How to Actually Crush Your 2026 Goals (Evidence-Based)

AAli Abdaal
경영/리더십창업/스타트업정신 건강

Transcript

00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the channel.
00:00:01In this video, we are talking about the GPS method
00:00:04that will drastically improve your chances
00:00:06of achieving literally any goal that you set your mind to.
00:00:09So it contains a bunch of evidence-based insights
00:00:11that have been combined
00:00:12into this fairly easy to follow system
00:00:14that's completely free
00:00:15and takes like somewhere between five and 10 minutes
00:00:17to actually do.
00:00:18So whether you wanna build a business or you wanna get fit
00:00:20or you wanna find the love of your life
00:00:22or you have goals in literally any other area of life,
00:00:24if you follow the GPS method,
00:00:26you are just way more likely to achieve that goal.
00:00:28And by the way, if you're new here,
00:00:29hello, my name is Ali, I'm a doctor turned entrepreneur
00:00:31and author of the New York Times bestseller,
00:00:33Feel Good Productivity.
00:00:34These days, my main gig is that I'm the co-founder
00:00:36of Sparkle Studios,
00:00:37which is a sort of app development company
00:00:39where we're building productivity apps
00:00:40that we wish existed in the world.
00:00:42And on the side, I've been making YouTube videos since 2017,
00:00:45documenting my journey from medical student to doctor
00:00:47to entrepreneur and author,
00:00:48and sharing the books and ideas and strategies and tools
00:00:51that can help us build a life that we love.
00:00:53So if that sounds good,
00:00:54you might like to consider subscribing if you like.
00:01:00(gentle music)
00:01:02So before we dive into the GPS system,
00:01:04there is one key piece of theory
00:01:06that this entire system is based around.
00:01:08Now, this might sound obvious,
00:01:13but it's surprisingly powerful,
00:01:15which is that every goal you wanna accomplish
00:01:17is merely a series of tasks or actions that you do.
00:01:21So if you are not accomplishing your goals,
00:01:23you are simply not doing the things
00:01:25that it would take you to accomplish your goals.
00:01:27Like if you didn't need to do stuff,
00:01:29then your goal would just happen automatically.
00:01:31And the reason it hasn't happened yet
00:01:33is because you are not doing the right things.
00:01:35And that is either that you don't know
00:01:36what the right things are to do,
00:01:38or you do know what the right things to do are,
00:01:42but you're not actually doing them.
00:01:43And pretty much all of goal achievement,
00:01:46all of the evidence around it
00:01:47can basically be summed down to those things.
00:01:49What is the goal?
00:01:50What are the actions that are actually gonna get you there?
00:01:52And then how do you get yourself to actually do those things?
00:01:55And it's this concept,
00:01:56these three concepts that the GPS system is based around.
00:01:58Like for example, let's say I wanted to get fit
00:02:00and that was my goal for whatever reason.
00:02:02In order to get fit, I have to do a series of actions
00:02:04like eating healthily and hitting the gym
00:02:06and doing some cardio, all of that kind of stuff.
00:02:08If I wanted to start a business,
00:02:09there would be a series of actions like figuring out my idea
00:02:12and like coming up with a product
00:02:13and finding people to buy it.
00:02:15And so the whole idea behind the GPS system
00:02:16is that we are breaking down these three components
00:02:18into an actionable system with a nice acronym
00:02:22that we can use firstly,
00:02:23to actually achieve the goals that we set.
00:02:25And secondly, as a diagnostic tool,
00:02:27where if we are struggling with something,
00:02:29we can just run it through the GPS system
00:02:31and then we'll see exactly why we are struggling.
00:02:33Great, so having established that,
00:02:35let's actually talk about the GPS system.
00:02:37Now the GPS system stands for goal, plan and system.
00:02:43And within each of the components of goal, plan and system,
00:02:48there are three factors or three things
00:02:51that we wanna be considering.
00:02:52This might sound like a lot,
00:02:53but literally it takes less than 10 minutes per goal
00:02:55that you set, maybe even five minutes
00:02:57to like figure out like the three components
00:02:59of the GPS system.
00:03:00And if you just follow the system,
00:03:02you are drastically more likely
00:03:03to actually achieve the goals that you set.
00:03:05All right, so let's start with component number one,
00:03:10which is the goal.
00:03:11Now, when it comes to setting the goal in the first place,
00:03:15there are two broad mistakes people make.
00:03:17Mistake number one is not being clear or specific
00:03:20or concrete enough about what the goal actually is.
00:03:23What is the thing you actually want to do?
00:03:25Things I hear a lot when I do events
00:03:26is like someone will set the goal
00:03:27that they want to stop procrastinating.
00:03:29It's like, okay,
00:03:30but what does stop procrastinating actually mean?
00:03:32You've probably tried to set the goal
00:03:33of stop procrastinating for a decade and it hasn't succeeded.
00:03:36So there's like something going wrong here.
00:03:38Similarly, I speak to people who say that their goal
00:03:40is to start a YouTube channel.
00:03:41But like right now you could go on youtube.com,
00:03:43you could click new channel and congratulations,
00:03:45you've started a YouTube channel.
00:03:46Have you accomplished the goal?
00:03:48Well, probably not because when you say
00:03:49start a YouTube channel,
00:03:50you actually probably mean some things other than that,
00:03:53but like you haven't yet taken the time
00:03:54to get specific and concrete about what you actually mean
00:03:57by that particular goal.
