Target the Right Goals and Build Commitment
If-then plans channel commitment into action, but they cannot manufacture commitment that is not there. Planning for a goal you do not really care about, or one blocked by a missing skill rather than a missing trigger, wastes effort and erodes trust in the method itself. The first step is choosing goals where the real problem is starting or sticking, then testing your own commitment honestly before you write a single plan. Get this right and everything you build afterward sits on a goal worth pursuing.
Proficiency Level
This is a preview of how skill assessment works in Admire
Measurable Behaviors
Behaviors are optimized to be directly observable for evidence-based skill tracking.
Guide a peer through selecting and committing to a goal
Walks a colleague through naming a goal, picturing its payoff and obstacle, and making an honest keep-or-drop call.
Name a goal with a clear follow-through gap
Picks a goal you keep meaning to act on and names exactly where it breaks: forgetting, delay, or distraction.
Picture the result you want and the obstacle most likely to block it
Writes the specific payoff of reaching the goal next to the single obstacle most likely to derail it.
Run an honest commitment check and either commit or drop the goal
Decides whether a goal is achievable and worth it, then commits to it or drops it on purpose.
Separate follow-through problems from skill or motivation gaps
Tells apart a goal that stalls on starting from one blocked by a missing skill or weak motivation.
This is a preview of how behavior tracking works in Admire
Mastering Goal Selection and Commitment
A strong practitioner picks goals where the problem is genuinely about starting or sticking, not ability or desire. They test their commitment honestly before planning, drop goals that fail the test without guilt, and can tell a follow-through problem from a skill gap. The result is a short list of goals that if-then planning can actually move.