Almost nothing important
is accomplished without someone setting a goal first. Goal setting is crucial
in real estate investing. Responsible business owners don’t start work without
a business plan—especially with thousands of dollars on the line.
And a business plan is
just a major goal broken into subgoals and steps on how to reach them. If
you’re running a series of house flips, you shouldn’t be less well-prepared.
You should set goals that:
- Give you motivation and purpose
- Will give structure to your
days, weeks, and months
- Are really big but can be
broken down into small objectives and actions
- Are easy to track and finish
If your New Year’s
resolutions hardly ever work out, how can you set better goals? Real Estate
Elevated reviews the steps below that have worked for us.
Set
Goals that Excite You
Do you find yourself
thinking “should” a lot about your goals or tasks? The word “should” is a clue
that you’re not interested in what you’re doing. You need to instead set goals
that are truly important to you.
1. Brainstorm
First, write down
everything you want to experience or accomplish in the next 12 months. Use the
following categories to help you think of ideas:
- Growing your skills
- Improving your finances
- Relationships with business
partners and vendors (contractors, etc.)
- Improving your renovations
- Upgrading your team
- Networking
- Building your portfolio of
projects
Write down every
possible idea without criticizing any of them. Just get them out onto a piece
of paper or into a document.
2. Prioritize
The way to achieve
excellence is to focus your time and energy on just one or a small handful of
goals. That’s why your next task is to decide which goals will give you the
greatest rewards and to prioritize those.
For each goal, ask
yourself these questions:
- What benefit will it eventually
bring to this business?
- How will it improve my
relationships with my team, family, vendors, etc.?
- What skills and habits will I
have to learn in order to accomplish it?
- If I could only accomplish this
one goal, would I be truly excited about it?
- Am I interested in the process
of accomplishing this goal, not just getting it over with?
- Is finishing this goal
important to me personally, or do I want to satisfy someone else’s agenda?
If any goal doesn’t seem
worth it after these questions, delete it or put it off for later. Try to find
the smallest number of goals you can accomplish with full attention, rather
than trying to work on as many as possible.
How
to Use Your Real Estate Investing Goals
Goals are only valuable
if you act on them. With your highest-priority goals, your final task is to
plan your next year. You’ll need to:
- Split those goals into 12
objectives (one for each month).
- Write each objective in a
different month on a yearly planner.
- Divide each monthly objective
into weekly and daily goals (starting with just the next month or two).
- Put your goals and subgoals up
somewhere you can’t miss them.
- Refer to your goals constantly.
- Take daily or weekly action to
advance your highest-priority objectives.
Also, you can adjust
your goals if feedback from your actions suggests it.
Learn more about how to set goals, renovate homes, and build a real estate investing business. Register for a Real Estate Elevated event to learn from the principles of Tarek and Christina.
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