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Sell 48 Widgets – The Origin Story of SMART Goals

SMART goals were born from sales. Paul Cardinal illustrates this with a basic example: Sell 48 widgets for $8 each, per year. 

Seems straightforward. But the real problems show up fast: 

  • Do you want to reward the person who sells the most units, or the one who earns the most profit? 
  • What happens when a salesperson hits the goal early—do they stop trying? 
  • Should you fire the lowest 20% of performers even if all did well? 

In chasing metrics, companies forget the humanity in performance. As Paul says: 

“A manager can hand this goal to a salesperson and gleefully watch the spreadsheet tick upward… until they realize the discounts given to close those sales killed profit margins.” 

Goals must consider impact, not just output. 

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