About this topic
Goal Setting is the cluster you reach for when something matters enough to write down on its own page. The Goal-Setting Sheets collection bundles every layout we have seen actually used: the classic SMART worksheet (specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound), the 90-day plan that breaks a multi-step project into thirteen weeks of concrete actions, the yearly goals page for January or birthday-week resets, the quarterly review sheet for quieter check-ins, the one-page vision sheet for big-picture clarity, the weekly check-in for staying on track, and the three-big-goals printable for people who want to commit to no more than three priorities for the next quarter.
Every goal-setting printable in this cluster shares the same backbone: a what (what specifically you intend to do), a why (why it matters enough to do it), a first action (the smallest physical next step), a first deadline (when that step happens), a check-in cadence (weekly or biweekly), an obstacles-and-helpers space (what is in the way, who can help), and a celebration line (how you will mark the finish). The structure is deliberately uniform across the variants because the most common failure of goal-setting is not the goal itself but the absence of a first physical action and a check-in date.
Further reading: a longer essay on the methodology behind goal setting.
We tend to recommend the SMART worksheet for a single specific goal ("finish a 10K by July"), the 90-day plan for a multi-step project ("launch the side business"), and the yearly review-and-reset sheet at the start of January, your birthday week, or the start of a new fiscal quarter at work. Pair the goal-setting sheet with a Habit Tracker for the daily action that the goal depends on, and with a weekly planner that schedules a recurring goal-work block, and the goal stops being a wish and becomes a calendar entry.
For couples, families, or small teams, print two copies of the same goal sheet, fill them in independently, and then compare. The conversation that follows — about which goals overlap, which are individual, and which need shared time — is in our experience the single most useful planning conversation a household can have, and an under-appreciated use of these printables.
Every printable in this cluster is free for personal use, sized for US Letter on a home printer, and designed to live somewhere visible — a fridge, a notebook cover, the inside of a binder — rather than buried in a drawer.
Sub-categories in this topic
The Goal Setting topic groups 1 sub-category that share a purpose:
- Goal-Setting Sheets — SMART goal worksheets, quarterly planning sheets, vision boards, and 90-day plans for breaking big intentions into doable next steps.
High-intent printables this topic covers
Common things readers come here looking for:
- Goal Setting Worksheet
- Smart Goals Printable
- 90 Day Plan Template
- Quarterly Goals Worksheet
- Vision Board Printable