Like many experts in the field of career development, Psychology professor Gail Matthews from Dominican University in California, heard about an often cited study from Yale Business School. The study found that over a 20-year period, people who wrote down their goals earned 10 times more money than those who did not. A survey from Harvard Business School had similar findings.
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While these two studies were often cited in motivational and academic circles, it eventually surfaced that there was no evidence that they actually took place. Yale and Harvard couldn’t even find that data.
Not to be deterred in her efforts to see if there was a connection between writing down goals and achieving them, Matthews conducted her own research.
“The widespread mention of this non-existent study in business circles as well as the need for research into the techniques used by business coaches provided impetus for my current research, which was focused on how goal achievement is influenced by writing goals, committing to goal-directed actions and being accountable for those actions,†said Matthews.
To conduct her research, Matthews recruited a variety of entrepreneurs, attorneys, educators, artists, managers, and other professionals from different parts of the world and broke them into five groups:
- Group 1 was asked to think about their goals
- Group 2 not only had to think about their goals, but they also typed them into a survey
- Group 3 did all of the above and also wrote an action plan for each goal
- Group 4 did all of the above and had to share their commitments with a friend
- Group 5 did the same things but also had to send a friend a weekly progress report
The study looked at outcomes over a 1 month period. When it was complete, Group 1 accomplished 43% of their stated goals.  Group 4 accomplished 64%, Group 5, the most successful accomplished 76%.
“This study provides empirical evidence for the effectiveness of 3 coaching tools:  Accountability, commitment, and writing down one’s goals,†said Matthews.
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