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    Home»Business»6 questions to ask before committing to your next work goal
    Business 6 Mins Read

    6 questions to ask before committing to your next work goal

    Business 6 Mins Read
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    Organizations invest in setting the right goals to drive strategy, and increasingly they’re using AI to help. To be sure, AI can support the mechanics: draft objectives, align to strategy, track progress. But the questions that determine whether you can deliver on a goal, sustainably, aren’t ones an algorithm can answer: Are you clear on the target? Do you know why it matters? Is it realistic given your capacity?

    Too often, employees take on goals without asking these questions, and the result is unfocused, empty effort or burnout. The fix isn’t an AI agent—it’s having a smarter, human conversation before you commit. Next time your manager asks you to take on a new initiative, shape it together around three areas: make it clear, make it matter, and make it manageable. These six questions will help set you up for sustainable success.

    CLARIFY THE TARGET

    You can’t hit a target you can’t see. Before you invest effort, know what kind of goal it is, who cares about it, and what impact is expected.

    Question 1: Is this a tactical goal or an adaptive goal?

    Not all goals work the same way. A tactical goal has clear deliverables and timelines (deliver the Q3 report). An adaptive goal (integrate AI tools into the team’s workflow) requires navigating ambiguity and adjusting course as you learn. Each requires a different approach. Treat an adaptive goal like a tactical one, and you’ll get frustrated when the target moves. Treat a tactical goal like an adaptive one, and you’ll waste time exploring when you should be executing. 

    Most organizations only manage and measure tactical performance, even though today’s environment demands both. With 73% of employees experiencing change fatigue, knowing what kind of goal you’re taking on helps set the right expectations from the start.

    Discuss with your leader: Does this goal have a set deliverable, or could it shift? How should I handle it if conditions change? If it’s adaptive, plan to revisit scope regularly.

    Question 2: Who are the stakeholders, and what impact do they expect?

    Before you own a goal, understand who cares about it and the outcome they’re after. This prevents misdirected effort and reduces friction through the process.

    This insight can also help you use AI as a strategic thought partner, prompting it to help you understand and consider stakeholder perspectives and flag opportunities and concerns you might miss.

    Discuss with your leader: Who are the key stakeholders and what impact do they expect? What are their key concerns? What does a successful outcome look like?

    KNOW WHY IT MATTERS—TO THE BUSINESS AND TO YOU

    Goal clarity alone isn’t sufficient. Research consistently shows that why we pursue a goal helps us sustain our effort. We perform best when we connect what we’re pursuing to both business value—how the work contributes to organizational objectives—and personal value. 

    Question 3: How does this goal connect to the organization’s and team’s priorities?

    We want to know that our work matters. When goals are clearly linked to company objectives and team priorities, employees are more motivated to pursue them. 

    We also find satisfaction in making progress on a goal, but only when the work feels meaningful. Research shows that progress in meaningful work is the most powerful driver of work satisfaction, but only when you understand the impact and value of what you’re doing. Connecting your goal to why it matters to your organization and team transforms it from an assignment into an activity worth your effort.

    Discuss with your leader: How does this connect to our team’s priorities and the broader strategy? Who benefits from this work, and how?

    Question 4: How does the goal connect to what motivates me?

    Motivation naturally pulls us to act, feeds our energy, and encourages effort. It doesn’t magically materialize, nor should we rely on our leaders to inspire it in us. Instead, activate it yourself. When you find personal meaning and value in a goal, it becomes worthy of your effort. 

    Consider how the goal supports your growth—what it allows you to learn and what skills it lets you develop. Find the purpose in the goal by defining your unique contribution, leveraging your strengths. Identify how you can do what you love within the project. Such intrinsic motivation increases our work satisfaction and is the best predictor of performance.  

    If you can’t find a personal connection, discuss with your leader, a mentor, or a trusted peer. Together, you may find an angle you’re missing.

    Discuss with your leader, mentor, or trusted peer: How does this goal support my growth? Where can my strengths add the most value? How can I leverage what I love to do?

    MANAGE YOUR RESOURCES

    You can still fail to deliver on a clear, motivating goal if you don’t have the bandwidth, resources, or support to execute it. This is the check we all often ignore, thinking we can do it all instead. 

    Question 5: Where does this fit among everything else on my plate?

    Nearly half of employees describe their work as chaotic and fragmented, and nearly a third say unclear priorities are hurting their productivity. If your leader isn’t proactively helping you prioritize, create clarity for yourself to have a conversation rooted in data.

    To be realistic about your capacity, map how the new goal fits with your current workload and whether you can pace your effort to accommodate it. If not, develop a recommendation for what to prioritize, pause, or postpone to make room.

    Discuss with your leader: How urgent is this project? Is the goal a must do, should do, or could do? Do you agree on what I should prioritize to make room?

    Question 6: What level of effort does this deserve?

    Beyond prioritization, managing the effort put against a goal is equally important, especially as work environments intensify. Our own perfectionist tendencies and over-collaboration are two culprits that can create unnecessary effort.

    Not every goal requires 110%. Revisit the desired impact to calibrate your effort, and lean into your strengths to be effective and efficient. Identify the resources you need to be successful and right-size collaboration. And don’t forget AI—strategize upfront on where you’ll use AI tools to support your workflow.

    Discuss with your leader: What level of effort does this warrant? What resources and support are available? Where can I simplify?

    These six questions aren’t about pushing back on goals. They’re about connecting to them—committing with intention, in a way that sustains performance. When a goal is clear, motivating, and manageable, you make progress. That progress fuels more motivation, creating a virtuous cycle. You also build a working relationship with your leader grounded in honesty and shared ownership. That’s better for you, your team, and your organization.



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