Cayenne Consulting

Resolve: Learn to Stick With It

Resolve for the New Year

There is a strange phenomenon in the second half of each January. Gyms around the world start to empty out. Caffeine, chocolate, and alcohol purchases scale back up. TV binge-watching reaches previously high levels. That’s right, this is the time of year when resolutions start to slip. The best and brightest of intentions lose their luster in the harsh light of reality. Faced with the uphill battle to get healthy, save money, and be a better person, even the strongest willpower crumbles. In fact, only about 8% of people actually achieve their New Year’s goals.

You may be noticing resentment building around the positive, fresh, and exciting goals you had set for yourself and your business mere weeks ago. Or perhaps, after years of realizing the same failed resolution cycle, you have decided to opt out of this year’s ritual. Even if you’re one of the few still standing with the dedication to becoming the best version of yourself and taking your business to new highs, an understanding of the psychology behind goal attainment can help get you past the bumps that may arise in your journey.

First, a moment to validate the resolution concept. It’s easy to regard the resolution concept as passé. Much like a teen who faces a difficult challenge might label the activity as “dumb” to rationalize avoidance, even adults can leverage the art of the eye roll when faced with monumental efforts. However, this time-honored method of evaluation, reflection, and goal setting exists for a reason. Research shows there is something to the “fresh start effect.” There is a drive to break old habits at the beginning of a new time cycle like a new year, a new month, the beginning of a week, after our birthday, etc. Does this matter? According to researcher Katherine Milkman, it does.

Milkman says you can’t hit the home run if you don’t get up to bat. Leveraging the new year as a convenient moment to evaluate, recalibrate, and make changes really does set you up for more success in the long term. We can make the most of these new cycles in two ways. The first is to identify one-time decisions that have a huge impact (e.g. enrolling in 401(k) plans, getting a flu shot, etc.). The second is to take the opportunity to identify the habits we want to make, and leveraging temptation bundling. Let’s take a look at how your business can benefit from each method.

One-Time Decisions

Here are a few one-time decisions you can make that really will have a substantial impact on your business:

Temptation Bundling

Temptation Bundling is a system to help motivate us to perform tasks we dislike. One common example is to only watch your favorite TV show while working out at the gym. Combining something you dislike with something you enjoy means you’re more likely to complete the less desirable tasks. How does this apply to your business? Here are a few ideas:

So the old adage is true, you’ll never win if you never begin. Use the beginning of each new year to identify one-time decisions that will have a long-term impact, and bundle temptations to help motivate you to complete the tough tasks. Let’s make 2018 the best year yet. Cheers to health, happiness, and success in 2018 and beyond!

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