00:03:58So the way we avoid this mistake
00:04:00is by getting really specific
00:04:02on what are we actually trying to do.
00:04:04And the trick here is in the specificity.
00:04:06It is so much easier to work towards a specific
00:04:09and concrete goal compared to a vague or an abstract one.
00:04:12I often hear people say, you know,
00:04:13I want to start a business
00:04:14or I want to start a lifestyle business
00:04:15because I want financial freedom.
00:04:16I'm like, okay, that's great.
00:04:18But that's a very vague abstract goal.
00:04:20Start a business for financial freedom.
00:04:21It's like, what does financial freedom mean?
00:04:22Like how much money are we talking?
00:04:23And starting a business that makes you 100 grand a year
00:04:26or 500 grand or a million a year
00:04:27is very different than starting a business
00:04:29that you can sell for $300 million.
00:04:30Like those approaches require drastically different paths.
00:04:33And both of them could be a business
00:04:34that gets you to financial freedom.
00:04:36So what actually is the thing that we are going after?
00:04:38The second big mistake people make when it comes to goals
00:04:41is choosing goals that are not emotionally compelling enough.
00:04:44You really need to understand
00:04:46why do you care about the goal?
00:04:48A lot of us choose goals from a sense of should
00:04:50or a sense of obligation.
00:04:52Oh, I really should take care of my health.
00:04:54I really should do that thing because like, you know,
00:04:56society or parents or what people will think
00:04:59or, you know, all of that kind of stuff.
00:05:01But in general, it is so much easier to achieve a goal
00:05:04if you have some compelling reasons
00:05:06as to why you care about actually achieving that goal.
00:05:09Ideally, those reasons would be intrinsically motivated,
00:05:12not just extrinsically motivated.
00:05:14Again, the evidence on this is clear.
00:05:15People who follow goals for extrinsic purposes
00:05:18like fame or money or status or, you know, that kind of stuff.
00:05:21A, you're a lot less likely to actually hit those goals,
00:05:23but B, you are also less likely to enjoy
00:05:25the process of hitting those goals.
00:05:26So we wanna get clear on why.
00:05:27Why do we care about the specific thing?
00:05:30And then the third component of the G component of GPS
00:05:33is what are your anti-goals?
00:05:35What are the things you want to avoid
00:05:37on route to achieving your goal?
00:05:39Like let's say your goal was, I don't know,
00:05:41to build a $100,000 a year lifestyle business
00:05:44in the next 12 months.
00:05:45That would be a reasonable goal.
00:05:46It's quite specific.
00:05:47Maybe a reason why is because you really want time freedom.
00:05:49You want the autonomy to be able to control your time
00:05:51to be able to pick your kids up from school.
00:05:53That's a reasonable why behind it.
00:05:54And you might set the anti-goal,
00:05:56like along the route to building this business,
00:05:58I don't want to have to work on the weekends.
00:06:01I don't want to have to work more than 40 hours a week.
00:06:03These are all good constraints that you can set on yourself
00:06:06because it's not just about achieving our goals.
00:06:08It's about achieving our goals without like torpedoing
00:06:10the other aspects of our life.
00:06:11What specifically is the goal?
00:06:13Why do you actually care about achieving it?
00:06:14What are your reasons?
00:06:15And what are the anti-goals or constraints?
00:06:17What are the things you want to avoid on route to achieving
00:06:20the goal?
00:06:20And here are some examples of this in action.
00:06:22So for example, for me, one of my health goals
00:06:24is I want to reduce my visceral fat levels by 50%.
00:06:28That is the what, it's specific.
00:06:29It's tied to a number.
00:06:30In general, whenever you can put a number on your goal,
00:06:33it makes it, that's a hack for like getting more specific
00:06:36and like quantifiable and clear about what you're actually
00:06:38trying to do.
00:06:39Why do I want to decrease my visceral fat levels?
00:06:40Well, I recently became a father
00:06:42and I would like to not die of a heart attack,
00:06:44particularly soon.
00:06:44And visceral fat levels are like the things
00:06:46that like directly contribute to your risk of a heart attack
00:06:49or a stroke or something.
00:06:50And I have a family history of heart disease.
00:06:51And thanks to my poor South Asian genetics,
00:06:53even though I don't look that fat,
00:06:55like I actually have quite a lot of visceral fat
00:06:57in my abdomen according to DEXA scans that I've done.
00:06:59And so really I would like to be around for my wife and child
00:07:02and hopefully future children without dropping dead
00:07:03of a myocardial infarction overly soon.
00:07:05And then in terms of anti-goals, things I want to avoid.
00:07:08Yes, I want to reduce my visceral fat levels,
00:07:09but I don't want the process to eat into the time
00:07:12that I spend with my wife and my daughter.
00:07:14So I don't really want to be going on runs in the evenings
00:07:16for example, because that's like family time.
00:07:18And on screen, we will put some other examples of goals.
00:07:20This for example, is the goal for getting a girlfriend
00:07:22and the what, why and anti-goals
00:07:24that you might choose in that context.
00:07:26And this for example,
00:07:27might be the goal to start your lifestyle business.
00:07:29So the what, the why and the anti-goals associated with that.
00:07:31And of course, you are very welcome to pause the video
00:07:33if you'd like to look at these examples in a bit more detail.
00:07:36Oh, by the way, if you're watching this video,
00:07:37then maybe one of your goals
00:07:38is to grow your social media presence.
00:07:40And that is where the sponsor of this video comes in.
