3 Principles of Setting Startup Goals

3 Principles of Setting Startup Goals

From the earliest days of your startup, you should be setting goals. Goals keep your team focused on the most important tasks and speed up progress. Usually, you’ll begin with short-term tasks, e.g., incorporate in Delaware, but quickly graduate to complex projects, e.g., release iPhone app v3 by October 1st. Setting the “correct” goals is surprisingly difficult as you have so many competing priorities at a startup. However, there are some basic principles to keep your goals meaningful and drive your company forward:

1. Metrics

What: Start with a simple, core metric for your startup. Usually, this would be a revenue or usage number, e.g., monthly recurring revenue or daily active users. It’s also helpful to have up to 3 supporting metrics tracking your offering’s customer acquisition, engagement, and churn.

Why: Using metrics makes tracking your startup’s progress much easier, allowing you to measure your rate of growth by quickly comparing dates. If you orient your startup’s goals around a core metric and mention it regularly in team discussions, everyone at the company will begin to prioritize it.

2. Deadlines

What: Set short-term deadlines for long-term goals, e.g., if you plan to launch an iPhone app in 6 weeks, you may want the screen designs ready within 2 weeks. If you’re unable to hit your near-term deadlines, you should adjust the longer-term goals accordingly.

Why: While everyone will have to work hard at a startup, people tend to push themselves to hit mutually agreed-upon deadlines. Making use of near-term deadlines, ideally in one to two week sprints, allows you to adjust long-term goals based on reality and gives you time to iterate on a project’s challenges before it’s too late.

3. Ownership

What: Assign exactly 1 person to act as the owner for each goal. This doesn’t mean that 1 person has to complete the goal by themselves; instead, they are responsible for the planning and execution of the goal. The goal owner will need time to make a plan and request resources to complete their goal. Most of the time, you won’t be able to provide all the requested resources, but always try to help as much as possible. It may be tempting to set 2 or 3 owners for a goal. However, you should instead rotate ownership across the team to maintain 1 ultimate owner per goal.

Why: Having 1 owner ensures accountability. If you have more than 1 owner, and a goal is not completed, multiple owners can blame each other. When 1 person owns a goal, they know they will receive recognition for its completion, which is motivating.

Setting goals is an essential part of a startup’s early success, and getting it right is hard. Using these 3 principles, you can give yourself the best chance of keeping your team focused and growing fast.

Thanks to Kaego Rust for their help with this article.

Sterling Road invests up to $250k in pre-seed B2B startups based in the USA, Canada and UK.

Learn more by visiting wwww.sterlingroad.com

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Ash Rust

  • Rust's Rules of Negotiation

    Over the last 20 years, I’ve been involved in negotiations for everything from small sales contracts to IPOs. Whatever…

    2 Comments
  • Star Trek Inches Closer with AI - Friday Thoughts

    The computers in Star Trek are perfect: instantly available, easy to operate, and very powerful. However today, we’re…

    1 Comment
  • How to Handle Getting Laid Off

    Layoffs are now widespread across the tech sector, with even the darlings of our Industry forced to make deep cuts…

    6 Comments
  • Friday Unsolicited Thoughts -Musk/Twitter Deal

    This week’s big news was that the Musk/Twitter deal is now back on. Here’s my unsolicited thoughts on the main…

    1 Comment
  • Garry Tan Heads Back to Y-Combinator — Unsolicited Thoughts

    This week's big news was Garry Tan heading back to Y-Combinator as President & CEO. Here's my unsolicited thoughts on…

    4 Comments
  • 3 Terrible Pieces of Startup Advice (And What You Should Do Instead)

    “Garbage In, Garbage Out” is a term often used in engineering where bad inputs will result in bad outputs. Much like…

    1 Comment
  • Terms of Use Template for B2B Startups

    Before launching your startup’s product, you’ll want to create a document that covers you against common customer…

    10 Comments
  • Introducing Sterling Road Fund 3: Deploying $20M through early-stage founder coaching

    Today we’re introducing Fund 3, a $20M fund backing pre-seed stage founders of B2B startups, that have gone through our…

    7 Comments
  • How to Cold Email an Investor

    For many founders, getting a warm introduction to an investor might not be possible if you lack the community…

    24 Comments
  • How to Build a Deck

    For most founders, the deck is a cornerstone of their seed fundraising process. Unfortunately, most decks are terrible.

    7 Comments

Others also viewed

Explore content categories