The Morning Questions

How does Marshall Goldsmith’s morning questions practice build self-awareness and daily accountability?

Marshall Goldsmith’s morning questions are a daily active question routine in which you score yourself each morning on whether you "did your best" to pursue specific values-based commitments the previous day. The practice reframes self-monitoring from passive measurement ("how did X go?") to active responsibility ("did I try?"), which research on active questions suggests produces greater engagement and honest self-assessment. The evidence base is practitioner-clinical; large-scale trials are limited.

Marshall Goldsmith, one of the most recognized executive coaches, developed the morning questions practice as a response to a central coaching paradox: people know what to do but do not do it. The solution is not more information but daily active self-questioning — asking "did I try my best?" rather than "how did it go?" The daily score creates a lightweight feedback loop that makes values-based intentions visible day after day. The practices below extend and operationalize Goldsmith’s framework across the full self-awareness use case.

Practices

Reframe passive questions as active questions

Ask "did I do my best to...?" rather than "how was my...?" — the word "try" changes what the question measures.

Design a personal question list that matches your current growth goals

Build a short list of active questions that track the behaviors most relevant to your life right now — not a fixed template.

The daily scoring ritual

Score each question at the same time each day — consistency matters more than perfect accuracy.

Weekly trend analysis from daily scores

Review your scores at the end of each week to spot patterns rather than reacting to single-day noise.

Sharing scores with an accountability partner

Send your daily scores to someone — the act of disclosure meaningfully increases follow-through.

Graduating a question when the behavior becomes automatic

Retire a question from the list when it scores consistently 8 or above — mastery earned is bandwidth freed.

Include a happiness question — not as an outcome goal but as a signal

Add "Did I do my best to be happy today?" to the list — not as a target, but as a daily quality-of-life sensor.

Practice this with IX Coach

Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.

Practice this with IX Coach

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