00:07:42And that is Many Chat.
00:07:43And Many Chat is a platform
00:07:45that basically helps you create automations on social media.
00:07:47So for example, you might've seen on my Instagram
00:07:49or on other people's Instagram,
00:07:51the whole thing around comment the word book
00:07:54and I'll send you a link to my book
00:07:55or comment the word guide
00:07:56and I'll send you a link to my guide.
00:07:58Usually the book or the guide or whatever the thing is,
00:08:00those are lead magnets that are capturing emails
00:08:02so that we as the business owners
00:08:04can then connect with our audience
00:08:05on a platform that's not social media
00:08:07because then we get the email address.
00:08:08Now obviously doing this stuff manually
00:08:10would take a lot of time,
00:08:11especially if you have a big audience.
00:08:12But what Many Chat does
00:08:13is that it is a meta approved automation platform
00:08:16that makes it super easy to create automations
00:08:18so that when someone triggers a particular keyword,
00:08:20you can then define a series of actions
00:08:22that are gonna happen next
00:08:23and you can do really cool stuff with it.
00:08:24So for example, on my Instagram,
00:08:26if you comment the word Angus on any of my posts,
00:08:28then you might get a little Easter egg.
00:08:30You can use Many Chat to create DM automation.
00:08:32So if someone DMs you a particular word,
00:08:34you can almost like create like a little quiz funnel
00:08:36and do an automated chat qualification process
00:08:38for them if you want.
00:08:39And of course you can use Many Chat for things like
00:08:41if someone comments a particular word on a video,
00:08:43you could send them to some kind of resource or lead magnet
00:08:45or to book a call or for whatever the thing
00:08:47that your business does.
00:08:47So if you would like to grow your audience
00:08:49and find a meaningful and automatic way
00:08:51to connect with them, then check out Many Chat.
00:08:53There's gonna be a link in the video description.
00:08:55So thank you so much Many Chat for sponsoring this video
00:08:56and let's get back to it.
00:08:58Okay, so having established our goal,
00:09:02the next thing we wanna do
00:09:03is we wanna figure out what is the plan.
00:09:06Now there is a fascinating debate
00:09:08that goes on in the world of personal development
00:09:11in the realm of goal setting.
00:09:12And that is about the importance of goals versus systems.
00:09:15So you've got the systems camp,
00:09:17which was popularized by James Clear
00:09:19and his wonderful book, "Atomic Habits."
00:09:20And the general vibe that people took away from that
00:09:22is that you don't need to worry too much about the goals.
00:09:25What matters is the system.
00:09:26Like the system is sort of like the daily habits.
00:09:28The example he used in the book, I think was that everyone
00:09:31who runs the 100 meter sprint in the Olympics,
00:09:33they all have the goal of winning a gold medal,
00:09:35but obviously not all of them can win the gold medal.
00:09:37And generally the person who wins,
00:09:38it's because they have the best system or the best habits
00:09:41in order to practice and train
00:09:42to get to that particular goal.
00:09:44This is all well and good.
00:09:45However, if your goal is to win the gold medal
00:09:47in the 100 meters Olympics,
00:09:48that is a very different system you would follow
00:09:50compared to if your goal is to win gold medal in swimming
00:09:54at the Olympics.
00:09:55Or even if your goal is to get a girlfriend,
00:09:56or even if your goal is to start a business.
00:09:58That's not to say the system is not important,
00:10:00but like the goal does in fact define
00:10:02what you're actually doing
00:10:03and what's the system that you follow.
00:10:05Then on the other side of the camp,
00:10:06you have the people that don't really care about systems,
00:10:07they don't really care about plans,
00:10:08they just care about the goals.
00:10:10This is sort of like the manifestation law
00:10:12of attraction folks who are like,
00:10:13man, if you just have crystal clarity,
00:10:15you just really got to get clear on exactly what you want,
00:10:18then the universe will conspire to give it to you
00:10:21and all of those sorts of things.
00:10:22And the classic criticism of that is like, okay,
00:10:24but you can have a goal to become a millionaire,
00:10:27but unless you follow a plan and like do stuff,
00:10:29like follow some kind of system to get there,
00:10:31it's not actually gonna happen.
00:10:33And so I think both camps do have some kind of merit.
00:10:34And so basically the plan is the bridge
00:10:37between the goal and the system.
00:10:38The goal is sort of like the destination
00:10:40you are trying to get to.
00:10:41The system is like, you know,
00:10:42putting one foot in front of another
00:10:43in order to get to the destination,
00:10:45but the plan is sort of like your roadmap.
00:10:47It's like the path you follow in order to get to the goal.
00:10:50So there are three components of the plan.
00:10:52The question you wanna ask yourself is what are the three
00:10:54to five major moves that will get me to my goal?
00:10:57So for example,
00:10:58if my goal was to reduce my visceral fat by 50%,
00:11:00the three to five major moves I might define
00:11:03as 10,000 steps per day,
00:11:05hitting 150 grams of protein per day,
00:11:08staying underneath 2,200 calories a day,
00:11:10making sure I do three sessions of zone two cardio
00:11:12three times a week,
00:11:13and making sure I do three sessions of weight training
00:11:15with progressive overload to avoid losing muscle.
00:11:17Those are like five major moves
00:11:20that if I followed those things and actually did them
00:11:22would be pretty likely to get me to my goal
00:11:24of reducing my visceral fat levels.
