Goal Setting and Visioning: Your Blueprint for Success
In December, Symphonic Strategies spent time exploring how reflection fuels growth, knowing that as the year winds down, many of us reflect on what we’ve accomplished and what lies ahead. Just as reflecting on the past is valuable, the natural step that often starts a new year—planning for the future—is transformative. Goal setting and visioning are two powerful practices that provide clarity, motivation, and direction for personal and professional growth. Scholars like Edwin Locke, Peter Drucker, and Simon Sinek have explored the profound impact of setting clear goals and aligning them with a compelling vision, and in January, Symphonic Strategies will be sharing some insights on how goal setting and visioning can guide us in creating a roadmap for success in the coming year.
The Power of Goal Setting
For example, Edwin Locke and Gary Latham’s goal-setting theory is a cornerstone of modern productivity science. Their research demonstrates that specific, challenging goals lead to higher performance than vague or easy ones. This generally aligns with the theory that effective goals should be SMART: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. By clearly defining what we want to achieve, we not only enhance focus but also foster a sense of accountability.
For instance, instead of saying, “I want to get fit,” a SMART goal would be, “I will run three miles, three times a week for the next three months.” This specificity turns a general desire into a tangible target. As Locke and Latham suggest, the act of setting a challenging goal encourages us to stretch our abilities and stay committed.
Visioning: The Bigger Picture
While goals provide structure, vision gives them purpose. Stephen Covey’s Begin with the End in Mind, one of his seven habits of highly effective people, reminds us that every goal should align with a larger vision of our ideal future. Visioning is like creating a mental map—it helps us see where we want to go and why it matters.
Simon Sinek’s Start with Why complements Covey’s approach by emphasizing the importance of purpose. Sinek explains that understanding the “why” behind our goals creates a deeper sense of motivation. For example, a fitness goal tied to a vision of improved energy and quality time with family carries more emotional weight than a superficial desire to “look better.”
The Role of Growth in Achieving Goals
Achieving ambitious goals requires persistence, adaptability, and a willingness to learn from setbacks. Carol Dweck’s research on the growth mindset highlights the importance of embracing challenges as opportunities for development. People with a growth mindset are more likely to view obstacles as stepping stones rather than barriers. For instance, if you fall short of your weekly fitness target, Dweck’s approach encourages asking, “What did I learn, and how can I adjust for next week?”
Angela Duckworth’s Grit complements Dweck’s work by showing that sustained effort over time is more important than talent in achieving long-term goals. Setting ambitious goals and remaining committed to them requires grit—the ability to persevere even when progress feels slow.
Your Roadmap for 2025
Goal setting and visioning work best when combined. Start with a compelling vision for the year ahead—where do you want to be in December 2025? Break that vision into smaller, actionable goals that are aligned with your values and purpose. Finally, commit to growth by embracing challenges and learning from setbacks.
Success isn’t about luck—it’s about clarity, purpose, and persistence. As Locke, Covey, and Sinek have shown, a clear goal paired with a meaningful vision is the blueprint for a fulfilling and impactful life.
What’s your vision for the future? Follow along with Symphonic Strategies this month as we keep exploring insights on goal setting and visioning. The future is waiting—plan for it with purpose.
Post by: Symphonic Strategies
Not everyone knows Dr. June Jackson Christmas’s name, but fellow leaders in her field are fully aware of how her contributions made other peoples’ lives better. Dr. Christmas, who passed away on New Year’s Eve at age 99, was a pioneering Black woman psychiatrist and one of the first scholars and practitioners to address the impact of social and economic factors on mental health
She made history early in life as one of the first three students who identified as Black to graduate from Vassar College, where she was in the class of 1945-4. (The few Black students who attended Vassar years earlier had kept their racial identities hidden and “passed” as white while on campus.) After college, like her fellow trailblazing Black classmate Beatrix McCleary Hamburg, Dr. Christmas chose to go to medical school to study psychiatry. Dr. Hamburg became the first Black woman graduate of the Yale School of Medicine and an expert in child psychiatry. Dr. Christmas, who was one of just seven women in her class at Boston University’s School of Medicine, said she originally hoped studying psychiatry might help her teach people not to be racist. It did help her address race and class as she fought to make sure vulnerable populations had better access to care.
Dr. Christmas was a clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, a professor of behavioral science at the City University of New York School of Medicine, a resident professor of mental health policy at the Heller Graduate School of Social Welfare of Brandeis University, the first Black woman president of the American Public Health Association, and an appointed leader who shaped New York City’s mental health care policy. As the New York Times said, Dr. Christmas “broke barriers as a Black woman by heading New York City’s Department of Mental Health and Retardation Services under three mayors . . . As a city commissioner, as chief of rehabilitation services at Harlem Hospital Center, and in her role overseeing the transition of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare to a Democratic administration for President-elect Jimmy Carter, Dr. Christmas ardently advanced her professional agenda.”
The Times continued: “Her priorities included improving mental health services for older people, helping people cope with alcoholism, and assisting children ensnared in the bureaucracies of foster care and the legal system. She also sought to ease the transition of patients from being warehoused in state mental hospitals to living independently . . . In 1964 she founded Harlem Rehabilitation Center, a Harlem Hospital program, which gained a national reputation for providing vocational training and psychiatric help to psychiatric hospital patients who had returned to their communities after being discharged.” This became a model for patient care.
All of this gives a sense of not just what made Dr. Christmas a trailblazing leader, but how she displayed the characteristics of a symphonic leader. Throughout her life she was used to seeing the impossible: possessing a mindset that is free from the constraints imposed by the current reality, even a 13-year-old growing up in Boston who organized a spontaneous sit-in to try to integrate a roller-skating rink in neighboring Cambridge. She brought that mindset to each new role where she seized the opportunity to make advances in patient care. When asked in an interview how she motivated people, Dr. Christmas answered: “Let people know that you are on their side. That you are behind them and you are supportive. I do care that a patient or staff person is able to stand up for himself or herself. When we motivate others we just don’t look at a person. We look at a person and at their environment.” This perspective shows several of the principles of symphonic leadership, and is an example of playing from the soul: the ability to shape situations in ways that align collective action with the protection and advancement of self-interest.
Eric Wilson, the co-chair of Vassar’s African American Alumnae/i organization, gave one more clue about Dr. Christmas’s leadership style with this description: “Dr. Christmas was as regular as they came. Humble, personable, so totally lacking in pretension as to be considered old-school cool, and beyond brilliant.” This hints at a third characteristic of symphonic leaders, moving the crowd: a depth of social grace where social interactions leave people wanting more.
At Symphonic Strategies, we’re always on the lookout for new examples of symphonic leaders to study and share with others. Women’s History Month is a wonderful opportunity to highlight and celebrate great women leaders, but be sure you’re aware of the great leaders around you every day.
Goal Setting and Visioning: Your Blueprint for Success
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