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Don’t you just hate it when you have to set goals to get things done? They are an evil way of making sure you have to put in those extra -often unpaid- hours, to accomplish more than you’re hired for. And if you fail, that’s a reason to withhold your bonus, or even your yearly raise.
This is a list with 47 simple words you can use to sabotage goals. Use these words when formulating goals and they are bound for failure, so if you don’t want to get caught not accomplishing goals, make sure you use these words. The more the better!
- To try
Try and you will fail. Well, you’re not saying that you’re failing, but you are implying that failure is a very realistic option. - To attempt
Attempting is a more sophisticated way of saying you are going to try. Sounds a lot better, still doesn’t guarantee success. - To aim for
When you aim to achieve a goal, you never said you were going to do anything to accomplish now is it? If you aim an arrow, it wasn’t going to shoot itself at the goal, right? - To hope for
Express that you hope to achieve the goal sounds good. It shows your intention, but you can always blame someone else when the goal is not accomplished. - To wish for
This is even better than hoping! It shows your intention and you express a desire for a preferred outcome. You are totally committed…but you can still blame someone else. - To seek for
Tell someone you’re seeking to accomplish your goal, and they are convinced that you are committed. But hey, no one told them you were actually going to find it, not did they? - To should
It should be done. We should accomplish the goal. Don’t name who is going to do it, but it should be done, shouldn’t it? - To ought to
Ok, so should didn’t work out. Maybe someone ought to do something about that? - To must
Sounds decisive! It must be done, just don’t tell anyone you’re not going to do it. But it must be done, damn it! - To want
If you express that you want to achieve the goal, you connect instantly. Others want it too! But no one decides who is actually going to do anything about it. - To desire
This is a more sophisticated way of saying you want it. Makes you look even better! - To pursue
Pursue what you want, no guarantee you’ll ever catch up with it, right? But man, did you put a lot of energy and determination into the pursuit! - To start
Name something you’re not doing right now, and can start easy. Now make it appear difficult, and you have set yourself a great goal. And since there’s only the starting in the goal, you’re next goal could be to continue or to improve
Or to stop it again, if you’re really evil. - To prepare
This is a favorite. To prepare is an activity you needn’t even show results for. And you don’t have to start or stop, or whatever it is you’re preparing. Guaranteed for quite some time idling around. - To avoid
Formulate the goals in such a way that it is about avoidance and not about accomplishing it. There are two benefits; one is that it’s never ending (yeah, still working on it), two is that it places the bad thing in people’s minds (so they will think about it all the time). Time-tested recipe for failure. - To prevent
Is kind of like avoiding, but it sounds better doesn’t it? It makes you sound kinda serious and this one also never ends. - To stop with
Ok, this one does have an end, however it still places the one thing in people’s mind that they should not do. And that doesn’t quite help them stop… - To refrain from
Subtlety is in detail. Use this to formulate something that doesn’t happen yet, but definitely shouldn’t happen. And in the mean time you put it in the minds of people. - To reach for
No guarantee that you’re ever going to reach it right? But you reached for it, and you tried hard too! - To change
Changing is easy, and can be never-ending. And no one told you it should be better after you changed it right? You just need to adjust it some more, tweak it a little further. - To optimize
This is a management classic! You’ll never find the optimum. Once you’ve decided what to factor in and what the optimum is going to be, the environment has changed and you can start all over again. But is sounds like you know what you’re after. - To carry on
Make a goal of something you’re already doing. Easy as that! - To continue
Like to carry on. Just…carry on. - To persist
Again like carrying on, but much more energy and determination behind it (yeah right). - To keep
Make a goal of something you already have. - To grow
Like to start when you haven’t started it, or like to improve when you have started. Great formulation to give metaphors from nature as to explain why things grow … so … slow. - To reduce
Take something you don’t really like, emphasize the negatives of that activity and show off with your goal to reduce it. - To simplify
Take something you hardly do, make it appear large and difficult and set a goal to simplify it. Show absolute success by stopping with the activity altogether. - To improve
Management classic! But as long as it is unclear exactly what needs to improve and by how much, you needn’t worry. - To enhance
Is like improving, but can also be translated strictly to appearances. - To upgrade
Is like improving as well, but more technical. Use when appropriate, preferably accompanied by a lot of technical mumbo-jumbo. If people don’t understand, they usually don’t ask questions. - To boost
Is like to improve, but different. Very popular in some industries. Says you’ll do better, but not how much. - To perfect
Perfect! You can never achieve this, there is no such thing as perfect, so you can never fail this goal! You’re still putting the dots on the i’s. - Very
Stress a word with very as a prefix and it makes an impression, but it can’t be measured so it really doesn’t say anything. - Quite
Also an empty word, but it might arise some suspicion… But some people love this word. - Really
And another empty word to mix in between the other empty words. Doesn’t say anything, but makes the goal sounds so much sweeter. - Maybe
If you pull this of you’re a master! If you get this word in the formulation of a goal, you’re on safe ground. No one can blame you for not accomplishing anything, since there was no certainty it could accomplished in the first place! - Better / More / Greater / Faster / Bigger / Less / Quicker
Sounds great and when not further specified is childishly easy to accomplish. Nobody said how much now did they? - Best / Most / Greatest / Fastest / Biggest / Least / Quickest
Sounds even better and makes it almost impossible to accomplish. There’s bound to be something or someone better, faster or quicker than you, at all times. And impossible goals can be stretched into eternity. - Soon
Gotta love this word, reaching the goals is always close, but not yet reached. Soon…I promise! - Someday / Sometime
A little further away than soon, so it’s even a little safer. But it has a certain vagueness around it that might trick people into asking further questions on timing. But if you get it in there, you’re absolutely safe. - Future
Even further away and it sounds good. And you’ll never get there. Somehow the future is always in the … future. - Approximately
This gives you a range of values for the results. The bigger the better, nobody can get you on not accomplishing anything. - Around
Kind of like approximately, but it makes hitting the target (if there even is any) even more unlikely. - Near
Like around, only hitting the target just became a no-no at all. - About
Just another word for around. You need some variations in order not to get caught. - Sometimes
That’s great, getting your goal…sometimes. You decide: feel like doing it? Do it. Feel like lounging around? No worries, mate!
