Career Coach: Achievers Take Note

The Career Coach helps readers outline an action plan to attaining your goals no matter what they may be.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld | Columns: Career Coach

Calendar/Schedule
On page 5 you will create a calendar, incorporating the activities from your action plan. This is where you will schedule your time to carry out your action plan and to track your progress and daily activity. Leave a space where you can check off the items as you complete them. Each time you give yourself a check, pat yourself on the back. You are making progress toward accomplishing your goal and achieving your dreams.

Your daily, weekly and monthly goals should support your long-term goals. Even if it’s a small goal, give yourself targets. You may not always achieve your goal, but the simple act of setting the goal will motivate you to accomplish more than you might otherwise accomplish.

A calendar for losing 20 pounds might look like this:

Starting weight: ___________ Goal weight (starting weight minus 20 pounds)

Week 1

Mon:Walk for one hour in neighborhood
Tue:Go to gym for one hour of Pilates class (Remember to fill in what time your class meets)
Wed:Walk for one hour in neighborhood
Thu:Go to gym for swimming aerobics class
Fri:Take tennis lesson
Sat:Walk neighborhood
Sun:Walk neighborhood and weigh myself at 10:00 am

Starting weight week 2 ___________

Starting weight week 3 ___________

Follow Through, Measure Your Progress and Reward Yourself
After you get started, vital steps to achieving your goal are to follow through, measure your progress and reward yourself.

At the end of each day evaluate how productive you were based on how successful you were in achieving your goals. If you were not successful, determine why. Make a commitment not to let the same distractions impede your productivity again.

To measure your progress in the case of losing weight-give yourself a check mark every time you forgo dessert. Check off every time you exercise and follow your schedule. Give yourself a pat on the back.

Weigh yourself once a week only and mark your progress on the calendar. As with all goals it takes time to lose weight. Don’t give up if you don’t show immediate progress. After three weeks, calculate how much weight you have lost. If it is one pound, recognize that it might take 60 weeks (20 pounds x three weeks) to reach your goal. Write the new date for your goal on page 1.

Every time you work on your goal, congratulate yourself on your persistence. You will encounter setbacks, but every time you overcome an obstacle, every time you keep going, you are making progress toward an important accomplishment.

Here’s another example:
An artist’s goal may be to create a portfolio of 25 good life drawings of wild animals. (Page 1)

The artist has written his reasons for wanting to accomplish the goal and how it might change his life — “I will have a portfolio to submit for jobs and might get a new job and career. I will improve my life drawing skills.” He might photocopy some life drawing from a book and glue it underneath his statements of how this might make him feel. (Page 2)

To accomplish this goal the artist lists he will need art supplies (paper, pencils), zoo visits (zoo membership) and time. (Page 3)

The artist creates an Action Plan for creating a portfolio of 25 life drawings: (Page 4)
Buy art supplies. (paper, pencils, sketchbook)
Buy zoo membership
Visit the zoo on weekends (opens at 10 am). Draw for three hours per day. Plan to get one good drawing per day. Length of time needed to produce 25 drawings at rate of one per day is 25 days. Plan to visit zoo two days per week, 25 days/two days per week = 12 weeks = 13 weeks is amount of time needed to create 25 drawings. Animals to draw: Giraffe, hippo, lion, bear, turtle, alligator

Now he adds the estimated date of completion (13 weeks from now) on page 1, rewriting the goal statement “I will create a portfolio of 25 life drawings of wild animals by (13 weeks from today). The dream is now a goal. A goal is a dream with a deadline.

Next the artist makes a calendar/schedule to carry out his action plan. (Page 5)

Week 1

Fri:Buy art supplies.
Sat:Buy zoo membership. Draw giraffes from 10 to 1.
Sun:Draw giraffes from 10 to 1.

Week 2

Sat:Draw hippos from 10 to 1.
Sun:Draw hippos from 10 to 1.

At the end of the first day, the artist reviews his progress. He displays the best giraffe drawings he did. He puts them where he will see them when he wakes up. He already has something to show for his time and efforts. Congratulations are due-he’s started making his dreams a reality.

On the Road to Success
You can add goals to your goal notebook at any time. Just put in a divider, label it with the new goal, add five more pages and go through the process.

  1. Write down your goal — Ask yourself what you want
  2. Write how achieving this goal will change your life and paste an inspiring image next to the statements
  3. List what you need to achieve your goal
  4. Create an action plan
  5. Add a date of completion to your goal and write a goal statement
  6. Create a calendar/schedule for the action plan
  7. Follow through, measure your progress and reward yourself

Going through these seven steps will help you set smaller goals to help you attain the larger goals, which will help you gain control. Goals are a roadmap for success.

Review your book of written goals every day. Stick to your schedule and you will see steady progress.

Once you have accomplished a goal, even the incremental goals on the way to your major goals, congratulate yourself and celebrate. Set aside time regularly to assess your progress and plan new goals. If you use the goals notebook tool to track your progress, setting goals and achieving goals will become a habit. That will take you far on the road to success.

Pamela Kleibrink Thompson is a recruiter/hiring strategist and career coach. As a career coach, she helps clients identify their goals and devise strategies to attain them. As a recruiter, she helps her clients find top quality people. She has recruited for visual effects companies such as Digital Domain and Framestore as well as animation companies such as Disney and Fox and software companies such as Macromedia. On Jan. 26, 2006. Pamela will be presenting a seminar on goal setting. For details see www.womeninanimation.org.








Comments


i am a 24 year old male living in nigeria africa;im very creative .i would love to join the animation business.pls i have no capital,i want your advice on how to achive my goals thxs.
ebele okeke (not verified) | Tue, 01/17/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink
Dear Career Coach, I am an 18 year old college graduate, and have been an animation enthusiast for the past 2 years. At the moment I am eligible to further my studies at The University of Malta. The University of Malta constraints the student to follow certain specific courses, the only one which appealed to me was Bachelor of Science (business and computing). I could tolerate that field of study, but I don’t know how satisfied I’ll become of a career I that field. My true passion lies in computer animation and as I realized that studying abroad is a possibility, I’m up for anything as long as I could pursue a career in relation to animation. What I’m looking for is aid, aid on where to begin? What to do? Which degrees are available? What fields of animation are possible, since animation is such a vast subject. Which part of the world could provide me with a quality UNI course and aid me in job opportunities. I am willing to sacrifice and work hard to achieve this goal, please help me to full fill my drive to bring life to these creations in my head.
Aidan celeste (not verified) | Sun, 10/02/2005 - 00:00 | Permalink

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