The Ryan Hanley Show - The Unreasonable Guide to Crushing Your 2025 Goals
Episode Date: January 3, 2025Most people fail their goals not because they lack effort, but because they’re stuck using outdated strategies. In this episode, I break down a bold, no-BS approach to goal-setting that focuses on f...ewer, bigger goals, unstoppable habits, and the mindset shifts you need to dominate 2025 like a savage. Links and Resources Mentioned: 10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dr. Benjamin Hardy: https://amzn.to/4j41HJq Atomic Habits by James Clear: https://amzn.to/4210jkO Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.com The Civilized Savage: https://civilizedsavagebook.com What You’ll Learn in This Episode: Why traditional goal-setting advice (like SMART goals) often falls flat—and what to do instead. The power of prioritizing fewer, bigger goals to create clarity and focus. How to detach from outcomes and commit to non-negotiable habits that drive success. Why tracking your habits, not just your outcomes, is the key to building momentum. How to apply the concepts of The Power of One More and Stoic philosophy to take relentless action. A practical, 5-step system for setting goals you’ll actually hit. Key Quotes from the Episode: “The reasonable man adapts himself to the world. The unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.” — George Bernard Shaw “You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.” — James Clear “Change happens when the pain of staying the same is greater than the pain of change.” — Tony Robbins What’s your “one more” today? Share your non-negotiable habit or the next bold step you’ll take toward your goal. Drop it in the comments, DM me on Instagram, or connect with me on LinkedIn—let’s make it real! Instagram: https://instagram.com/ryan_hanley LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanhanley
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I've always hated goals. I've always thought that they were pointless.
I felt like if I just worked as hard as I possibly could, then what was the point of the goal?
I was just going to get as much as I could get.
But I was wrong. And if you struggle with goals, then you are in the right place, my friends.
Keep listening.
What is up, guys? and welcome back to the show.
We have another solo episode for you. I'm really enjoying doing these as I dump my brain,
hopefully into yours. Now, what changed my mind about goals? Years of running businesses,
leading teams and realizing one hard truth.
Goals aren't the problem.
It's the way we've been taught to set them.
It's the way that we've been taught to attack them.
If you stick with me, I'm going to show you how to set goals that you will actually hit. No fluff, no BS, no cliches.
Just an actionable, easy to follow strategy that I guarantee will work. All right, for years, I thought that working as hard as I possibly could was enough.
And my logic there was if I gave 100% or 110% or whatever you're supposed to say when you're
trying your best, then the results would take care of themselves.
But I always hit walls. Projects stalled, teams floundered, people got frustrated with me,
growth plateaued in different times. And I found I was great at starting projects,
but I was terrible at finishing them. And that's when I realized that hard work without goals just
doesn't work. And some of you are probably listening to this going,
duh, Ryan, I've known about goals for years.
Well, shit, sorry.
I have these odd things that I think,
and until I absolutely bang them against a wall
and find out if they make hay or not,
I have to kind of learn the hard way.
That's always been the way for me.
And the problem is most of the advice that we get about goals is absolute garbage.
You've heard things like, you know, just make smart goals or you need stretch goals.
And, you know, everyone talks about smart goals, but I don't know anybody in which,
like, they practice smart goals and they actually work for them.
And be honest with yourself.
Do you sit down and do specific, measurable, achievable, relevant,
do you writing all that down?
I don't know anybody that does that,
and I also think there's tons of cracks in the system.
It's not completely lacking of value,
but I definitely don't think that smart
goals are the answer or stretch goals or any of these other kind of prepackaged philosophies
around goals actually work. You know, and here's some stats for you. A staggering, staggering 84%
of people do not set any goals, which obviously significantly diminishes their chances of
success.
Only 3% of people have written goals with a plan to execute them.
Even though, and this is crazy, you are 10 times more likely to succeed if you've written
out your goals.
10 times more likely.
Only 45% of the people that actually set goals
even track their goals.
Insane.
And 35% of individuals
abandon their New Year's resolutions
within a week of setting them.
Often due to setting unattainable goals.
That came with the stat.
And I think that last part is bullshit.
And that's why we have to be careful when we get a stat
and then someone applies their opinion on to the end of it,
which I'm doing, but this is my podcast.
