It is just a topic I am always interested in.
    I did have a situation like that (a bit different) in that I had been working in publishing for over 10 years and had finally ended up as a layout artist, which I loved. I got laid off from a Big Job, and thought well I will go back to freelance clients and then find another job in my area. Not realizing that my whole career was being outsourced to India, permanently. Hence the grad school thing and the moving to another, related career. But it took me a long time of “why isn’t this working when it has worked many many times before?!?!?” to move over sideways.
    So I am interested in that part of the story (and find the rest interesting too). It wasn’t really an option for me to not have a full time job with a paycheck and health benefits, but when everything you know to do doesn’t work OR when you have to figure out “how do I do this at all?” — that is a topic that interests me a lot.

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  16. Michelle Avatar

    Thanks Elise. I don’t have a business degree just a lot of work experience in business, so the gaps in my knowledge are huge when I try and do the business-thing myself.
    I know there is an audience for my idea bc a local B&M business did an Amazon local deal for the service available at their location, and it sold out. How to reach those people… I have no idea. I know if I didn’t already have a full time job I would have time to figure it out, but the mental energy is just not there.

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  17. Kelsey Avatar

    Love love this type of post and getting an insight into what works for others. I have a really similar method as well. I’ve noticed that if something on my to-do list is not getting checked off that I need to break it into smaller, more manageable chunks. Or really think about the hold up. Sometimes when I really think about it I may not have a piece of information and I need to make a phone call or do something that I don’t really want to do and so I’ve been avoiding it (this happens in my day job where I need to frequently get input from others for projects). Once I identify that sticking point I can tell myself, “just do it!” and get over the hurdle and move forward. It’s interesting how just being intentional and identifying the next step can make sure a big difference. It’s easy to dismiss something as being too hard or complicated when really a little thing can get you started and make it seem doable.
    I just started doing the Bullet Journal (www.bulletjournal.com) method of keeping a notebook and it is so amazing, it’s a system that works so well for me.

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  18. Photosbykris Avatar

    Oh we need the how to finish big problems, just lost our barn and tractor, last month to a barn fire. We just put in a new roof on said barn last Jan and a new loader and fork on the tractor in December.
    So for now it’s cleaning up the mess, setting up a make shift barn to get us thru calving season, buying a new tractor to feed cattle, and now to buy material to build a new barn, it’s going to be massive 40x90x16 ft pole barn hoping to finish that in the summer time. I can see me getting allot of time using the drill and screwing in allot of screws.
    Never a dull moment ranching….had 12 calves yesterday between 4am and noon, only one had to be pulled as it was backwards. Just got a good start calving, but the body is so not use to night calving and getting up every two hrs to check cows, and then function at a full time baking job in town.
    This is the time of the year I get way behind on my project life, way to many irons in the fire.

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  19. Welcome Home Taylor Avatar

    I love this! I have some big goals in mind, but they’re so intimidating. I really love the idea of breaking it down into smaller goals that are easier to manage and complete.
    xoxo
    Taylor
    http://www.welcomehometaylor.com

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  20. Leah Avatar

    Agreed! “Where the lists meet time is when things start to fall part.” So true!

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  21. Kailey Avatar
    Kailey

    These are my favourite types of posts, the ones that I keep coming back to read! Thank you for sharing such concrete details, I think I will try that chart. I find that try to hold all the steps of a big project in your head, instead of planning it out on paper just leads to being overwhelmed.
    Thanks so much for sharing! I will being trying to use these in my work today πŸ™‚

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  22. Lynnette Avatar

    Awesome! Thanks Elise!

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  23. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    Maybe you can do a post on how you make it so easy to start something and continue with it, even though it is not perfect. For me that is very difficult. What are your ideas on this?

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  24. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    I mean that for me, before I start I have to have all perfect materials, an idea how to start,I can always find a better fabric, better pattern etc. I am always scared to start, because I donΒ΄t think I can make it perfect enough. Which causes me not to start at all…

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  25. Kim Avatar

    so great to know how you are so productive & successful! Thank you! (now I think I know why I am neither, overwhelmed w/the big goal from not breaking it into little steps)

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  26. Emily p Avatar

    Wow, I just randomly found your blog and this was the first post I read. Needless to say, I already have probably five more tabs open to dig into your archives. I love the way you set goals (seriously encouraging) and your pictures are beautiful. So excited to read more.
    Thanks!
    Emily

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  27. April Avatar
    April

    I feel the exact same way, Jessica! And then I beat myself up for not starting/completing anything.

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  28. Carrie Avatar
    Carrie

    Cheers to having the courage to set big goals, follow your heart & ride out the bumps in the road. You are an inspiration to so many people. Keep up the great work :).

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  29. cheyenne Avatar

    wow, that action book looks really great! thanks for sharing these tips, it’s always nice to see how others tackle their goals πŸ™‚
    xo, cheyenne

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  30. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    Yep. Depressing isn’t it? If I create something, I always feel amazing, but it rarely happens, because of the reasons mentioned above. We should just force ourselves or someting..Elise , help! πŸ˜‰

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  31. JenEverAfter Avatar

    Why is this not Facebook? I want to “like” your reply a thousand times!!!

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  32. JenEverAfter Avatar

    I saw this post in my Typepad feed last week, but didn’t have time to read it right then. It kept coming back to mind, and I finally had a moment to sit down and read. Great stuff! Like you said, nothing I didn’t already know, but I love seeing what your lists look like. I’m a chronic list writer, but not a list looker. I write them, then forget them. And right now, I’m in this time where I want to take more charge of my life and set real goals and work toward accomplishing them, which is something I’ve never really done of my own volition in the whole of my adult life. The question I have for you is how many big and small goals do you have at one time? I am a Jack-Of-All-Trades, and have a lot of varying interests. I tend to want to do about a hundred things all at once, but with two little kids, and only 24 hours in a day, there’s just not enough time. How long is a manageable list of goals to you? Or do you keep the list running, but only stay focused on so many at one time? Thanks so much! Jen.

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