00:11:26This is like the plan,
00:11:27the plan that you follow to get to the goal.
00:11:29The next part of the plan is we ask ourselves,
00:11:31is the plan actually realistic?
00:11:33So is it realistic in theory?
00:11:34I.e. in theory, will the plan get us to our goals?
00:11:37Like assuming we followed the plan to 100% accuracy,
00:11:40would we actually get to the goal
00:11:41as a result of following the plan?
00:11:43Does the plan work in theory?
00:11:44And we put a percentage amount of that.
00:11:46And then we also ask ourselves in practice,
00:11:49will I actually follow the plan?
00:11:51What are the chances of me actually following through
00:11:53on this plan?
00:11:54And this I find is a really, really, really important part
00:11:57of the process.
00:11:58A lot of people are very good at setting goals.
00:12:00Like they're like, they know what they want,
00:12:01but then the plan that they choose to follow
00:12:03in order to get there just doesn't make sense.
00:12:06I know a lot of people who are choosing
00:12:07to start their first businesses
00:12:09because they wanna get to, I don't know,
00:12:10$10,000 a month in passive income.
00:12:12It's like, okay, cool.
00:12:13We're clear and specific about the goal.
00:12:15But then the plan that they're following
00:12:17is just very unlikely to actually get them there.
00:12:19Even in theory, even if they followed the plan,
00:12:20it just wouldn't get them there.
00:12:21And that means that they just haven't picked the right plan.
00:12:23And these days with like Chad GPT and Claude and AI tools,
00:12:26it's not that hard to come up with a plan
00:12:27that actually gets you to your goal.
00:12:29But you have to kind of be thinking in this way.
00:12:30Otherwise you end up choosing plans
00:12:32that just don't make sense.
00:12:33Oh, and by the way, if you're interested in a totally free
00:12:35and easy way to incorporate the GPS system
00:12:37into your own goals,
00:12:38then my team and I have actually trained
00:12:40a totally free AI model
00:12:42that is literally trained on the GPS system.
00:12:43We call it the GPS coach.
00:12:45And so it's sort of like Chad GPT,
00:12:46but just way more specific
00:12:47because it's specifically about the GPS thing.
00:12:49And it will basically ask you a series of questions
00:12:50so that it can kind of coach you through the process
00:12:52of like figuring out the GPS for your own goals.
00:12:55So there'll be a link down below in the video description
00:12:57if you're interested in that, it is completely free.
00:12:58For example, I know people who have the goal
00:13:00of getting to $10,000 a month in passive income.
00:13:02And the plan they wanna follow to get there
00:13:03is number one, posting on Instagram once a week.
00:13:06Number two, trying to get companies to sponsor them
00:13:08for posting on Instagram once a week.
00:13:09And number three, doing this for about six months
00:13:11before giving up.
00:13:12Now, even if you followed that plan,
00:13:14you posted on Instagram once a week,
00:13:16you tried to reach out to brands
00:13:17and you did it for six months,
00:13:18would that get you to $10,000 a month in passive income?
00:13:21Absolutely not.
00:13:22Like there's all sorts of issues with that plan,
00:13:24but like the primary one is that posting on Instagram
00:13:26once a week is really just not enough to get anywhere.
00:13:29Maybe if you're posting once a day
00:13:31and you're doing it for like three years,
00:13:32then maybe you could get to that goal
00:13:34in terms of like the passive income goal.
00:13:36Also, brand deals isn't really passive income,
00:13:38so you'd actually probably wanna be creating
00:13:40your own digital product or something like that.
00:13:41Also, depending on what your niche is,
00:13:42Instagram might not even be the best platform for it.
00:13:45You might actually choose LinkedIn or YouTube
00:13:46or TikTok instead.
00:13:47Like there's all sorts of things
00:13:48that are wrong with that plan.
00:13:49And often what I find is that people just don't take
00:13:51the three or four minutes to actually think,
00:13:54what is the plan I actually wanna follow?
00:13:56And does the plan even make sense in theory?
00:13:58And then sometimes if the plan does make sense in theory,
00:14:00you still need to ask yourself,
00:14:01will I actually follow the plan?
00:14:04For example, if my goal was to reduce visceral fat
00:14:06and part of my plan was running for five hours a day.
00:14:09Okay, in theory, that will massively increase
00:14:12my caloric expenditure,
00:14:13which will put me in a calorie deficit,
00:14:15which will probably reduce my visceral fat.
00:14:17But what are the chances that I'm actually gonna run
00:14:18for five hours a day?
00:14:20Those are pretty low.
00:14:21Therefore, if any of these numbers is under 80%,
00:14:24this is sort of like my threshold for this,
00:14:25that is a sign that I need to rethink my plan.
00:14:27And then the final component is something
00:14:29that I call the crystal ball method.
00:14:31This is based on research from the psychologist
00:14:33Gabriel Ertingen, who has come up with this WOOP method,
00:14:35where basically the whole vibe is you kind of wanna
00:14:38imagine a crystal ball and you wanna figure out like,
00:14:41let's say you project in the future
00:14:43and you did not achieve your goal
00:14:45or you did not follow the plan.
00:14:46What are the top three reasons
00:14:48as to why you didn't follow the plan?
00:14:49Like what are the top three reasons why it didn't work?
00:14:52In the case of reducing my visceral fat, for example,
00:14:54reason number one why it doesn't work is maybe I,
00:14:57if I think back to past attempts at doing this,
00:14:59number one, I just blow over my calorie,
00:15:02my calorie limit of 2,200.