I get to put my opinion on things.
They call it Quitter's Day.
And it's one week from when this episode is dropping.
So this is dropping on Friday the 3rd.
So technically, the second Friday in January is officially Quitter's Day when all of our big
grandiose plans and goals that we make for the year we throw out and go back to our old habits.
So if we don't set goals the right way, then we are absolutely giving ourselves no chance of success.
We're failing ourselves, our team, our business, and that is not who we are, certainly if you take the time to listen to this show.
So first, before we get into the actual strategy itself, I want to hit you with this idea.
Prioritize fewer,
bigger goals. One of the biggest reasons that goals fail is because we try to do too much at once. We spread ourselves thin. We're chasing five, 10 different priorities and we end up missing
them all or getting like half-hearted results on a bunch of them. And then, you know, how do we choose which ones to prioritize, et cetera.
Dr. Benjamin Hardy, who wrote 10X is Easier than 2X, has a great quote.
To 10X, you must focus on fewer things that matter most and eliminate everything else.
10X is Easier than 2X is one of my absolute top 10 book recommendations,
regardless if you're in the business community or not.
There are so many incredible insights inside that book.
And the biggest idea that I took away from 10x is Easier than 2x is this thought that with a 2x goal, right, I want to double my income
or I want to do 2x the number of whatever the thing I'm trying to achieve is.
There's a thousand different ways to 2X your goal.
You can, you know, you can take this path or that path or if this happens or I could get lucky here, you know, this could go up.
And there's all kinds of external and internal factors and paths that we can take to hit a 2x goal.
But if we're going to 10x our results, there are one, possibly two ways to get there.
Simply by focusing on a 10x goal, be it unreasonable or not, we drastically reduce the paths to
success, which immediately creates focus.
I love that book.
Highly recommend if you haven't read it,
make that a priority in 2025.
Read 10X is Easier than 2X by Dr. Benadryl Hardy.
Fewer, bigger goals demand clarity and commitment.
When your goal is ambitious, it eliminates distractions.
You can't afford to waste time on things
that don't move the needle.
Now, what I'm about to share with you has worked for me. I'm not a goal guru. I'm just a guy that
likes to get shit done. And as I mentioned before, I tend to have to learn every lesson the hard way. And because I live a GNF life, I don't often take pre-packaged advice at face
value. And I love to try my own thing. So my point in saying all that is take this in, listen to it.
If you apply it, I have a feeling that your relationship with goals, much like my own, is going to change because this works and we're going to explain the process.
All right, we've kind of built up the payoff here for a while.
Let's get to the actual strategy itself.
I don't have a cool acronym or anything.
I would love for you guys to come up with one.
Leave it in the comments or DM
me if you think of something as I'm talking through here. But step number one is clarity.
We have to be crystal clear on what we want to achieve. If you set generic goals, I want to get
more fit. I want to make more money. I want to be better to my spouse. I want to be a more
present dad or whatever. There's no, there's nothing to grab onto. There's no tangible thing
that we can grab onto and actually apply whether we're doing the thing or not. Like there's nothing
there. It's, it's, It's like sand slipping through your fingers.
What does making more money mean?
Is 10 more dollars a year, is that enough?
100? 1,000?
Are you talking about 100,000 more dollars a year
if you want to make more money?
What's going to make you happy?
What's going to get you there?
What's going to make it so that at the end of 2025,
you're thumping your chest at the holiday party
looking around going, I'm a fucking badass.
Now, you don't actually have to do that.
And if you did do it, one, I would love to see it
because I think that'd be cool as hell.
But also most of the people in the room
would probably think you're a jackass.
However, that feeling, if you're not specific,
if you're not clear, then you're never going to know.
We have to put numbers to our goals.
And this is what I was always terrible about.
This was the part that shut me down immediately right here.
I was like, well, I want to do a million in sales, obviously.
And I thought to myself, but if I work as hard,
I can probably only reasonably hit three.
And then I started negotiating with myself.
And, you know, mental garbage.
We all have to deal with it.
When I started committing to specific goals, everything changed.
Clear targets.
Clear targets are easier to hit.
So let's, for me specifically this year, I want to hit 1.5 million in ARR for Linkora by the end of 2025.
