When I started applying SMART marketing objectives to organize my workflow and then for two teams of 20 people each, my entire perception of success changed.

SMART goals graphic with a woman holding a compass for direction, pens for writing goals, clock to time-bound, and chess pieces for strategy.

Download your free marketing goal-setting template here. 

As long as I didn‘t set clear goals with reasonable deadlines, I was bogged down in mountains of work, seeming to have no light at the end of the tunnel.

I was extra-achieving, but I didn’t feel it was enough, which led to wrong priorities and piling up tasks in a backlog.

Only after reading books on SMART goals did I realize how amazing clear objectives could be for soaring productivity in less time.

So in this article, I will explain the five dos and don’ts of making a SMART goal, complete with examples and hands-on experience.

In this article:

What are SMART goals?

SMART goals are concrete targets that you aim to hit over a certain period.

These goals should be carefully drafted by a manager and their direct report to set them up for success. “SMART” is an acronym that describes the most important characteristics of each goal.

“SMART” stands for “specific,” “measurable,” “attainable,” “relevant,” and “time-bound.” Each SMART goal should have these five characteristics to ensure the goal can be reached and benefits the employee.

Find out what each characteristic means below and how to write a SMART goal that exemplifies them.

In the working world, the influence of SMART goals continues to grow. The reason why successful marketing teams always hit their numbers is that they also set and write SMART goals.

Research shows that 48% of people who set goals always write them down. It can help you get clear on what you want, stay focused, and track your progress.

Writing goals down turns vague ideas into concrete plans, and, of course, makes them easier to achieve.

48% of goal-setters always write their goals down

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Use this template to follow along and create your own SMART goals.

SMART Goal Acronym

Most trace the SMART acronym back to a 1981 paper by George Doran, “There’s a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management goals and objectives.”

His colleagues Arthur Miller and James Cunningham are also credited for their work on this paper.

The “Objectives” section of this paper asks, “How do you write meaningful objectives?” Then goes on to define the SMART acronym as the following:

  • Specific — target a specific area for improvement.
  • Measurable — quantify or at least suggest an indicator of progress.
  • Assignable — specify who will do it.
  • Realistic — state what results can realistically be achieved, given available resources.
  • Time-related — specify when the result(s) can be achieved.

The meaning of each letter in this acronym can shift based on the user and how they want to apply this framework to their business. You can see the most popular terms and their best-known alternatives below:

SMART goals acronym

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The paper also states that not every goal needs to meet all five criteria. Instead, the goal was to use this acronym to create a benchmark for management excellence.

But today, the SMART acronym usually looks like this:

Measurable goals: Smart goals

SMART goals are:

  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Attainable
  • Relevant
  • Time-bound

This framework continues to be useful because it’s easy to remember and can help streamline the goal-setting process.

I’ll now talk more about each part of the SMART acronym and how you can apply this as you create measurable goals for yourself and your team.

S — Specific

Specific goals are clear and include precise details. Specificity makes your goal easy to understand and carry out.

To check if your goal is specific, I recommend you ask more than one person to review your goal and rephrase what you are trying to do. If your proofreaders come up with more than one idea of your final goal, it isn’t specific enough.

M — Measurable

Measurable goals are targets that you can calculate and track over time. Goals that include a set measurement or metric are more concrete than anecdotal goals or plans based on someone’s opinion.

Measurable goals give you and your team a chance to track progress toward a goal and make changes over time. It also gives you a clear and specific picture of success.

To figure out how to make your goal measurable, look closely at your ultimate goal. Ask yourself:

  • How can we control this goal?
  • Is this goal clear and actionable?
  • Is there anything subjective about this goal?

Then, choose the metrics that most directly connect to your final goal. If you’re not sure which metrics to choose, I think this is a useful guide to KPIs to help you get started.

A — Attainable

Attainable goals are challenging but achievable. This aspect of goal-setting should consider your team’s unique qualities as well as the problems and blockers you work on together.

