Catalog
method#Product#Delivery#Governance

SMART

Method for defining concrete, measurable goals using five clear criteria.

SMART is an established method for formulating clear, verifiable goals.
Established
Low

Classification

  • Low
  • Organizational
  • Organizational
  • Intermediate

Technical context

Jira for implementation trackingConfluence for documentationOKR tools for strategic alignment

Principles & goals

Goals must be specific and clearly formulated.Goals should be measurable and verifiable.Goals must be achievable, relevant, and time-bound.
Discovery
Enterprise, Domain, Team

Use cases & scenarios

Compromises

  • Focus on easily measurable rather than value-creating goals.
  • Excessive administrative overhead with too many goals.
  • Gaming of metrics to satisfy targets.
  • Limit the number of goals per level to maintain focus.
  • Link goals to concrete metrics and data sources.
  • Establish regular review cycles and transparent communication.

I/O & resources

  • Strategic directives
  • Resource and time constraints
  • Stakeholder requirements
  • SMART-defined goals
  • Measurement plans and review dates
  • Ownership assignments and implementation tickets

Description

SMART is an established method for formulating clear, verifiable goals. It structures objectives using five criteria (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) to improve transparency and accountability. SMART is used for product, project, and personnel goals and supports focused planning and outcome measurement.

  • Increased clarity and shared expectations.
  • Better measurability of progress.
  • Facilitated tracking and accountability.

  • May lead to narrow goals that hinder innovation.
  • Measurement requirements are not always sensible or available.
  • Insufficient alone for complex, long-term intentions.

  • Goal completion rate

    Percentage of SMART goals achieved within a given period.

  • Average time to goal

    Average duration from goal setting to achievement.

  • Share of measurable goals

    Proportion of goals that have clear, verifiable metrics.

Reduce bounce rate

Goal: Reduce bounce rate by 15% within six months, measured via web analytics.

Increase conversion rate

Goal: Increase conversion rate by 10% in Q2 through A/B tests and UX optimizations.

Improve support response time

Goal: Reduce average first response time to support requests to under 4 hours within three months.

1

Identify stakeholders and align goals

2

Formulate and document goals according to SMART

3

Assign measurable indicators and responsibilities

4

Schedule regular reviews and make adjustments

⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks

  • Missing data interfaces for automated measurement.
  • Inconsistent metric definitions across teams.
  • Legacy processes that slow down adjustments.
unclear-criteriamissing-dataoverload
  • Manipulating metrics to formally meet targets.
  • Prioritizing short-term KPIs over strategic objectives.
  • Setting unrealistic deadlines and ignoring resources.
  • Defining goals too narrowly and preventing learning.
  • Unclear measurement definitions lead to disagreements.
  • Goals are forgotten without regular review.
Goal definition and prioritizationCommunication and facilitationBasics of measurement and data interpretation
Goal transparencyMeasurability of outcomesAssignment of accountability
  • Available measurement data limited
  • Time constraints may be unrealistic
  • Potential conflicts with long-term strategic goals