I want to sell 500 memberships to my Master of the Clothes program, which is coming out in a few weeks.
Watch for that.
If you're not on the wait list, that's going to be the best possible price ever for the value that you get.
You got to be on the wait list, and it's only going to be offered to people on the wait list.
There's over 800 people on the wait list right now,
but my goal is to sell 500 memberships to that.
I also want to get 5,000 copies of the Civilized Savage
into the hands of people who need it.
And the reason I didn't make that goal sell
was because I don't
care if they buy them or not. I want them in people's hands. The message in that book is,
it's a model that Chris Paradiso and I have discussed for decades because I've known him
that long. And that by co-authoring that book with him, I feel like this message, I'm just so proud of what this message of the teachings, of the lessons, of the ideas, the concepts that we've put into this book.
I think it's going to inspire a lot of people, and I want to get 5,000 copies into the hands of people who need it.
So I know what you're saying, Ryan, you know,
you're a dope. The S in smart goals stands for specific. And again, I did not say that smart
goals was completely void of value. I just said as a framework, I don't think it works. And we're
going to get to that in a second. So if you're still on the smart goal train, and you haven't heard a convincing case as to why you shouldn't be using smart goals, I get it, we're going to get to that in a second. So if you're still on the smart goal train and you haven't
heard a convincing case as to why you shouldn't be using smart goals, I get it. We're going to
get there. Stay with me. Okay. So that's step number one. We got to be clear, specific clarity.
Okay. Step number two, we have to reverse engineer the process to the goal. So once we know the destination, then we have to map the steps to
get there. Ask yourself, what do I need to do to hit my goal? This means actual tasks, like what
do you need to do? Not just like, well, if I want to do a million in revenue, then I need to sell, you know,
a thousand widgets or whatever, right?
It's what are the actual things that you need to do?
And if you don't know, ask somebody or read a book.
I know that might sound crazy, but most of the crazy shit that I know came from reading
books.
Ask ChatGPT, call a mentor, Follow the person who's doing the thing today on social
media and consume their content. And here's a little caveat to that or an addendum to that idea.
Don't just consume their content. Watch what they actually do, right? A lot of times you can learn just as much from digging into someone's social media account and watching what they're actually doing even more so than if you just listen to what they say.
So don't just consume that person that you admire, that person whose life you would like to live or a version of their life, like your version of their life that you'd like to live.
And it's completely cool, by the way, to have that.
You can have aspirational individuals who, you know,
you take different parts from their lives and say, you know,
I'd love to have this kind of house and this kind of relationship with my spouse.
And I'd like to have this kind of company.
And I'd like to be known for expertise or thought leadership on this particular topic.
It's completely cool to cherry pick different people's lives
and things they do in their lives and admire them
and then follow them, consume their content,
but don't just consume their content.
Watch what they actually do.
So it's most likely not rocket science.
It's most likely just work.
But once we have the tasks,
once we know the actual things that we need to do, step number three is where we drastically diverge from smart goals.
Step number three is set non-negotiable habits.
Goals aren't about outcomes.
They're about the habits that drive those outcomes if we focus on
outcomes it distracts us from the process if you're in sales you've heard detach from the outcome
every part of your life in which you can detach from the outcome and focus on the habits that create
success, not the outcomes of success, but the habits that create success, you will see
drastic positive improvements.
This is kind of like an anecdote, but I played college baseball.
I played a little baseball after college.
My career really took off when I was a junior in high school. And it was because I had a coach where I grew up in upstate New York. American Legion baseball was like, you know, the good summer baseball. That's where you wanted to play if you wanted to play in college, but you were still in high school, right? So tons of guys that went on to play in college and even further played American Legion where I was.
There's different leagues all over the country.
American Legion was the big thing.
So I had this summer coach for my American Legion team, and he pounded into our heads this idea of detached from the outcome.
And he also smoked cigarettes as he coached first base. So
he used a lot of curse words and crazy metaphors. And he was very crass. And he's probably my one
of my favorite coaches ever. So I'm not going to share exactly how he conveyed that message to you.
But when I realized that it was okay for me to just focus on the work, focus on my mindset, on my setup,
on my approach when I came up to bat and I completely detached from whether or not I
actually got a hit or got on base.
Surprisingly, my career jumped.