00:15:03And so I just eat way more calories than that,
00:15:05which means I'm never gonna reduce fat.
00:15:06Number two is maybe I lose a lot of muscle
00:15:08because I haven't hit my 150 grams of protein
00:15:10with enough of a training stimulus to retain muscle.
00:15:13And maybe number three is I don't do my 10,000 steps a day,
00:15:16which means I end up in a caloric surplus
00:15:17rather than caloric deficit.
00:15:18And then that makes the whole plan go out the window.
00:15:20So in this context, even just taking one minute
00:15:22to just visualize what is your plan for achieving the goal?
00:15:25And then what are the top three reasons
00:15:27why it might not work?
00:15:28This is mental forecasting.
00:15:29You're sort of predicting what obstacles
00:15:31you're gonna run into
00:15:32before you're getting started with the goal.
00:15:34And then you come up with a plan to address those obstacles.
00:15:36So again, using my fat loss example,
00:15:38how do I make sure I stay under 2,200 calories?
00:15:40Well, I should probably track on my fitness pal.
00:15:42How do I make sure I stay at 150 grams of protein?
00:15:44Well, I should probably track it on my fitness pal.
00:15:46How do I make sure I get 10,000 steps a day
00:15:48even when I'm busy?
00:15:49Well, I have a walking treadmill literally off camera.
00:15:51And so I can make sure I'm just tracking my step count
00:15:54on my Apple watch.
00:15:55And I'm just sort of making sure that if I'm in Zoom calls
00:15:57or whatever, I'm sort of walking on the treadmill
00:15:59to passively get those steps in
00:16:01without actually having to go out and go for a walk.
00:16:03Those would be like just three random examples
00:16:05of obstacles that could get in my way
00:16:06of not achieving my goal.
00:16:07And then things I might do to overcome those obstacles.
00:16:10Again, on screen, this is what the plan might look like
00:16:12for the girlfriend example.
00:16:13And this is what the plan might look like
00:16:15for the start a lifestyle business example.
00:16:17And again, you are very welcome to pause the video
00:16:18to have a look if you would like.
00:16:20Oh, by the way, if you're watching this
00:16:21before the 3rd of January, 2026,
00:16:23I am hosting a completely free two day series of workshops
00:16:26called Spark on Saturday the 3rd
00:16:28and Sunday the 4th of January, 2026.
00:16:30So the idea that it'll be me and my wife
00:16:32and a few guest speakers that you might've heard of.
00:16:34And we're gonna be taking you through
00:16:35a bunch of different exercises to help you reflect on 2025
00:16:39and set goals for 2026 so that we can hopefully help you
00:16:41make 2026 the best year of your life.
00:16:43It is completely free.
00:16:45There'll be a link down below to register if you would like.
00:16:48Okay, so now we get to the boring bit, which is the system.
00:16:53So there are three components of a system.
00:16:55So the goal was where do I wanna be going?
00:16:56Like what's my destination?
00:16:57The plan is what do I need to do to get there?
00:17:00The system is answering the question of
00:17:02how will I make sure I stick to the plan?
00:17:04What daily and weekly actions do I need to do
00:17:07to make sure I actually stick to the plan?
00:17:10'Cause again, lots of us are very good at setting goals,
00:17:11but we suck at sticking to those goals.
00:17:13There is an execution gap.
00:17:15We have the intention to do the thing
00:17:17and then we don't do the bloody thing.
00:17:18And the reason why is because we have not stuck to the plan,
00:17:20assuming we have a plan in the first place.
00:17:22So there are three aspects of the system.
00:17:25The first one is tracking.
00:17:27For example, this meta analysis basically collated
00:17:31138 different studies that covered
00:17:33nearly 20,000 participants.
00:17:35And they basically found that the people
00:17:36that monitor their progress towards a goal,
00:17:39i.e. they track their progress towards achieving that goal,
00:17:42those people were way more likely
00:17:43to actually achieve the goal
00:17:44compared to people that did not track.
00:17:46Again, you've got the classic weight loss example,
00:17:48which is if you just step on a set of scales once a day,
00:17:51you are likely to lose weight.
00:17:52Because just simply being aware of the number
00:17:55makes you start making micro decisions
00:17:57that cause you to lose weight.
00:17:58Similarly, ever since I got a whoop band,
00:18:00I've been aware of my sleep score.
00:18:02And so my sleep has improved,
00:18:03really without me having to do anything
00:18:04other than just looking at the number every day.
00:18:06Because when I see things like,
00:18:07man, my sleep score was only 64%,
00:18:09it will just nudge me to do sensible things
00:18:11like again, earlier nights
00:18:12and make sure the room is set to the right temperature
00:18:14and all that kind of stuff.
00:18:15It is enormously helpful
00:18:16to track your progress towards your goal.
00:18:18So the question you wanna be asking yourself
00:18:20is for whatever goal I'm following,
00:18:21for whatever plan I'm following,
00:18:23how can I track my progress towards it?
00:18:25When I was writing my book, "Field of Productivity"
00:18:27for example, I made the most progress
00:18:29when I had a Google sheet
00:18:30and I was tracking how many words I was writing every day.
00:18:33Back when I was studying for my exams
00:18:34at Cambridge University Medical School.
00:18:36The highest performances I ever got in the exams
00:18:37were the ones where, again, I had a Google sheet
00:18:39where I was tracking the syllabus
00:18:41and I was sort of color coding it red, yellow, green,
00:18:43depending on how confident I felt
00:18:45about that particular topic.
00:18:46People who go to the gym and end up getting jacked
