Build the life you want: The goal-setting system that actually works

New Year’s resolutions fail for one simple reason: they’re vague. “Get fitter.” “Be less stressed.” “Spend more time outdoors.” They sound good, but they rarely survive past February.

Goals, on the other hand, work — when you link them to measurable actions. A resolution can be a goal, but only if you build an action plan behind it.

One simple way to do this is a lightweight version of the Pyramid Goal Setting Model. It breaks a goal into three layers:

  1. Goal (Vision) — the broad thing you want

  2. Embodiment — what life looks like if you’re living that goal

  3. Actions — the specific behaviours that make the embodiment real

Let’s take the classic example: Get into better shape.

Example

Goal Embodiment Actions
Get into better shape
  • Regular gym visits
  • Look better in the mirror
  • More stamina, less aches and pains
  • Join gym
  • Workout 2× per week (100×/year) for ≥20 minutes

Print your goals and keep them visible — fridge, desk, office wall. As soon as you join the gym, cross it off. Then tick off every workout over 20 minutes. It’s simple, and it works.

The key is realistic action targets. Don’t commit to seven gym days a week. Start with something you can hit — and exceed. At year‑end, review your actions, then look at the embodiment. Did your behaviour create the life you described? If yes, you achieved the goal. If not, you’ve learned which levers weren’t effective.

When the actions don’t deliver — and why that’s okay

A few years ago, I set this goal:

Goal Embodiment Actions
Be calmer at work in stressful moments
  • Pause before responding to challenging statements from a colleague
  • Try to understand why you are in a situation before purely reacting
  • Pick battles small enough to win and big enough to matter
  • Review online tutorial on managing stress at work
  • 200 ten‑minute mindfulness meditations

I hit every action metric — but I still didn’t feel calmer in tough moments. That reflection was valuable. It told me the actions weren’t the right ones. That insight led me to work with a leadership coach, which made a far bigger difference.

Goals don’t need to start in January

You can set goals anytime. But the start of the year often gives you the mental space to reflect. Throughout the year, keep a running list in Microsoft To Do or Google Tasks of potential goals. When December rolls around, you’ll already have a shortlist.

Next Steps

  • Identify 2–3 goals for the year (personal or professional).

  • Define what “embodying” each goal looks like.

  • List the specific actions that would make that embodiment real.

  • Print the sheet and keep it somewhere visible.

  • Track your action metrics throughout the year.

More examples from past years

Goal Embodiment Actions
Take better advantage of the outdoor offerings in my local area
  • I will know the good hiking areas and be able to recommend to others based on difficulty
  • Better awareness of the great places nearby to have some outdoor fun (hiking, camping, kayaking, etc.)
  • Go on 3 hikes
  • Camp 2 nights
  • Find a local outdoors club and participate in at least 1 group event
Become a better surfer
  • Reliable pop up
  • Better turns
  • More confidence in larger surf
  • Buy surfskate (for turns practice)
  • Find a turns drill on YouTube
  • Complete turns drill 10 times
  • Identify a pop-up and breathwork workout
  • Complete pop-up and breathwork workout 10 times
  • Surf 30 times
  • Stretch: Sign up for a surf lesson
Be a more connected friend
  • Regular contact with my closest friends
  • Semi-regular contact, but a proactive communicator with old friends I don't see much
  • 1×/week: contact a close friend to check in (52 times)
  • 1×/week: message an old friend to see how they are doing (52 times)

Small, achievable actions compound. Some take ten minutes. But they move you forward — and that momentum is what makes the year feel meaningful.