It’s that time of year when people start goal setting for the new year. It’s only normal, a new year offers the possibility for a new you, right?
However, only around 8% of people actually achieve their resolutions each year. And, only around 75% of those who set goals follow through with them after the first week of the year.
It’s crazy that 25% of people already stop working towards their goals after just the first week!
With today’s blog post, I’m going to help you stick to the goals you set for 2025 and become successful with them in the new year. Let’s make your 2025 goals list a reality!
Posts related to goal setting:
- 75 Ways To Make Extra Money
- How To Save 50% Or More Of Your Income
- 8 Things To Sell To Make Money
- 30+ Ways To Save Money Each Month
And, before you throw out the idea of goal setting and New Year’s resolutions, or judge people who are doing so, please keep this quote from Statistic Brain in mind:
“People who explicitly make resolutions are 10 times more likely to attain their goals than people who don’t explicitly make resolutions.”
This is why I believe that setting goals and making a plan to reach them is so important.
Due to that, let’s make it a great year. Let’s work on managing our money better, living our dream life, traveling more (here’s how to take a 10 day trip to Hawaii for less than $25!), and succeeding with whatever goal you want to reach.
Here are my tips and advice to help you reach your life goals. Plus, at the end of this blog post, I’ve included my goal progress as well as my goals.
Related: 70+ Goal Ideas
9 goal setting tips for success:
Review the previous year and your previous goals and objectives.
Before you start thinking about 2025, you should think about how the previous year went for you.
Think about the goals you reached, the successes you had, and more. Then, think about what you wish you could have done better and the areas you struggled with.
By completing this step, you’ll be able to better figure out what you need to do in 2025 in order to have a successful year.
Make sure your goal setting is SMART.
You should always make sure that any goal you set is SMART.
A SMART goal is:
- Specific – What is your goal? Is it specific enough or is it too broad? What needs to be done for you to achieve your goal? Why do you want to reach your goal?
- Measurable – How can you measure your progress? How will you know if you’re on track?
- Attainable – Can your goal actually be achieved?
- Realistic/relevant – Can you achieve your goal? Is the goal worth it?
- Time – What’s your time frame for reaching your goal?
Write down your goals and objectives.
Writing down your goals is a very important part goal setting.
Completing this step can help you remember your goal and why you want to achieve it. Whenever I don’t write something down or have it in front of me on a regular basis, I tend to forget about it.
If you can’t remember your goal, it would be very hard to reach it. I suggest that you think about:
- Creating a blog to detail your progress.
- Making a vision board.
- Putting post-its around your home that list your yearly goals.
- Placing reminders on your phone, calendar, or whatever else you use for your to-do list.
Related tip: If you’re looking for a life planner, I highly recommend checking out Erin Condren and looking at their life planners and monthly planners. This can be a great way to stay motivated so that you can reach your goals!
Create a plan to reach your life goals.
If you want to stay motivated with your goals, then one of the first things you should do is to create a plan on how you will reach your goal.
A plan can help you focus on the steps it will take to reach your goal, instead of feeling like you are all over the place.
Your plan should detail the steps you need in order to reach your goal, what will happen as you reach each step, when and how you will track your progress, and more. Being detailed with your plan will help you reach your goal and become successful.
Related reading: Be More Confident And Get What You Want In Life
Break your goal apart into smaller goals.
Having a full year to reach your goal is a long time, and you may forget about your goal or just become overwhelmed by it.
What I recommend doing is creating 12 goals for your overall goal, one for each month of the year. Basically, each month would be a step that gets you closer to your overall goal.
This can be a great way to stay motivated and see the progress you are making towards your overall goal, and you’ll know exactly what you need to do in order to be successful.
For example. If your goal is to become a blogger in one year (this is just an easy example for purposes of this blog post), your monthly goals may be something such as:
-
- January – Think of a blog idea and a name.
- February – Start a blog and create a blogging plan.
- March – Create an editorial calendar.
- April – Find ways to monetize a blog.
- May – Reach X amount of page views.
- June – Attend a blogging conference.
- July – Guest post on 10 websites.
- August – Grow your email list to X subscribers.
- September – Build an emergency fund for X months.
- October – Reach X in blogging income.
- November – Grow a social media account to X.
- December – Become a blogger!
Keep track of your goal setting progress and make changes (if needed).