I mean, I was good enough to be on the team at the time, but that season,
I led the team in RBIs and doubles and in batting average.
And it just changed the trajectory of my baseball career.
Who knows if I had stayed on the path that I was,
if I would have made it to college. But from that point on,
playing college baseball was a clear path and I bring it all the way back.
I mean, at the time, I probably couldn't have told you this,
but bringing it all the way back and thinking about it now
as 43, soon to be 44-year-old man,
it was this core idea of detaching from the outcome
that changed the trajectory of my career.
And this applies to sales.
It applies to everything we do in life.
Detach from the outcome.
Focus on the habits, right?
If you want to lose 10 pounds,
commit to all workout five days a week and cut out sugar.
Right?
The habit, the non-negotiable habit is five workouts a week and no sugar.
Not, I'm going to lose 10 pounds because what happens is if the,
if you focus on the losing 10 pounds and the outcome, you're going to have days where you
retain a little extra water and the scale is going to make it look like you're not making
any progress and you're going to get frustrated. And then you're going to change your path and
you're going, you know, maybe I'm working out too much and I need to. And now you're off your habits, your success habits.
Instead of thinking I'll close 10 clients this month, focus on the number of calls you have to make or emails you have to send or networking events you have to go to or contacts you need to add to your CRM.
What is that habit that you do every day that gets you to the goal not the goal itself
my uh my my ex-father-in-law who taught me about selling insurance
uh he used to say don't worry about premium just put policies on the books so this is an
insurance reference uh for those of you who don't work in the insurance industry. I worked at a local independent insurance agency, sold home and auto insurance, sold commercial insurance. It was where I cut my teeth as a sales professional. And he would say all the time, don't worry about premium. Premium is how you gauge success oftentimes.
Some people gauge it by revenue. I think that's silly, but, um, you know, we get, you know,
kind of premiums, your top line sales number. And he would say, don't worry about premium.
Just put policies on the books, put policies on the books. Don't worry about premium. Premium
will always come. So if you need an example from like my business, you know, back at
rogue risk, uh, was the commercial insurance, national digital commercial insurance agency
that I started and then sold and exited from in 2023. Uh, you know, instead of we need 20 leads a day, my habit was I will produce four YouTube videos a week because I knew that four good
YouTube videos that addressed our audience, that were well optimized for SEO, et cetera,
that they would produce the leads.
And the other part about focusing on the habits is that it took the pressure off any one video
or any one action of being successful.
Any one week's worth of creating videos, they didn't need to always produce a certain number.
I knew that stacked over time, week after week, that producing four videos a week,
that the leads would come.
And they did. We blew past 20 leads a day.
We were crushing. Not because I didn't focus did. We blew past 20 leads a day. We were crushing.
Not because I didn't focus on nitpicking the 20 leads.
I just said every single week without fail,
I will get four YouTube videos out.
That was one of our primary marketing strategies
was inbound through YouTube.
Today, right, that might look like LinkedIn posts.
So I've committed to posting a new LinkedIn post
every day before 10am for 2025, every single day. So 365 posts, right? These posts are how I work
through the ideas that are going to be in my TED talk at the end of February. These are ideas that
I'm reframing from the book The Civilized Savage. So instead of saying I'm going to grow my audience to 100,000 followers, right, I'm just going to do the work every day and know that if I'm continuing to refine my game, continuing to refine my expertise, if I'm doing the work, if I'm making sure the success habit is non-negotiable, I just do it every day,
the audience will come.
Goals are the destination.
Habits are the path.
When you nail the right habits, the outcome take care of themselves.
James Clear said this in Atomic Habits every action you take is a vote
for the type of person you wish to become
your habits are who you are
you can say that you're the type of person that works out
but if you never go to the gym, you're not
you can say that you're a salesperson
but if you don't make sales calls, send emails, go to networking events,
if you don't do the actions, if you don't have the habits
that you need to be a successful salesperson, then you're not.
All right, step number four.
We must reflect on and refine our habits, not our annual goals.
So here's the thing.
Don't over plan.
Action begets action.
Planning is important, but at some point you have to move.
Only through action will the path become clear.
As the saying goes, the only way out is through.
You got to do the thing.
You got a big goal.