00:18:48tend to track their workouts.
00:18:50They don't just go to the gym and hope for the best.
00:18:51They actually write down on some kind of notebook
00:18:53or some kind of app exactly what they're doing.
00:18:55People training for a marathon are far more likely
00:18:57to actually be able to run a marathon
00:18:58if they are tracking their runs,
00:19:00looking at their heart rate,
00:19:01looking at their heart rate zones
00:19:02and sort of adjusting their plan as they go along.
00:19:04It'll be linked down below if you wanna check it out.
00:19:06It's basically an AI tool
00:19:07that talks you through the GPS process
00:19:09and coaches you on how to incorporate the GPS system
00:19:11into your own goals.
00:19:12Component number two of system is to ask yourself,
00:19:15how will you remind yourself of your goal and of your plan?
00:19:19For example, there was this study, I think 2017,
00:19:21from Dominican University.
00:19:22And basically what the study found is that
00:19:24if you just write down your goals,
00:19:26you are 42% more likely to achieve them.
00:19:28And there was another study I came across.
00:19:30I can't remember the exact reference,
00:19:31but it was basically showed that
00:19:32if you look at your goals every day,
00:19:33you are just, again, way more likely to achieve them.
00:19:35If you remind yourself of what you are trying to do,
00:19:38then the brain has a tendency to forget.
00:19:41We all set new year's resolutions, new year's goals,
00:19:43and then like a week goes by, two weeks go by,
00:19:44and we have completely forgotten what the goal actually was.
00:19:47And so there is a lot of value
00:19:48in just reminding yourself to look at the goal.
00:19:51How do you remind yourself to look at the goal?
00:19:52Well, you can do things like a daily journaling practise.
00:19:55I've made videos about that.
00:19:56You can do things like a weekly review.
00:19:57We've done videos about that.
00:19:58My favourite thing is to just stick blocks of time
00:20:00in the calendar.
00:20:01So for example, if I know that one of my goals
00:20:03is the visceral fat thing,
00:20:04and my goal is to run three times a week,
00:20:06it's just super nice to put those three blocks of running
00:20:08in the calendar and set it to repeat
00:20:10for the next three months or six months.
00:20:12Because at least every time I look at the calendar,
00:20:14I'm reminding myself that like, oh yeah,
00:20:16this was a thing that was important to me.
00:20:18You could use an app,
00:20:18like my team and I have built an app called Momentum,
00:20:20which is sort of like a habit tracker
00:20:22with accountability squads built in.
00:20:23And this gives you notifications every day.
00:20:25Like I get a notification to remind me
00:20:26to do my 10 minutes of stretching every day.
00:20:28The other example is I have a vision board that I've created
00:20:30that I have as my desktop wallpaper.
00:20:32And this reminds me of what some of my goals are
00:20:34every single time I go on my computer.
00:20:35So the question you wanna be asking yourself
00:20:37is what are the reminders I can implement into my life
00:20:39that will actually help me stick to the plan.
00:20:41And then the final component of system is accountability.
00:20:46Most of us really struggle to hold ourselves
00:20:48accountable to ourselves
00:20:50for the goals and the plans that we would like to achieve.
00:20:52And so having some kind of system
00:20:54where you get an accountability squad
00:20:56or an accountability buddy to help hold you accountable
00:20:58is enormously helpful.
00:21:00My team and I have this online mentorship program
00:21:01called the Lifestyle Business Academy,
00:21:03where we mentor people one-on-one
00:21:04to help them build their lifestyle businesses.
00:21:06And a key component of that is accountability.
00:21:08We are checking in on you every single week
00:21:10to make sure you're doing the things
00:21:11you said you were gonna do.
00:21:12We give you a Google Sheet scorecard
00:21:14to fill in every single week
00:21:16that asks you how many hours you worked,
00:21:17how much content you posted,
00:21:19how many discovery calls you took.
00:21:20We have like a checklist process
00:21:22to help you go through the process
00:21:23of figuring out your niche and figuring out your offer.
00:21:25And if we see that you're falling behind
00:21:26like a lot of students tend to do,
00:21:27we ping you a message in the one-on-one support channel
00:21:29being like, "Hey, Johnny,
00:21:30notice that you're falling a little behind on blah, blah, blah.
00:21:33What's going on? Anything we can help with?"
00:21:34It's an accountability system more than anything else.
00:21:37So if you just spend five minutes
00:21:38defining your tracking system, your reminders,
00:21:40and trying to come up with some sort of accountability system,
00:21:42whether it's a friend or a family member
00:21:44or like a WhatsApp group or using our app Momentum
00:21:46that has accountability squads built in.
00:21:48All of these things in the system component
00:21:49are again gonna make you way more likely
00:21:51to actually follow your plan and actually achieve your goal.
00:21:54Now at the point where you've taken five or 10 minutes
00:21:55to define your GPS for any of the goals
00:21:58that you're working towards,
00:21:59you're gonna wanna check out this video over here,
00:22:01which is a video containing I think five really quick,
00:22:04really easy evidence-based principles that you can follow
00:22:06to again, drastically increase the chances
00:22:08that you're actually gonna achieve your goal.
00:22:10So plan your GPS method for any goal that you have
00:22:12and then check out that video over there
00:22:13to be able to put it into practice.
00:22:15Thank you so much for watching
00:22:15and I will see you over there.