To set ambitious but attainable goals, start by thinking big. Create a list where you imagine the best possible outcomes.

Take a break for a day or two, then come back and edit your list with every question, challenge, and critique you can think of.

Goals that are too easy to meet won‘t motivate your team or lead to growth. But goals that are unrealistic can demoralize your team and strain resources. It’s important to find the right balance.

“Make your goal ambitious but achievable. Your goal should feel like a little bit of a stretch for you, so you stay motivated. If you set a goal that‘s too easy, you won’t feel inspired to do the work. On the other hand, the goal can’t be impossible, or you will get frustrated.

To find the balance, take into account where you are today and what’s reasonable for you. Given the time and resources available to you, what is a goal that feels like a little bit of a stretch?” – Bernard Marr, CEO and Founder of Bernard Marr’s Wine Cellar.

R — Relevant

Relevant goals support the mission, vision, and priorities of your business.

Start the goal and objective-setting process with a quick review to ensure that your SMART goals connect to your business goals.

I suggest reading through your company’s mission and vision statements, or print and post them on the wall in a shared space. Then review quarterly business reports, recent memos, or any recent communication about business goals.

This will mean you start the process with what’s relevant at the top of your mind.

After you draft your SMART goals, do another quick scan of these documents and review your goals for relevance.

It‘s easy to get excited about a new idea, even if it doesn’t align with company priorities. But the best ideas will support your most essential business goals.

T — Time-Bound

Time-bound goals have a specific deadline or timeframe. In my experience, without deadlines, assignments are uncompleted, and processes stagnate.

Human nature always seeks comfort and procrastination. Deadlines hold us accountable and pinpoint the lack of resources, knowledge, or other hurdles in a timely manner.

Also, adding a time constraint to your goal creates a sense of urgency.

Urgency combines importance with a need for action. This is sometimes because there‘s a fear of consequences. Other times employees feel it because they’re eager to prepare for the future or meet an exciting goal.

Time constraints are important to your goal-setting process. Tasks that are time-sensitive often feel more important than tasks without a timeframe attached.

This means that, no matter how essential a project is, it will drop in priority without a deadline.

Luckily, it’s easy to create a feeling of urgency. Just add a realistic timeframe to your goal. I find that time-bound goals also set clear expectations for stakeholders, which improves communication.

Why are SMART goals important?

SMART goals are important to set as they:

When you set specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-bound goals, you increase your odds of success by verifying that the goal is achievable, identifying the metrics that define success, and creating a roadmap to reach those metrics.

If your goals are abstract, if you don‘t know what it will take to achieve success, or if you don’t give yourself a deadline to complete steps, you may lose focus and fall short of what you want to accomplish.

Do SMART goals actually work?

In short — yes, if done correctly.

I polled roughly 300 participants in the U.S. and found that 52% believe SMART goals help them achieve their goals more often than if they didn’t use a SMART framework.

SMART goals statistic showing people believe SMART goals work

Setting unrealistic goals and trying to measure them without consideration of previous performance, overly short time frames, or including too many variables will lead you off course.

My experience shows how it works (and fails) in practice.

Prior to starting work with the District #1 Charitable Foundation, I drafted a consultant proposal that outlined services by priority, timeframe, and OKRs.

The purpose was to find and attract new donors for livelihood and development projects for people affected by the war in Ukraine.

Having extensive experience in cold and outbound sales for tech startups, I considered it possible to engage 15 new partners in the conversation in under three months from the database I’d built.

I misjudged the resources needed and the time required to build genuine relationships. As a result, I couldn’t finish all the work within the planned hours.

However, I did manage to establish connections with seven new partners, sign one contract, and attain several memorandums.

That said, I fell short of the desired 15 meetings but succeeded in building long-lasting partnerships.

Why am I telling you all this?

Well, even if your SMART goal doesn’t work out to the fullest, it will bring other positive outcomes or at least valuable lessons for the future. If you encounter failure, don’t give up on this approach just because of one setback.