To stay motivated with your yearly goals and become successful with them, you should review your progress every so often. You may want to check in daily, weekly, or monthly, depending on what type of goal you have and what personally works for you.
Keeping track of your goal setting progress is a good idea because it can tell you what you need to do in order to reach your goal, whether or not you are behind, or if you need to make a change.
Related: I highly recommend that you check out Empower (a free service) if you are interested in gaining control of your financial situation.
Find small ways to stick to your goal.
Many fall off track when it comes to their goals because sometimes the daily steps they are taking are just too big. This may cause a person to ignore their goal because they are feeling lazy (we’ve all felt this!), tired, and so on. This can lead to spiraling out of control and completely falling off track.
Forgetting about your goal, for even just a short period of time, may also contribute to you falling off track.
A better idea for the days when you don’t feel like working towards your goal is to take smaller steps. This way you won’t completely forget about your goal and you also won’t feel like you have entirely given up. This will make days when you’re feeling “off” much easier to deal with.
Several examples so that you can learn how to get back on track include:
- If you are trying to eat in more, do a batch freezer cooking session to stay on top of preparing meals ahead of time. This way you will have a meal to turn to on the days when you don’t feel like cooking.
- If you’re not feeling like working out, then do something small instead. Try to fit in some squats, lunges, jumping jacks, or whatever else you can while you are cooking a meal, watching TV, or getting ready.
- If you are trying to reach financial goals but are feeling overwhelmed, you may want to start automating as much as you can, and so on. This can make reaching your financial goals a little easier.
Related reading: Living Life To The Fullest Is Something Everyone Should Start Doing

Find ways to motivate yourself when setting goals.
Motivation is what keeps you going so that you do not quit and this will help you to reach your goal. However, finding motivation can be a hard task for anyone. But it’s so important to find what motivates you because it will help you continue to work towards your goal, even when it seems impossible.
Here are a few ways to motivate yourself so that you can learn how to get back on track and not give up on your goals:
- Create a vision board and keep it somewhere that you will see on a daily basis.
- Make it a friendly competition (read more below).
- Find ways to reward yourself as you get closer to your goal.
Related reading: How To Stay Motivated And Become Successful
Make reaching your goal a friendly competition.
One great way to stay on track with your goals is to turn your goal setting into a competition between you and someone else.
Finding an accountability partner can make reaching your goals more fun and potentially easier.
This is because you won’t be going at it alone, you’ll have someone to talk to who is going through a similar process as you, you’ll have someone else pushing you to succeed, and more.
There are many ways to find an accountability partner. An accountability partner can be someone you know, such as a friend, family member, coworker, and so on. They can even be a stranger, such as someone you met online who has a similar goal.
Update on my goals:
- PASS! Get at least two months ahead on Making Sense of Cents posts. I am currently two months ahead. I wonder how far I can get next year! 🙂
- PASS! Grow Making Sense of Cents. While my page views didn’t grow in 2016, my email list grew significantly as well as all of my social media accounts.
- FAIL. Be active every day. While I am a pretty active person, I doubt I was active every day in 2016, haha.
- PASS! Have fun living in the RV full-time! Living in an RV has been a ton of fun so far. I can’t wait to see what amazing places we go in 2017.
My next year goals:
- Get at least three months ahead on Making Sense of Cents posts. I figured since I am currently two months ahead, I might as well work even further ahead. Being ahead in blog posts makes life much more enjoyable because I can focus on other things knowing that the majority of my writing work is already done.
- Grow Making Sense of Cents to 1,000,000 monthly page views. I would love to help more readers, see even more engagement, have higher traffic, and so on. I love my blog and I would love to see it grow! I’m hoping to see at least 1,000,000 monthly page views by the end of 2017.
- Start doing more live interviews, such as podcasts and webinars. I’m not as shy as I used to be, but living in an RV and not always having an internet or a reliable schedule makes podcasts and webinars are a little more difficult. I hope to find a way around that (perhaps planning out a better schedule?) and make time for more of these two things.
- Create one more product to sell. This year, I created Making Sense of Affiliate Marketing, and that has completely changed my life and my business. I want to think about and create another product to sell in the next year so that I can continue to diversify my income.
What goals are you hoping to reach? What goal setting tips do you have to share?
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My biggest goal for 2017 is finishing my CFP courses. I’m switching over to in-person classes at a local University to stay motivated. I also really want to take two international trips with credit card rewards points.
