Achieve your goals with these science-backed motivation enhancers.
Setting a goal—anything from getting a degree or landing a new job to achieving a new level of physical fitness—is a big step toward improving your life. But following through to achieve what you set out to accomplish can be challenging, especially on those days when motivation wanes. So how can you follow through on your commitments during those times when you just don’t feel like putting in the work?
Everyone loses motivation from time to time. When you’re feeling unmotivated, try one of these science-backed strategies to get yourself back on track toward your goal.
Put your goal on the calendar.
Make working toward your goal a habit.
Plan for imperfection.
Set small goals to build momentum.
Track your progress.
Reward yourself for the little wins as well as the big ones.
Embrace positive peer pressure.
Practice gratitude (including for yourself).
Do some mood lifting.
Change your environment.
Remember your “why.”
Motivation (and remaining motivated) only sometimes comes easily. When you need a little extra help, consider the above tips can help. Let's take a closer look at each of these self-motivation techniques, including what they are and the science behind them.
One way to increase your internal motivation is to create some external motivation by setting a target date. Whatever it is you’re aiming to accomplish, put it on the calendar. You may be working toward a goal with a set finish date built in. Examples include preparing for a test or taking a course with a fixed end date.
If your goal lacks this structure, you can add it by deciding on a date by which you could realistically achieve your goal.
Want to run a 5k or a marathon? Sign up for a race on or near your target date. Considering a degree? Research the application deadline and write it down. Aiming to learn a new career skill? Register for a course and set a target date to finish.
Having a target date not only helps you stay motivated, it also helps you track your progress—you always know how much further you have to go. This can have a big impact on your performance.
Be realistic when setting your target date, but resist the urge to give yourself more time than you’ll need. Studies show that you sometimes perceive longer goals as more difficult, even when they’re not. This can lead to a greater likelihood of procrastination or quitting [1].
When you make working toward your goal a habit—an automatic conditioned response—you no longer have to rely so much on feeling motivated. How do you turn a behaviour into a habit?
Choose something that you already do every day, like brushing your teeth or eating lunch, to be a trigger for the action you want to make a habit. Write out an “if-then” plan (also known as an implementation intention).
For example, if you want to create a habit of studying for a class daily, your if-then plan might look like this:
If I pour my first cup of coffee, then I will spend five minutes on my maths homework.
To build consistency in exercise, it might look like this:
If I get up and brush my teeth, then I will immediately put on my workout clothes.
Making this plan and committing it to writing could increase the likelihood of following through.
Notice that the above examples do not say that you’ll read six chapters of your textbook, watch two hours of lecture videos, or spend an hour sweating on the treadmill.
Getting started is often the hardest part on low-motivation days, and starting is much easier when the task is small: Five minutes of study or putting on your workout clothes.
These seemingly small actions can prime your mind for the task at hand, so the follow-through—a longer study session or a full workout—can happen more naturally with less mental resistance.
It’s great to feel excited and confident about achieving your goal, but it’s also possible to be too optimistic. Not every day will go exactly as planned, and that’s okay. Life happens.
One way to boost motivation on difficult days is simply to plan for them. As you think about your goal, jot down a list of the things that could get in your way. If you’re taking an online course, this could include:
Losing internet access
Getting a phone call in the middle of a study session
Having a child home sick
Feeling stuck on a difficult concept or assignment
If your goal is to go running every day, some obstacles might include:
Rainy weather
Injury
Illness
Getting asked to stay late at work during the time you usually run
You can’t predict everything that could happen, but you can predict those obstacles that are likely to happen from time to time based on our unique circumstances.
Once you have your list, make a plan for handling the obstacle. How can you plan ahead for when your internet goes out? Maybe you could download a few lecture videos to your phone or computer for offline access, or you could identify a nearby coffee shop that offers free Wi-Fi.
Now when that obstacle pops up, instead of losing motivation and feeling deflated, you have a plan in place to keep the momentum going.
Keep in mind that for some obstacles, missing your task is a perfectly acceptable plan.
Next time you’re setting a goal for yourself, practise the WOOP technique pioneered by Dr. Gabriele Oettingen. This stands for Wish, Outcome, Obstacle, and Plan. What is your wish? What would be the outcome of that wish coming true? What main obstacle stands in your way? What can you do to overcome that obstacle?
“If you want to change the world, start off by making your bed. If you make your bed every morning, you will have accomplished the first task of the day. It will give you a small sense of pride, and it will encourage you to do another task, and another, and another.”
This quote is from United States Naval Admiral William H. McRaven, who gave this advice during his commencement speech at the University of Texas at Austin in 2014. The former Navy SEAL was onto something.
