Treat 12 weeks as a full year

Replace the distant annual deadline with a 12-week one that creates urgency now.

Why it works

A year-long horizon defers urgency until the final stretch, so most of the year is wasted on a comfortable middle with no deadline pressure. Compressing the cycle to twelve weeks puts a meaningful deadline always within sight, which forces prioritization every week instead of every December.

How to do it

  1. Set a 12-week endpoint and treat it as your "year-end."
  2. Define what success looks like by week 12, in concrete terms.
  3. Re-set a fresh 12-week cycle rather than rolling goals indefinitely.

Evidence

The compression idea rests on well-supported principles that deadlines and time structure improve follow-through; the specific 12-week packaging is Moran’s practitioner framework rather than a separately validated finding. (mechanistic)

Twelve weeks is a chosen unit, not an optimum; the active ingredient is a near, hard deadline, and some goals need longer arcs.

Sources

  • Ariely & Wertenbroch (2002), self-imposed deadlines improve task completion (underlying principle)

Common mistake

Keeping annual thinking inside the 12-week frame — front-loading nothing and assuming there is plenty of time, which recreates the problem the method solves.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you scope a goal into a real 12-week target with a week-12 finish line, so urgency is present from week one.

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