Awesome goal. I hope 2017 is great for you!
interesting, thanks for sharing!!!
🙂
Great tips–especially the one about accountability. I find nothing to be more of a kick in the pants than when a friend asks about a goal I told them about. I always have a running list of things I’m working toward, so I don’t typically do beginning of the year resolutions, but I just started a blog so I am hoping to grow readership in the coming year. We’ll see how it goes!
Yes, exactly!
This is such a great motivational post! After reading this I’m going to set my goals in 2017 seen as my travel blog is fairly new! Happy Christmas and New Year! 🙂
Thanks! Glad to help 🙂
I started my blog last year as a way to keep track of our money-saving growth as we try to achieve financial independence. I think it’s really important to document a long term goal so you can see what works and what doesn’t work.
Yes, I agree. Long-term goals are important!
Thanks!
Loving this post. While I don’t usually make resolutions as such, each year I write down what I want to achieve in the year to come in a special book that is only used at that time each year, and then I look at last year’s list and write down what I achieved on that list, as well as those surprise things that I’m proud of and had no idea the year had in store for me.
I’ve yet to sit down and write this year’s one but already know a few special things I’ll be including on that list!
Amanda, that’s a great idea. Love it!
Michelle, I absolutely agree that setting goals is the key to achieving what you want in life. I believe goal setting to be so vital that I put together a 244-page planner for myself that’s focused on achieving goals and financial awareness. I spent so much time and put so much love into the planner that I’ve decided to share it with everyone on my blog. Good luck achieving success with all your goals in 2017 and keep inspiring us!
I hope 2017 is great for you! 🙂
This is a good one, Michelle! I’m sure you already have a course in mind for 2017, but it would be interesting to learn how you converted to RVing full time. I’ll bet there are a lot of people who would pay to cut out some of that learning curve. 🙂
What are some questions you would have for that? I can always create a blog post! 🙂
What were the non-negotiables in choosing an RV (size? slide out? 5th wheel? pull behind?)? How is it traveling with a big dog? Considerations you have to make like wi-fi connection…do you schedule your trips around connection time or wing it? Also, I’m a sucker for “A Day in the Life of” (including nitty gritty details, like dumping blackwater). How do you handle winter, don’t the water lines freeze? What’s the best part? What’s the worst part? What would you do differently? Like that. 😉
These are all great questions. I’ll definitely cover something about this. Thanks so much! 🙂
Cari I love the questions you came up with for Michelle. This would be a great blog to read. I love the Day in the Life idea.
Thanks!
Amber
I set SMART goals in my day job all the time and when I transferred doing that over to our personal finances- huge change! Mad at myself for not doing it sooner! Do you set aside a week to write/batch blog posts and then schedule them out in wordpress? I’ve got to do more of that in 2017! These are great reminders, thanks for sharing!
I just write whenever I’m in the writing mood. Sometimes that’s 10 blog posts a week, and sometimes it’s none 🙂
I’m hoping to grow my blog. I’m also working on creating my own product. I can’t decide between an eBook or a course, or both. I’ll hopefully have that figured out in the next couple of weeks since I have a little time off work before life gets hectic again.
Outside of blogging goals, I’m building on my successes with crushing debt and simplifying life. I’d LOVE to get back to being self-employed, I doubt that will happen this year. I also want to spend more time with my children and my partner, perhaps see a little more of New Zealand by traveling at weekends. So much to do and so little time!
Yes, you should do more weekend traveling 🙂
I don’t normally make New Years resolutions but this year I am. It’s been a very stressful year and I feel like I have fallen behind in a lot of areas due to health and outside interference in 2016 and I’m ready to get back on the horse and make 2017 a year of growth. I’m going to pin your post and use it to help me with my goals. Good luck to you in 2017!
I’m sorry Mindy. I hope 2017 is better 🙂
Getting your blog up to 1,000,000 pageviews per month would be incredible! Good luck with that for this upcoming year.
Thanks!
The first step is SO important. You have to look back and reflect on the previous year before you can plan for the next year. This is why I encourage writing down what you do every day in your digital calendar (I use gCal), so at the end of the year you can evaluate whether you spent your time doing what is in alignment with your values. Then, the next year, you can plan accordingly.
Love your idea!
Great advice! I have written down many of my goals and they meet the SMART criteria! Plus, I’m going to publish blog updates on a few of them, so that will provide accountability!
Great job!