Key Takeaway

The GPS method systematically bridges the gap between setting goals and actually achieving them by clarifying objectives, creating realistic plans with obstacle prevention, and establishing tracking and accountability systems.

Highlights

The GPS method (Goal, Plan, System) is an evidence-based framework that dramatically improves goal achievement across any life area in just 5-10 minutes of setup

Goals require specificity and emotional compulsion—vague goals like 'stop procrastinating' fail because they lack clarity on what success actually means

Tracking progress is scientifically proven to increase goal achievement by 42% or more, as demonstrated by meta-analysis of 138 studies covering nearly 20,000 participants

The plan bridges goals and systems by identifying 3-5 major moves needed to reach your goal, then assessing both theoretical viability (will it work in theory?) and practical adherence (will I actually do it?)

The crystal ball method uses mental forecasting to predict the top three obstacles that will derail your plan, allowing you to build countermeasures before starting

Reminders, tracking systems, and accountability mechanisms are critical components that prevent the execution gap between intention and action

Anti-goals (constraints on what you want to avoid) are equally important as primary goals to ensure you achieve objectives without sacrificing other life areas

Timeline

Introduction and Channel Context

Ali, a doctor-turned-entrepreneur and author of the New York Times bestseller 'Feel Good Productivity,' introduces the GPS method as an evidence-based system designed to improve goal achievement across any life domain. He positions himself as the co-founder of Sparkle Studios, an app development company focused on productivity tools, and notes that he has been documenting his journey from medical student to entrepreneur on YouTube since 2017. The introduction establishes credibility and invites viewers to subscribe for content about building a life they love through strategies, tools, and evidence-based approaches.

Foundational Theory: Goals Are Series of Actions

Ali presents the core theory underlying the GPS system: every goal is simply a series of tasks or actions that must be completed. He emphasizes that if someone isn't achieving their goals, it's because they either don't know what actions to take or they aren't actually executing those actions. This foundational insight breaks down all goal achievement into three components: understanding what the goal is, identifying the specific actions required to reach it, and ensuring the person actually performs those actions. Examples include fitness goals requiring exercise and proper nutrition, or business building requiring market research and product development, establishing that the GPS method addresses all three components systematically.

GPS Method Overview and Components

Ali formally introduces the GPS acronym—Goal, Plan, and System—explaining that each component contains three sub-factors that can be determined in just 5-10 minutes per goal. He positions the GPS method as both an actionable goal-setting framework and a diagnostic tool for troubleshooting why someone might be struggling with goal achievement. The system is designed to be comprehensive yet practical, allowing people to take control of their goal-setting process without requiring extensive time investment. By breaking down goal achievement into these three structured components, the GPS method provides clarity on what's missing when goals fail.

The Goal Component: Specificity and Clarity

Ali identifies the first major mistake in goal-setting: lacking specificity and clarity about what the goal actually is. He provides examples of vague goals like 'stop procrastinating' or 'start a YouTube channel' that fail because they lack concrete definition—for instance, starting a YouTube channel could literally mean creating one account, but that's not what people actually mean. The solution is quantifying goals wherever possible and making them as specific as circumstances allow, such as 'reduce visceral fat levels by 50%' rather than 'get healthier.' Specific, measurable goals are dramatically easier to work toward because they provide clear direction and success criteria.

The Goal Component: Emotional Compulsion and Why

Ali addresses the second major goal-setting mistake: choosing goals that lack emotional compulsion or intrinsic motivation. He explains that goals chosen from a sense of obligation or external pressure ('should' goals) are significantly less likely to be achieved than those driven by genuine personal values and intrinsic motivation. Research confirms that people pursuing extrinsically motivated goals (fame, money, status) are less likely to achieve them and less likely to enjoy the process. Therefore, it's critical to articulate why you genuinely care about achieving a particular goal, connecting it to deeper personal values and meaningful reasons beyond external validation or social pressure.

The Goal Component: Anti-Goals and Constraints

Ali introduces the concept of anti-goals—intentional constraints that define what you want to avoid while pursuing your primary objective. He uses the example of wanting to build a $100,000 annual lifestyle business with intrinsic motivation around time freedom and autonomy, while specifying anti-goals such as 'no weekend work' and 'maximum 40 hours per week.' Anti-goals ensure that goal achievement doesn't come at the expense of other important life domains like family time, health, or relationships. This three-part goal framework—the specific what, the compelling why, and the limiting constraints—creates a holistic goal definition that drives both achievement and overall life satisfaction.

Sponsor Integration: Many Chat Social Media Automation

Ali discusses Many Chat, a Meta-approved automation platform designed to help creators grow their social media presence without manual effort. The tool enables automated responses when followers comment specific keywords or send direct messages, creating lead capture funnels and qualification processes for businesses. Ali provides real examples from his own Instagram, such as automated responses to specific keywords and Easter eggs, demonstrating how automation can scale audience engagement. This sponsor segment is integrated contextually as Many Chat addresses a common goal (growing social media presence) that viewers might have.

The Plan Component: Theory Versus Practice Assessment

Ali explains that the plan bridges the gap between the goal and the daily system, serving as the roadmap for achievement. The plan component requires identifying 3-5 major moves that will get you to your goal, such as daily step counts, protein intake, calorie limits, and specific exercise protocols for fat loss. Critically, he emphasizes assessing both the theoretical viability (will the plan actually work if followed 100%?) and the practical adherence likelihood (will I realistically follow this plan?), suggesting an 80% threshold for each metric. If either drops below 80%, the plan needs reworking; many people fail because they create plans that either won't work in theory or are unrealistic for them to sustain in practice.

