Most students would like to be successful in college, career and life endeavors. However, not nearly enough good students approach those important goals in a manner that will pay off. The solution is to ask three questions that will show them what they need to know.

Although the questions are simple, the answers to these questions are more complicated. Remember, few good things happen without a solid effort. Ask these three questions to see for yourself.

What is it that you want to achieve?

What steps will get you there?

What price are you willing to pay to achieve the desired results?

1. What is it that you want to achieve? - Write it out. To be effective, the goal statement
must be clear, concise, easily understood and limited to one written sentence. The
sentence should incorporate clear information about the goal (what?), the size (how
much?), the timing (by when?) and how it will be measured (numbers and milestones).

Then, tape the statement to your computer where you will see it every day. Critical
goals should never be out of sight. Keep them in front of you, so your mind will keep
working on the steps and solutions.

When a clear target exists, the chances of success are significantly increased. Fuzzy
goals and objectives make it difficult to know what success means and when it is
achieved. Weed out and eliminate any goals that are fuzzy or low in importance.

Additionally, you must learn to focus on the limited number of goals that are critical to your
success. (Pareto’s Law: 20% of your time will produce 80% of the results. Also, 20% of
your activities will yield 80% of the value.) When you are spread too thin, deadlines are
missed and quality suffers.

A fuzzy goal: Tony Robbins tells a story about someone who came to him and said he
wanted more money. As Tony tells it, "So I gave him a dollar and told him to go away!"

Success requires a goal, a plan and a passion. -- Bob Roth

2. What steps will get you there? - To achieve your goal, you must figure out which path
to take and what steps will enable you to achieve that goal.

The path you choose is critical to your success. In effect, you select a path when you
select your field of study, the courses you take and the jobs you will pursue. Steven
Covey once gave an example of a person who climbed the ladder of success only to
find that the ladder was leaning against the wrong tree. That’s why so many people end
up making career changes later on.

Once you select a path, wise students lay out the steps that will lead to their goal. If your
goal is to land a Sales Job with a Fortune 500, Consumer Products Company by the
time you graduate, you should identify and write down the steps that will help to ensure
success. Multiple steps should be displayed on a timeline.

The difference between a dream and a goal is a timeline. -- Dr. Phil McGraw

Your first question should be, “What is it that Fortune 500, Consumer Products
Companies look for in the new Sales Reps. they hire?” If you can identify the preferred
qualifications and experiences they seek, you can begin to work on each of those steps.

After some research, you find that these employers prefer or require things such as:

- A GPA of 3.0 or higher
- A Business Major with a Sales Minor
- Work experience in the Consumer Products Industry
- Exceptional References
- Superior Communication Skills
- A Friendly, Courteous, Outgoing Personality
- A Positive Attitude
- Customer Service or Sales Experience
- Examples of related Accomplishments

Students who identify these employer preferences, early in their college experience,
can write out the steps and work on them over a two or three year period. Then, when
you conduct your job search, during your senior year, you will have already accumulated
many of the the experiences and accomplishments that recruiters will look for.

In the long run, men only hit what they aim at. -- Henry David Thoreau

3. What price are you willing to pay to achieve the desired results? - Everything worthwhile
has a price. However, only you can decide if you are willing to pay that price.

Let’s say that you would achieve a 2.7 or 2.8 GPA with your normal effort. However,
you now know that the most desirable employers in your field would prefer candidates
with a 3.0 or higher GPA. After some thought, you decide that you can probably pull
your grades up, if you drop out of intramural sports to spend more time in the library.
Are you willing to pay that price?

Now, you begin to think about your communication skills. You know that people in Sales
must have good writing and presentation skills. Recently, you learned that your college
will offer a course titled “Presentation Skills,” next semester. After that, a course called
“Business Writing” will be offered. You could take these courses as electives but, that
would mean that you couldn’t take those “Relic Hunting” courses that everyone is raving
about. Are you willing to pay that price?

A friend mentioned that his employer is looking for part-time help to perform both Sales
and Customer Service work. It doesn’t pay very well but would give you experience in
two areas that are important to future opportunities. Additionally, the job requires that you
work on Friday evenings, the night when all of the college basketball and hockey games
are played. Are you willing to pay the price?

Everything degenerates into work. -- Peter F. Drucker

Students who are passionate about their goals leave little to chance. They outwork, outthink and outperform the competition. They make sacrifices, in order to move closer to their goals. When opportunities present themselves, they take advantage of them. These students constantly work to stack the odds in their favor, so success follows naturally.

When you answer these three questions, you almost certainly determine your outcomes. And so, the question becomes, “How important is it for you to succeed?”

For more information visit Bob’s web site: www.The4Realities.com. Bob Roth is the author of The 4 Realities Of Success During and After College. Bob’s newest book The College Student’s Guide To Landing A Great Job is now available.

Author's Bio: 

Bob Roth, a former campus recruiter, is the author of The College Student's Guide To Landing A Great Job -and- The 4 Realities Of Success During and After College. Known as The "College & Career Success” Coach, Bob also writes articles for more than 175 College Career Services Offices and Campus Newspapers. Additionally, Bob has developed 20 Self-Scoring Learning Tools™ that help college students find success. He has been interviewed on numerous radio programs across the country and also by many newspapers, including The Wall Street Journal. Lastly, Bob serves as an Adjunct at Marist College, teaching a course in Career Development. www.The4Realities.com