And here’s how I set realistic goals.

First, I start from the top down, where I state my final and biggest goal. Then, I break down the process to achieve the goal through subsequent steps and tasks. Once I get to the bottom and my first task, I run it through the SMART methodology. Taking that, I do the following:

Let’s now discuss the data-backed benefits of SMART goals.

Benefits of SMART Goals

Offer Focus and Clarity

The process of goal completion is often more complicated than it seems. Distractions, side tasks, and other projects can all steer you away from completing your projects.

But SMART goals improve focus because they simplify the to-do list and offer an immediate reminder of why those specific tasks are important.

Boost Motivation

It’s not unusual to experience stress or be overwhelmed in the workplace. One contributor is often a lack of clear goals. And that combination can make a serious impact on your motivation.

But a SMART goal can boost energy, improve direction, and motivate you and your team because:

But, even with SMART goals, motivation levels can drop — sometimes really low. And it’s completely normal. We’re only humans after all. 🙂

Blending freelance writing with part-time work at a charitable fund can be draining. When this happens, here’s how I handle it — I focus on what I enjoy, excel at, and learn from.

When I feel overwhelmed, I pause to remind myself why I do it and what I gain. If I stepped back, would I pivot? The answer is no.

Motivation drives me, so I rely on precise goal setting and tracking to reach new heights, improve the quality of my work, and open more doors.

Improve Accountability

Fear of failure often stops people from doing their best work. To avoid this stressor, you might avoid making a commitment in the workplace.

But accountability is essential for high-growth teams. It helps you and your team engage, take ownership of your work, and take responsibility for progress.

In my experience, SMART goals improve accountability because they give teams and managers a simple way to track progress toward shared objectives.

This makes it easier for teams to understand the learning, coaching, and feedback they need to optimize performance.

According to Persuasion Nation research, people who submit weekly accountability reports tend to achieve 40% more than those who don’t.

Committing to your goals with these reports can really boost your chances of success. Weekly reports help you build a routine and reflect on your progress.

That’s how you get a clear view of what’s working and where you might need to adjust.

Persuasion Nation report on how SMART marketing objectives help you achieve your goals

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Strengthen Communication

According to 2023 data from Project.co, 68% of businesspeople have wasted time due to communication issues.

And only 7% of businesses rate their communication as “excellent.”

Clearly, effective communication is both difficult and essential to any business.

SMART goals help with effective communication. This is because they’re goals that multiple coworkers, teams, and departments can quickly understand. This improves knowledge-sharing, collaborative efforts, and communication.

Help Manage Resources

Proper resource management can reduce costs, make processes more efficient, and increase productivity. But managing resources is tough.

Put simply, a business is a group of people, each with distinct knowledge and experience, working toward individual goals.

These individual goals eventually come together to meet common goals, but in the process, things can get a little wonky.

But SMART goals are great for resource management. This is because they offer a structure that makes it easier for teams to see where a process is creating blocks or challenges.

I’ve found this helps teams understand when priorities and resources are out of sync. It also creates a shared purpose that can inspire people to make necessary but difficult changes.

Increase Innovation

Innovation is a process that combines creativity and problem-solving skills to get original ideas. You may have heard the common belief that creativity requires a lack of boundaries.

And some critiques of SMART goals say that they can have negative impacts if goal-setting is too rigid or narrowly defined.

But there’s extensive data, including this research from Harvard Business Review, that says constraints often positively impact innovation. SMART goals boost innovation because they create motivational challenges.

The motivation comes in part from the constraints teams need to work within.

Planning to create goals for the week, month, quarter, or year? Use this template to simplify the process of setting, calculating, and evaluating your SMART goals.

Enhance Performance

For managers, SMART goals offer a useful framework for improving employee performance. They make progress toward project goals clear.

This goal-setting framework can also apply to long-term personal goals for each member of your team.

For individuals, SMART goals can make it easier to balance and track work projects. I’ve found they can boost performance because they help you:

  • Measure progress.
  • Identify strengths and weaknesses.
  • Build positive momentum.