The Plan Component: Realistic and Achievable Planning

Ali critiques common unrealistic plans, such as someone aiming for $10,000 monthly passive income while planning to post on Instagram once per week, which inherently won't achieve the goal even in theory. He advocates using AI tools like ChatGPT or Claude to generate plans that actually bridge the gap between goal and reality, avoiding the wasted effort of pursuing plans that are fundamentally misaligned with objectives. The accessibility of modern AI tools eliminates the excuse of not having a realistic plan; the issue is simply that people don't take the few minutes to think through whether their plan makes sense. A practical example shows how running five hours daily for fat loss might work in theory but fails the 80% practical adherence threshold.

The Crystal Ball Method: Obstacle Prediction

Ali introduces the crystal ball method, based on psychologist Gabriel Öttingen's WOOP research, which involves mental forecasting to predict the top three obstacles that will derail your plan. Using his fat loss example, Ali identifies common obstacles like exceeding calorie limits, losing muscle due to insufficient protein intake, and failing to achieve daily step counts. Once obstacles are identified, the method prescribes creating countermeasures before starting—such as using MyFitnessPal to track calories and protein, or using a walking treadmill during work calls to accumulate steps passively. This proactive obstacle identification and prevention strategy transforms goal-setting from hopeful thinking into realistic preparation that addresses the most likely failure points.

Sponsor Integration: GPS Coach AI Tool

Ali promotes the GPS Coach, a free AI model trained specifically on the GPS system framework that guides users through goal-setting with targeted questions. Unlike general AI tools, the GPS Coach is narrowly focused on helping users apply the GPS methodology to their own objectives. The tool serves as a personal coach, walking users through the three components and their sub-factors systematically. This ties back to the earlier point that using modern AI tools to develop realistic plans has become accessible and free for anyone willing to invest a few minutes.

Goals Versus Systems Debate and Plan's Role

Ali addresses the dichotomy in personal development between goals-focused and systems-focused camps, referencing James Clear's 'Atomic Habits' which emphasizes systems over goals. He acknowledges that while systems are crucial, goals actually define which system you need—someone pursuing a gold medal in sprinting needs a different system than someone pursuing one in swimming or wanting to find a girlfriend. The plan serves as the crucial bridge between goal clarity and system implementation, defining the specific path you'll follow. Ali concludes that both camps have merit, but the GPS framework integrates them by using goals to define direction, plans to establish the roadmap, and systems to ensure execution.

The System Component: Tracking Progress

Ali presents tracking as the first system component, citing a meta-analysis of 138 studies covering nearly 20,000 participants demonstrating that people who monitor their progress are significantly more likely to achieve goals. Simple tracking creates awareness that naturally nudges better decisions—stepping on scales daily leads to weight loss, tracking sleep with a Whoop band improves sleep quality, and counting words written improves book progress. Ali provides concrete examples from his own life: using Google Sheets to track daily word count while writing, color-coding exam topics by confidence level, and fitness enthusiasts tracking workouts. The evidence is clear that whatever goal you pursue, establishing a specific tracking mechanism dramatically increases likelihood of success.

The System Component: Reminders and Visibility

Ali explains that reminders help combat the brain's natural tendency to forget goals, with research showing 42% increased achievement likelihood when goals are written down and even greater increases when reviewed daily. He provides multiple reminder implementation strategies: daily journaling practices, weekly reviews, calendar blocking for important activities, habit-tracking apps like Momentum that send daily notifications, and vision boards as desktop wallpapers. The key principle is making goals impossible to forget by strategically placing reminders throughout daily life and regular routines. These simple systems prevent the common pattern of setting New Year's resolutions that are forgotten within days.

The System Component: Accountability Mechanisms

Ali identifies accountability as the critical third system component, noting that most people struggle to hold themselves accountable without external support structures. He references his own Lifestyle Business Academy mentorship program, which maintains accountability through weekly check-ins, Google Sheet scorecards tracking specific metrics, and direct outreach when students fall behind. Accountability can come from friends, family members, WhatsApp groups, or dedicated apps like Momentum that include accountability squad features. The power of accountability lies in external monitoring and intervention—someone else noticing and addressing your declining progress provides motivation that self-accountability often lacks.

Free Workshop Announcement: Spark Event

Ali announces a free two-day workshop series called 'Spark' scheduled for January 3-4, 2026, featuring himself, his wife, and guest speakers. The workshops are designed to help participants reflect on 2025 and set goals for 2026 through various exercises and frameworks. This completely free event offers practical goal-setting training directly from the creator of the GPS method. Ali emphasizes the opportunity for viewers to apply the GPS framework in a structured, guided environment with professional instruction.

Integration and Next Steps

Ali concludes by encouraging viewers to spend 5-10 minutes applying the GPS method to their goals and then references a follow-up video containing five additional evidence-based principles to increase achievement likelihood. He reinforces that the GPS framework—Goal, Plan, and System—is designed to be practical and implementable for anyone, regardless of goal domain. The conclusion emphasizes that combining GPS methodology with additional evidence-based principles creates a comprehensive approach to goal achievement. The call-to-action directs engaged viewers to continue learning through his referenced video content.

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