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Oh…and when it comes down to formulating your personal goals: Be sure to avoid them at all cost. Remember, they WILL sabotage your goals and make sure you don’t get the results.
Who are you fooling then?
If you liked this article, please vote for it on Digg! Thanks so much!
You can be an Original too!




















AgentSully
Tue 2007.10.23
“Do or not do. There is no try” - Yoda
Nice job!
Christine O'Kelly
Tue 2007.10.23
This is a very powerful post… Anyone who is really serious about achieving their goals should print this out and hang it on the wall in front of them so that it is visible at all times!
Lodewijkvdb
Wed 2007.10.24
Yoda rocks! I used that quote before as inspiration for an article on the word try. I don’t like that word at all!
And thanks Christine! I think I would look very surprised if I walked past someone’s office and my post was on the wall! But I like the thought
Create Business Growth Offers… » Blog Archive *Ways to Improve Your Online Presence *Weekly Interviews with Entrepreneurs *Comprehensive Business Strategies *Social Networking Tips & Much More Contact: David, Fred or Christine [at] Create
Fri 2007.10.26
[…] […]
Naomi Dunford
Fri 2007.10.26
Hi Lodewijk - This is my first time on your blog and it is STELLAR. Stel-lar. Stel. Lar. I’ve Stumbled, Dugg, Delicioused, the whole nine yards.
People should print this out and wallpaper their office in it. I hope this post makes you rich.
Living Off Dividends
Fri 2007.10.26
“there are 2 types of lies; the one we tell others, and the ones we tell ourselves”.
Dave Navarro
Fri 2007.10.26
Great post! Caught a few words here that I *will* purge from my self-talk
Lodewijkvdb
Sat 2007.10.27
@Naomi: Thanks! Your comment gave me a BIG smile. I love compliments
@Living off dividends: So true, and then there’s also this thing called statistics
@Dave: That’s something I have to do myself as well. That’s what I like about writing about this kind of stuff, you learn so much by researching it and compiling it into an article. I have to review my own goals as well, to eliminate some self-sabotage.
Financial Freedom Online Tips - 28th Oct 2007 | Financial Freedom Ideas
Sun 2007.10.28
[…] shares 46 more self-sabotage ways of thinking so check with yourself if you are on the right path to […]
Suzanne of New Affiliate Discoveries
Sun 2007.10.28
This is a great post, I dugg it, and I also featured it on this week’s Sunday Seven over at my site. Check it out if you get a chance, thanks for the great ideas.
The Sunday Seven - 10th Edition | New Affiliate Discoveries
Sun 2007.10.28
[…] A nice diggable post on how to sabotage your goals. The post focuses on the wording you use to phrase your goals. I’m a strong believer that […]
Writing Resources: How (Not) to Sabotage Goals | The Story Ideas Virtuoso
Wed 2007.11.14
[…] This is a list with 47 simple words you can use to sabotage goals. Use these words when formulating goals and they are bound for failure, so if you don’t want to get caught not accomplishing goals, make sure you use these words. The more the better! Read entire post » […]
Rolf F. Katzenberger
Mon 2007.11.26
Excellent! There *should* be a feature in every word processor that checks mission statements, visions and press releases for the presence of these “gems”…
Lodewijkvdb
Mon 2007.11.26
Rolf F. Katzenberger » That would be nice! But only optional for those purposes
These words do have value in entirely different contexts.
HD BizBlog- The Blog: Productivity in Context » Blog Archive » How To: Get the Most Out of Brainstorming
Fri 2008.01.25
[…] last but not least, my friend Lodewijk at How to Be an Original points us to How to sabotage goals with 47 simple words and a whole series on Goal Setting […]
IttyBiz » 32 Must Reads To Ensure Small Business Success
Sat 2008.04.19
[…] Slash and burn your vocabulary. Do not allow your words to be your […]
Zap Branagan
Sun 2008.04.20
So don’t just tell us what we can’t do…
Provide us with the substitution words…
Lodewijk
Sun 2008.04.20
@Zap: It’s allowed to do some thinking for yourself
Most of these words and verbs should simply be avoided. Substitutes would vary from goal to goal and situation to situation.
The underlying message is to think your goals through thoroughly, especially the way you formulate them. Check for these words and imagine what they would do for the likelyhood of attaining your goal. Not good? Then do some more thinking. No harm done? Congrats