Setting and working toward SMART goals can also help you develop new behaviors that can improve performance.

So now, it’s time to examine some realistic examples of SMART goals to better understand them.

1. Blog Traffic Goal

smart marketing objective example on blog traffic

2. Facebook Video Views Goal

3. Email Subscription Goal

4. Webinar Sign-Up Goal

smart marketing goal example on webinar sign-ups

5. Landing Page Performance Goal

6. Link-Building Strategy Goal

7. Reducing Churn Rate Goal

8. Brand Affinity Goal

9. Podcast Listener Count Goal

10. In-Person Event Attendee Goal

  • Specific: I want to boost attendance at our upcoming in-person event by 50% by sending out three email reminders to our subscriber lists each week before the event.
  • Measurable: Our goal is a 50% increase in attendees.
  • Attainable: Our attendee number increased by 20% last year when we sent out one email reminder to our subscriber lists.
  • Relevant: By increasing attendee count, we’ll increase brand loyalty by providing value to our existing customers and generate more leads.
  • Time-Bound: August 30.
  • SMART Goal: By the time of our event on August 30th, our attendee number will increase by 50% from where it’s at now (250 attendees), by sending out three email reminders to our subscriber lists.

Now that you’ve seen examples of SMART goals, let’s dive into how to make your own.

How to make a SMART goal: Do’s and Don’ts

1. Use specific wording.

When writing SMART goals, keep in mind that they are “specific” in that there‘s a hard and fast destination the employee is trying to reach.

“Get better at my job” isn’t a SMART goal because it isn’t specific.

Instead, I suggest you ask yourself: What are you getting better at? How much better do you want to get?

If you’re a marketing professional, your job probably revolves around key performance indicators (KPIs). Therefore, you might choose a particular KPI or metric that you want to improve on — like visitors, leads, or customers.

You should also identify the team members working toward this goal, the resources they have, and their plan of action.

In practice, a specific SMART goal might say, “Clifford and Braden will increase the blog’s traffic from email…” You know exactly who‘s involved and what you’re trying to improve on.

Common SMART Goal Mistake: Vagueness

While you may need to keep some goals more open-ended, you should avoid vagueness that could confuse your team later on.

For example, instead of saying, “Clifford will boost email marketing experiences,” say “Clifford will boost email marketing click rates by 10%.”

2. Include measurable goals.

SMART goals should be “measurable” in that you can track and quantify the goal‘s progress. “Increase the blog’s traffic from email,” by itself, isn‘t a SMART goal because you can’t measure the increase.

Instead, ask yourself: How much email marketing traffic should you strive for?

In my experience, if you want to gauge your team’s progress, you need to quantify your goals, like achieving an X-percentage increase in visitors, leads, or customers.

Let‘s build on the SMART goal we stated above. Now, our measurable SMART goal might say, “Clifford and Braden will increase the blog’s traffic from email by 25% more sessions per month… ” You know what you’re increasing, and by how much.

Common SMART Goal Mistake: No KPIs

This is in the same vein as avoiding vagueness. While you might need qualitative or open-ended evidence to prove your success, you should still come up with a quantifiable KPI.

For example, instead of saying, “Customer service will improve customer happiness,” say, “We want the average call satisfaction score from customers to be a seven out of ten or higher.”

3. Aim for realistically attainable goals.

An “attainable” SMART goal considers the employee’s ability to achieve it. Make sure that the X-percentage increase is rooted in reality.

If your blog traffic increased by 5% last month, try to increase it by 8-10% this month, rather than a lofty 25%.

I think it‘s crucial to base your goals on your own analytics, not industry benchmarks, or else you might bite off more than you can chew.

So, let’s add some “attainability” to the SMART goal we created earlier in this blog post: “Clifford and Braden will increase the blog’s traffic from email by 8-10% more sessions per month… ” This way, you’re not setting yourself up to fail.