Research shows that frequent small successes can build a sense of momentum that can, in turn, drive long-term success, especially early in the process [2]. Whatever your big goal may be, start by breaking it down into smaller chunks. Getting a new job might be a big goal. Smaller goals could be updating your CV, making a portfolio website, earning a certification, or attending a networking event.
Setting goals at the start of a new week, month, or year can naturally increase motivation. We tend to mentally associate these temporal landmarks with new beginnings while creating mental distance from any perceived shortcomings in our past. Now, that’s what we call a motivational Monday.
Seeing progress can be highly motivating. You’ll find many tools to help you track your goals. This could be as simple as a to-do list or calendar where you can cross off tasks or days as you complete them. Or you might opt for a free tool like Trello, which allows you to create a personalised digital task board to categorise your big goal into daily, weekly, monthly, or even yearly sub-goals.
Another option is to draw a progress bar on a sheet of poster board or paper. Hang it somewhere where you’ll see it regularly, and fill it in as you get closer to your goal.
Sometimes the best goals are SMART goals—specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound.
It feels good to be rewarded for our work. But rewards can also improve motivation and performance. Rewarding yourself for reaching small milestones and completing big goals could boost your interest and enjoyment in the work you’re doing.
These rewards don’t have to be big or cost a lot of money. Check out this quick list of ideas you could use to reward yourself:
Take a short break
Go for a walk outside
Enjoy your favourite snack
Read a chapter of your favourite book
Spend a few minutes meditating
Listen to an episode of your favourite podcast
Plan a night out with friends
Play an online game
Visit a free museum or attraction
Have a long bath or shower
Call a friend or family member
Spend a few minutes making your own reward list so that you’re ready to celebrate your wins, big and small.
You’re ultimately the one who puts in the work to achieve your goals. But other people can be a great motivator.
Feeling like you’re part of a team can boost perseverance, engagement, and performance, even if you’re working alone. Depending on your goal, this might mean joining a study group, running team, gym class, professional organisation, or virtual challenge.
Sharing your goal with someone whose opinion you value can strengthen your commitment to attaining that goal. For work goals, consider sharing with a mentor or supervisor. You might choose to share educational goals with a teacher or academic advisor or fitness goals with a coach or fellow gym member who you admire.
It might seem like gratitude would lead to complacency and acceptance of the status quo. Yet some studies have shown otherwise. Feelings of gratitude can:
Motivate self-improvement
Make us feel connected to others (i.e. part of the team)
Enhance motivation across time, beyond the duration of the gratitude practice
Induce a sense of wanting to give back
Improve physical and mental health, as well as sleep
You can choose more than one way to foster an attitude of gratitude. Spend the first five minutes after you wake up going through all the things you feel grateful for. Better yet, write them down in a gratitude journal. Is there someone in your life you’re particularly grateful for? Write them a letter expressing your thanks.
A good mood has been linked to increased productivity and improvement in both quality and quantity of work. This doesn’t mean that you have to be positive all the time—that’s not realistic. But if you feel sluggish about working toward your goal, a quick mood lift could be enough to get you started.
Need some ideas for how to boost your mood? You could try to:
Spend some time in nature (or at least get some sunlight)
Look at some cute pictures or videos of animals
Watch funny videos on YouTube
Exercise
Adopt an alter ego (i.e. the Batman effect)
Sometimes a change of scenery can help you approach your task with fresh eyes (and a new sense of motivation). This is called the novelty effect—a short-term boost that comes from altering your environment.
If you usually study at home, have a session at your local library. Do you always watch lecture videos on your computer? Try downloading them to your phone to watch outside in the park. Switch up your running route, or try a new exercise routine.
Why is this goal important to you? Why is that reason important to you? Why is that important to you? Keep digging until you get to your ultimate “why”—the core value that’s driving your goal.
To further reinforce your “why,” set an alarm every morning to remind yourself to spend one or two minutes visualising what success would look like. What would it feel like to achieve your goal?
Now that you have more information about getting motivated, ask yourself this: what do you want from your professional path? Use some of the tips above and empower yourself to achieve your career goals, big and small, with Coursera Plus. Get unlimited access to more than 7,000 courses, hands-on projects, and certificate programs to enhance your resume. Get started with a seven-day free trial.
Meng Zhu, Rajesh Bagchi, Stefan J Hock. "The Mere Deadline Effect: Why More Time Might Sabotage Goal Pursuit." Journal of Consumer Research 45, no. 5 (April 2018): 1068-1084. Accessed June 10, 2024.
Seppo E. Iso-Ahola and Charles O. Dotson. "Psychological Momentum—A Key to Continued Success." Frontiers in Psychology 7 (August 2016): 1326. Accessed June 11, 2024.
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