By paying attention to what works, we can translate much of what we understand from sport into a business context. Psychological research demonstrates that difficult, high-level goals prompt superior performance much more successfully than vague ‘do-your-best’ or no goals.
Crucially, many teams fall into the trap of setting the wrong goals without understanding why. So the challenge for executives, like sports coaches, is to understand how the process of goal setting works. And if we can understand more about the processes which lead to poor performance, we are in better shape to address them for next time.
For business, there are some valuable lessons to be gleaned from other performance domains such as sport, where attention paid by top coaches to small details result in significant performance gains.
If outcome goals alone were so effective, we might expect smoking and obesity to be under control in Europe – but, of course, it’s a complex problem. Sustaining commitment at the individual level is about much more than having a cognitive understanding of the ultimate goal. In business settings, managers have to work hard to achieve a common understanding about key goals and the means to achieve them, especially when working with capable people who have strong opinions. Whether working in an individual or team setting, this can be a difficult task and in organisations, worthwhile goals are often sabotaged by a lack of commitment or competing agendas which impair progress.
Legendary athlete turned pundit Michael Johnson, when he failed to qualify for the 200m final at the 1992 Olympics, said: “Sure it was important to me, but to who else? The sun will be out tomorrow and the stars and the moon will be out tonight. It was only a race”.
The story was very different in 1996, where he set a record for the only male athlete ever to win both the 200m and 400m events at the same Olympics.
For goal setting to work, simple clarity about the end point is insufficient. To make progress, people need to be personally motivated beyond the end goal for the process to work. Focus, tenacity and commitment matter a great deal and achieving collective buy-in to move forward is likely to require a great deal of effort and hard work to surface unspoken agendas and expose covert resistance.
The final word should go to Johnson, holder of five Olympic medals and a nine-time World Champion, who says:
“Commitment and preparation are all that make the difference among an arena full of perfect physical specimens”.
Many thanks to Dr Veronica Burke, Programme Director of the BGP, Cranfield School of Management, for this blog content.