
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Get this episode ad-free when you join TLBC+ today: https://tlbc.co/join
In this episode, we ask a question: Does tracking your goals actually help? Get excited, because this is Tiny Leaps, Big Changes.
Welcome to another episode of Tiny Leaps, Big Changes where I share research-backed strategies you can use, to get more out of your life. My name is Gregg Clunis.
The Research:
In 2016, Benjamin Harkin, Thomas L. Webb, Betty Chang, Andrew Prestwich, Mark Conner, Ian Kellar, Yael Benn, and Paschal Sheeran published a study titled “Does Monitoring Goal Progress Promote Goal Attainment? A Meta-Analysis of the Experimental Evidence”.
The researchers wanted to understand why, “Control theory and other frameworks for understanding self-regulation suggest that monitoring goal progress is a crucial process that intervenes between setting and attaining a goal, and helps to ensure that goals are translated into action. However, the impact of progress monitoring interventions on rates of behavioral performance and goal attainment has yet to be quantified.”
What They Found:
They found, “The present review of 138 interventions designed to promote progress monitoring suggests that (a) it is possible to engender large increases in the frequency of progress monitoring, and (b) increasing progress monitoring engenders a meaningful improvement in rates of behavioral performance and goal attainment. Our conclusion is that progress monitoring has a robust effect on goal attainment and constitutes a key component of effective self regulation”.
Key Takeaways:
Sponsored By:
Blinkist: http://blinkist.com/tinyleaps
Try Quince: https://onequince.com | TINY10
Hosted By: Gregg Clunis | https://www.instagram.com/greggclunis/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/tinyleaps
Twitter: http://twitter.com/tinyleaps
Website: http://tlbc.co/tiny-leaps-big-changes
Reading: Does Monitoring Goal Progress Promote Goal Attainment? (apa.org)
By Gregg Clunis4.3
856856 ratings
Get this episode ad-free when you join TLBC+ today: https://tlbc.co/join
In this episode, we ask a question: Does tracking your goals actually help? Get excited, because this is Tiny Leaps, Big Changes.
Welcome to another episode of Tiny Leaps, Big Changes where I share research-backed strategies you can use, to get more out of your life. My name is Gregg Clunis.
The Research:
In 2016, Benjamin Harkin, Thomas L. Webb, Betty Chang, Andrew Prestwich, Mark Conner, Ian Kellar, Yael Benn, and Paschal Sheeran published a study titled “Does Monitoring Goal Progress Promote Goal Attainment? A Meta-Analysis of the Experimental Evidence”.
The researchers wanted to understand why, “Control theory and other frameworks for understanding self-regulation suggest that monitoring goal progress is a crucial process that intervenes between setting and attaining a goal, and helps to ensure that goals are translated into action. However, the impact of progress monitoring interventions on rates of behavioral performance and goal attainment has yet to be quantified.”
What They Found:
They found, “The present review of 138 interventions designed to promote progress monitoring suggests that (a) it is possible to engender large increases in the frequency of progress monitoring, and (b) increasing progress monitoring engenders a meaningful improvement in rates of behavioral performance and goal attainment. Our conclusion is that progress monitoring has a robust effect on goal attainment and constitutes a key component of effective self regulation”.
Key Takeaways:
Sponsored By:
Blinkist: http://blinkist.com/tinyleaps
Try Quince: https://onequince.com | TINY10
Hosted By: Gregg Clunis | https://www.instagram.com/greggclunis/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/tinyleaps
Twitter: http://twitter.com/tinyleaps
Website: http://tlbc.co/tiny-leaps-big-changes
Reading: Does Monitoring Goal Progress Promote Goal Attainment? (apa.org)

815 Listeners

3,335 Listeners

21,162 Listeners

12,728 Listeners

2,506 Listeners

307 Listeners

1,892 Listeners

615 Listeners

669 Listeners

418 Listeners

27,334 Listeners

14,244 Listeners

1,400 Listeners

917 Listeners

19,819 Listeners