January often brings renewed interest in routines, but many goals fall apart because they rely almost entirely on motivation. Motivation is inconsistent by nature. What lasts are goals that are specific, manageable and tied to the rhythms of daily life. The most effective changes are the ones you can repeat without needing willpower to carry you through.
What Makes a Goal Last?
Durable goals share three traits:
- A clear action
- A defined time or situation
- A reliable cue that reminds you to do it
This structure lowers the amount of decision-making required. You know what to do, when to do it and what will trigger the behavior.
A Simple Strategy
Try using this structure:
“When I (cue), I will (action) at (time or place).”
Here are a few examples:
- “After I finish lunch, I will walk for 10 minutes before going back to work.”
- “When I start making dinner, I will add one vegetable to the meal.”
- “At 9:30 p.m., when my bedtime alarm goes off, I will dim the lights and put my phone away.”
These goals work because they are tied to real parts of your day like lunch, cooking or bedtime, rather than a vague idea like “walk more” or “eat better.”
Removing Friction
Friction is anything that makes a goal harder to perform. Reducing friction increases the likelihood that the action becomes automatic.
Examples of friction:
- Needing special equipment
- Not knowing where to start
- A cluttered environment
- A long list of steps
Examples of support:
- Keeping walking shoes by the door
- Washing produce in advance
- Filling a water bottle the night before
- Setting one reminder instead of five
A well-designed goal doesn’t require you to “rise to the occasion.” It fits into your existing life and removes barriers wherever possible.
Start Small and Repeat Often
Many people try to overhaul too much at once: new exercise plans, tight schedules, complicated routines. Large changes can feel exciting at first, but they usually create pressure and fade quickly.
A single, well-chosen action practiced daily is far more effective over time. If 10 minutes of walking feels realistic, start there. If adding a vegetable once per day works, stick to that. The goal is repetition, not intensity.
Signs Your Goal Is the Right Size
- You can describe it in one sentence.
- You know exactly when and where it will happen.
- It takes fewer than 5 minutes to begin.
- You don’t need special equipment.
- You can do it even on low-energy days.
- You can imagine doing it every day for a month.
Give Yourself a Narrow Focus
January doesn’t need to be a month of major commitments. Choosing one small goal helps prevent overwhelm and makes it easier to stay consistent. When that habit becomes automatic, you can layer in another.
Conclusion
Clear, repeatable goals work because they rely on structure, not motivation. By defining the action, tying it to a cue and reducing friction, you create a routine that can last beyond the early weeks of the year. One small step done consistently will carry you further than a long list of intentions that never become part of daily life.
By Cassie Story, RD, Nutrition Subject Expert





