One-minute goals: write them short enough to re-read in a minute
A goal that cannot be stated on a single page is too vague to be evaluated or acted on.
Why it works
Clear, written goals create a shared standard against which both manager and employee can measure performance — without that standard, every conversation about performance is a negotiation about reality rather than a useful evaluation. The one-minute constraint forces clarity: a goal that takes three paragraphs to describe is often actually multiple goals, or a vague aspiration. Clarity creates the psychological condition for honest feedback, because both parties can see what was agreed.
How to do it
- Write each goal on a single sheet of paper (or a single screen): what you are trying to achieve and what good performance looks like in observable terms.
- The employee writes the goals, in their own words, and the manager confirms — not the other way around.
- Limit to three to five goals per person; more than that fragments attention.
- Read the goals once a week — the "one minute" is the literal practice, not the writing.
Evidence
Goal-setting theory (Locke & Latham) is one of the most replicated findings in organizational psychology: specific, challenging goals produce higher performance than vague or "do your best" goals. One-minute goals implement the specificity component. (rct)
Goal-setting theory is robustly evidenced; Blanchard’s specific one-minute format is a practitioner prescription that implements the specificity principle, not a separately validated protocol. The brevity constraint is a useful heuristic, not a studied threshold.
Sources
- Locke & Latham (2002), Building a practically useful theory of goal setting and task motivation, American Psychologist
Common mistake
Writing goals in management jargon that sounds specific ("demonstrate leadership") but is actually evaluated subjectively — the test is whether both parties would independently agree on whether the goal was met.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach helps you write goals that pass the one-minute test — specific enough to be measurable and brief enough to actually be read and re-read, rather than archived after the first discussion.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).