How to Set Goals and Actually Keep Them
Short answer
Most goals fail because they're too big, too vague, and rely on willpower. Set one clear goal, shrink it into a daily action you can't fail, anchor it to an existing habit, and track it gently. Plan for the off days instead of pretending they won't come.
Why most goals quietly die
Every January, gyms fill up and journals get bought. By February, most of it has faded. The standard explanation is a lack of willpower, but that's mostly wrong and not very useful. Goals usually fail for structural reasons: they're too big to start, too vague to act on, and they lean on motivation, which is a feeling that comes and goes.
If you've abandoned goals before, that's not a character flaw — it's a design problem, and design problems can be fixed. The aim here isn't to hype you up; motivation isn't a renewable resource you can summon on demand. It's to build goals that survive the days you don't feel like it, because those are the days that decide everything.
Start with one goal, not ten
Ambition spreads us thin. It feels productive to set five goals at once — exercise, read more, meditate, eat better, sleep earlier — but each competes for the same limited pool of attention, and the whole stack tends to collapse together. One goal at a time isn't a lack of ambition; it's how ambitious people actually get anywhere.
Pick the single change that would make the biggest difference right now and focus on it until it's more or less automatic. A habit that's become second nature barely costs you anything, which frees you to add the next. Stacking goals you can't yet sustain just guarantees you'll drop them all. One kept goal beats five abandoned ones.
Make the goal specific and a little measurable
"Get fit," "be more mindful," "read more" — these aren't goals, they're moods. There's no way to know if you did them today, so there's nothing to actually do. The fix is to make the goal concrete enough that you'd know, at the end of any given day, whether you kept it.
A handy framing is to make goals specific, measurable and time-bound — the bones of the old SMART idea, minus the jargon. "Read more" becomes "read ten pages before bed." "Be mindful" becomes "one short breathing session after lunch." The point of measuring isn't to grade yourself; it's to remove the daily ambiguity that lets a goal slip away unnoticed.
Shrink it until you can't fail
Here's the move that changes everything: make the first version of the goal almost embarrassingly small. Not "meditate for twenty minutes" but "sit down and take three breaths." Not "write a journal entry" but "write one sentence." The goal is to make starting effortless, because starting is the part we resist.
This works for two reasons. A tiny action is hard to talk yourself out of — there's no excuse big enough to skip three breaths. And you almost always do more once you've begun; the three breaths become five minutes. But on a brutal day the floor stays low, the streak survives, and you've kept the identity of someone who shows up. Keep the bar small enough that even your worst day clears it.
Build the habit, not just the goal
Goals are about outcomes; habits are about repetition, and repetition is what gets you to the outcome. The most reliable way to make a new action stick is to anchor it to something you already do without thinking. "After I brush my teeth, I write one line." "After my morning coffee, I do one breathing session."
Your existing routine becomes the reminder, so you're not relying on memory or motivation. It helps to design the environment too — lay out the running shoes, leave the journal on the pillow, put the app on your home screen. We go deeper in our guide to building better habits, but the headline is simple: make the good thing easy to start and friction does half the work for you.
Track it — gently
Tracking a goal makes it real. Marking off a daily action gives you a small, honest record of effort, and that visible progress is quietly motivating. Whether it's a tick in a notebook, a habit-tracker app, or a wall calendar with an X for each day, seeing the chain build makes you want to keep it going.
But tracking has a dark side worth naming. When a streak becomes the point, missing one day can feel like total failure, and that guilt is exactly what makes people quit. We weigh apps on a low-pressure measure for this reason — how gentle and guilt-free they are, with no streak-anxiety or nagging. Track to encourage yourself, not to punish yourself. If your tracker is stressing you out, it's working against you, and you should loosen it or drop it.
Plan for the day you'll want to quit
You will have an off day. You'll be ill, slammed at work, travelling, or just flat. The difference between people who keep goals and people who don't isn't that the first group never misses — it's that they've already decided what missing means before it happens.
Make the rule simple and forgiving: never miss twice. One skipped day is life; two in a row is the start of a worse habit. So if you miss Monday, the only job is to show up Tuesday, however minimally. Decide your fallback in advance — the smallest version you'll still do when everything's gone wrong. A goal with a built-in recovery plan survives reality; one that demands perfection doesn't.
Let the goal change as you do
Goals aren't carved in stone, and treating them that way is a quiet trap. The version you set in week one was a guess made by someone who hadn't started yet. Once you're in it, you'll learn things — the time of day was wrong, the target too steep, the whole goal not what you actually wanted.
Adjusting isn't quitting; it's the difference between a plan and a stubborn promise to your past self. Raise the bar when the small version feels too easy; lower it when life gets heavier; swap the goal entirely if it's stopped mattering. The people who keep goals long-term are flexible enough to keep them relevant, not rigid enough to resent them.
Where apps help — and where they don't
An app can carry the parts of goal-keeping that you'd otherwise forget: the reminder, the streak, the gentle prompt, the quiet record of how far you've come. A good habit-tracker app turns a vague intention into a visible daily action, and that nudge is genuinely useful when motivation dips. Coaching-style apps like The Fabulous go further, walking you through a structured journey rather than leaving you to design one alone.
What an app can't do is care about the goal for you. It can remind you to write, but it can't want the change. So pick a tool that supports your goal without becoming a chore, and don't mistake collecting badges for progress. The app is scaffolding; the goal is yours, and so is showing up. If a tool ever adds more pressure than it removes, it's the wrong tool.
Putting it together
Here's the whole method in one breath: choose one goal; make it specific and measurable; shrink it to a daily action you can't fail; anchor it to a habit you already have; track it gently; never miss twice; and let it evolve as you learn. None of these steps is heroic. That's the point — they're meant to work on ordinary days, not just inspired ones.
Self care apps can hold the structure together, but the engine is the design, not the download. Start small enough that success is almost guaranteed, then quietly raise the bar over weeks, and you'll look up in a few months to find you've become the kind of person who keeps their goals — without ever needing a burst of willpower to do it.
Keep reading
- The best habit tracker apps, reviewed
- The Fabulous review
- How to build better habits
- Do habit apps actually work?
- How to build a self-care routine
- The best self care apps, ranked
FAQ
Why do I keep failing to reach my goals?
Usually it's not willpower — it's that the goal is too big, too vague, or depends on motivation. Shrink it to a daily action you can't fail, make it specific and measurable, and anchor it to an existing habit. Most goals that 'fail' were simply designed in a way that made failing likely.
What's a realistic number of goals to pursue at once?
One, in most cases. Each goal competes for the same limited attention, so stacking several tends to sink all of them. Focus on a single change until it's close to automatic, then add the next. One kept goal beats a handful of abandoned ones.
Can a self care app help me stick to my goals?
It can help with the mechanics — reminders, a gentle streak, a visible record, or a coached journey like The Fabulous offers. What it can't do is want the change for you. Pick a tool that supports your goal without becoming a chore, and choose a gentle one if streak-pressure tends to make you quit.