SMART Method
SMART Method
SMART criteria
SMART is a mnemonic acronym, giving criteria to guide in the setting of objectives,
for example in project management, employee-performance management and
personal development. The letters S and M usually mean specific and measurable.
The other letters have meant dierent things to dierent authors, as described below.
Additional letters have been added by some authors.
SMART criteria are commonly attributed to Peter Drucker's management by
objectives concept.[1] The first-known use of the term occurs in the November 1981
issue of Management Review by George T. Doran.[2] The principal advantage of
SMART objectives is that they are easier to understand, to do, and then be reassured
that they have been done.
Contents
History
Other definitions
Additional criteria
Developing SMART goals
Specific
Measurable
Attainable
Relevant
Time-bound
See also
References
History
Other definitions
Each letter in SMART refers to a dierent criterion for judging objectives. Dierent
sources use the letters to refer to dierent things. Typically accepted criteria are as
follows.
Letter
Most common
Alternative
Specific[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
Achievable[4][7][8][10][12][13]
Relevant[4][7][10][12][16]
Result-based, results-oriented,
resourced,[16] resonant,
realistic,[6][8][9][11][14][13] reasonable[5]
Time-bound[4][7][8][9]
Additional criteria
Some authors have added additional letters giving additional criteria. Examples are
given below.
SMARTER
Evaluated and reviewed[4]
Evaluate consistently and recognize mastery[5]
SMARTTA
Trackable and agreed[13]
Specific
The criterion stresses the need for a specific goal rather than a more general one.
This means the goal is clear and unambiguous; without vagaries and platitudes. To
make goals specific, they must tell a team exactly what's expected, why it's
important, whos involved, where it's going to happen and which attributes are
important.
A specific goal will usually answer the five 'W' questions:
What: What do I want to accomplish?
Why: Specific reasons, purpose or benefits of accomplishing the goal.
Who: Who is involved?
Where: Identify a location.
Which: Identify requirements and constraints.
Measurable
The second criterion stresses the need for concrete criteria for measuring progress
toward the attainment of the goal. The thought behind this is that if a goal is not
measurable it is not possible to know whether a team is making progress toward
successful completion. Measuring progress is supposed to help a team stay on track,
reach its target dates and experience the exhilaration of achievement that spurs it on
to continued eort required to reach the ultimate goal.
A measurable goal will usually answer questions such as:
How much?
How many?
How will I know when it is accomplished?
Indicators should be quantifiable
Attainable
The third criterion stresses the importance of goals that are realistic and also
attainable. Whilst an attainable goal may stretch a team in order to achieve it, the
goal is not extreme. That is, the goals are neither out of reach nor below standard
performance, since these may be considered meaningless. When you identify goals
that are most important to you, you begin to figure out ways you can make them
come true. You develop the attitudes, abilities, skills and financial capacity to reach
them. The theory states that an attainable goal may cause goal-setters to identify
previously overlooked opportunities to bring themselves closer to the achievement of
their goals.
An achievable goal will usually answer the question How?
How can the goal be accomplished?
How realistic is the goal based on other constraints?
Relevant
The fourth criterion stresses the importance of choosing goals that matter. A bank
manager's goal to "Make 50 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches by 2pm" may be
specific, measurable, attainable and time-bound but lacks relevance. Many times you
will need support to accomplish a goal: resources, a champion voice, someone to
knock down obstacles. Goals that are relevant to your boss, your team, your
organization will receive that needed support.
Relevant goals (when met) drive the team, department and organization forward. A
goal that supports or is in alignment with other goals would be considered a relevant
goal.
A relevant goal can answer yes to these questions:
Does this seem worthwhile?
Is this the right time?
Does this match our other eorts/needs?
Are you the right person?
Is it applicable in the current socio- economic environment?
Time-bound
The fifth criterion stresses the importance of grounding goals within a time-frame,
giving them a target date. A commitment to a deadline helps a team focus their
eorts on completion of the goal on or before the due date. This part of the SMART
goal criteria is intended to prevent goals from being overtaken by the day-to-day
crises that invariably arise in an organization. A time-bound goal is intended to
establish a sense of urgency.
See also
Management by objectives
Performance indicator
Strategic planning
PDCA
SWOT analysis
References
1. Bogue, Robert. "Use S.M.A.R.T. goals to launch management by objectives
plan" . TechRepublic. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
2. Doran, G. T. (1981). "There's a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management's goals and
objectives". Management Review (AMA FORUM) 70 (11): 3536.
3. Why SMART objectives don't work
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