Common SMART Goal Mistake: Unattainable Goals

Yes. You should always aim to improve. But reaching for completely unattainable goals may knock you off course and make it harder to track progress.

Rather than saying, “We want to make 10,000% of what we made in 2022,” consider something more attainable, like, “We want to increase sales by 150% this year,” or “We have a quarterly goal to reach a 20% year-over-year sales increase.”

4. Pick relevant goals that relate to your business.

SMART goals that are “relevant” relate to your company‘s overall business goals and account for current trends in your industry.

For instance, will growing your traffic from email lead to more revenue?

And, is it actually possible for you to significantly boost your blog’s email traffic, given your current email marketing campaigns?

If you’re aware of these factors, you’re more likely to set goals that benefit your company — not just you or your department.

So, what does that do to our SMART goal? It might encourage you to adjust the metric you‘re using to track the goal’s progress.

For example, maybe your business has historically relied on organic traffic to generate leads and revenue, and research suggests you can generate more qualified leads this way.

Our SMART goal might instead say, “Clifford and Braden will increase the blog’s organic traffic by 8-10% more sessions per month.” This way, your traffic increase is aligned with the business’s revenue stream.

Common SMART Goal Mistake: Losing Sight of the Company

When your company is doing well, I know it can be easy to say you want to pivot or grow in another direction. While companies can successfully do this, you don’t want your team to lose sight of how the core of your business works.

Rather than saying, “We want to start a new B2B business on top of our B2C business,” say something like, “We want to continue increasing B2C sales while researching the impact our products could have on the B2B space in the next year.”

5. Make goals time-bound by including a timeframe and deadline information.

A “time-bound” SMART goal keeps you on schedule.

Improving on a goal is great, but not if it takes too long. Attaching deadlines to your goals puts a healthy dose of pressure on your team to accomplish them.

I’ve found this helps me make consistent and significant progress in the long term.

For example, which would you prefer: increasing organic traffic by 5% every month, leading to a 30-35% increase in half a year? Or trying to increase traffic by 15% with no deadline and achieving that goal in the same timeframe?

If you picked the former, you’re right.

So, what does our SMART goal look like once we bind it to a timeframe?

“Over the next three months, Clifford and Braden will work to increase the blog’s organic traffic by 8-10%, reaching a total of 50,000 organic sessions by the end of August.”

As Frederik Binow, CEO at Walor, says, achieving goals is most effective when you set ambitious deadlines for yourself and your team. Without deadlines, tasks often lack specificity, leading to a decrease in motivation and urgency.

Deadlines serve as a motivating force and push individuals to overcome personal barriers through teamwork and determination.

And by consistently raising the bar, we foster a mindset where more goals seem attainable. In short, deadlines drive action and personal growth.

Common SMART Goal Mistake: No Time Frame

Having no timeframe or a really broad span of time noted in your goal will cause the effort to get reprioritized or make it hard for you to see if your team is on track.

Rather than saying, “This year, we want to launch a major campaign,” say, “In quarter one, we will focus on campaign production in order to launch the campaign in quarter two.”

Make Your SMART Goals SMART-er

Now that you know what a SMART goal is, why it‘s important, and the framework to create one, it’s time to put that information into practice.

Whether you‘re setting goals for a personal achievement or as part of hitting important marketing milestones, it’s good to start with what you want to achieve and then reverse-engineer it into a concrete SMART goal.

What I consider very important about setting goals is not to push yourself too hard. Don’t set limits beyond your capabilities.

Yes, we want to step out of our comfort zones, but that doesn’t mean we should destroy ourselves mentally and physically.

And worst of all, if you don’t achieve that goal in the end, it will eat you up inside.

This happened to me, and that’s why I’m trying to explain it to everyone now. Set your goals step by step. Don’t look for shortcuts. It doesn’t work that way.

Step by step. Realistic goals. Smart expectations. And, if things don’t go as planned, see it as a chance to learn from your mistakes.

Editor’s note: This post was originally published in December 2019 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.



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