You feel like you're in a storm, you're in a tornado.
You can sit there and hope it doesn't thrash you and throw you about or you can lock in buckle down and work your way out of the storm through action annual goals are great for setting vision right
that's what we're talking about here but the world changes way too fast to be locked in
for 12 months. So what happens is we need to break down our goals into 90 day sprints quarterly. I
like quarterly because I just, I don't think you get enough data back in a month to necessarily
make the right realignments and adjustments to your habits to get your goals
on track, right? And then we focus on the actions, the habits that we can control right now that
will get us to that quarterly goal. And if what we find after a quarter is those aren't the habits
or actions that get us there, then we can make adjustments.
But we make adjustments to the habits, not the goal. You set the goal because that's what you
wanted to do. Don't fuck with the goal. Fuck with the habits. Realign and adjust your habits
if you determine that they are not the right habits, that they're not the right
actions to be taking.
Again, James Clear from Atomic Habits.
You do not rise to the level of your goals.
You fall to the level of your systems, right?
We have one, two, maybe three big goals, tops, and then we find the habits that will create
the biggest impact
and align with those long-term goals.
We build systems of habits around those goals.
At the end of each quarter, we reevaluate.
Where are we now? What's changed? What's still working?
What needs to shift?
You're not abandoning your goal.
You're refining the path to get there.
All right, step number five,
and I guess we're coming back to smart goals to a certain extent. We have to track our habits, we have to measure what matters,
right? So if we're not tracking, then what's going to happen is our emotions are going to
lie to us, right? If we want to achieve our goals, we can't rely on our memory or our good intentions. It's just,
you are not your mind. You are not your body. They will lie to you, right? You need to track
your habits. You need to measure what matters, right? Your memory, your emotions will lie to
you. When things get squirrely and they absolutely positively will. It is inevitable. It's called entropy.
Your emotions are going to freak out. We're doing the wrong things. We're never going to hit our
goals. We weren't meant to do. We're not worthy. Doubt, shame, fear. And then we freak out and we
go back to what we had always done. And then we get the results that we've always got.
And we have another year where we didn't move forward.
And that is not you.
Actions, not outcomes.
We don't need fancy tools to do this.
There are plenty out there.
It all depends on what you're into.
Simple notebook, habit tracker, right?
Whiteboard with check boxes.
You know, whatever works for you.
Honestly, I don't care.
You know, I use WhoopStrap for a while to track my sleep.
I did that for about four months, figured out during that time what were the things that most impact my sleep
and therefore impacted my energy which uh we addressed
on previous episode uh energy management is one of my core priorities for this year making sure
that i am ready to go i'm doing uh dry january mostly just as a reset um everyone you know what's
funny when you tell people that you're doing dry january is that they immediately then go well you
don't have a drinking problem and i'm like one, well, one, how the fuck do you know?
And two, no, but dry January is not about like undoing some drinking problem I have.
It's about I know that alcohol, a la my whoop, has an impact on my sleep and my energy.
And though I love a good cocktail or a beer or a glass of wine, like anybody else,
probably in some cases more than other people, I want to kick off 2025 right. And I felt like
it was a good thing. And every once in a while, it's just fun to confirm that you have the willpower
to do something that you wouldn't otherwise want to do, which is for me, not drinking for an entire month. So I committed
to it. I'll do it. I did 75 hard last year. It's not a big deal. Right? So if we're tracking
our habits and not our outcomes, like, so if your goal is fitness, right? Log your workouts.
When did you strength train? When did you cardio train? When did you, when did you stretch or,
or do yoga? Right? And if you're really trying to get yourself in shape,
you should be doing all three, right?
Cardio, weights, pulled 405 on the deadlift today, by the way.
And stretching, and I really like hot yoga for stretching,
mostly because then I don't have to think about what to do.
And it also is an incredible core workout
beyond getting your muscles flexible.
So you can track your workouts, right? If you're building a business, this is we've talked about this track,
the activities, sales calls, email sent, whatever those core habits are, those core actions are that
you need to take, right? If you're creating content, mark off every time you post, if you
want to get really gangster, create a Google sheet, and put the date, put the title, put a link.
And again, I know we're not talking about don't track outcomes, track activity, but you could also go back in and track like, hey, what was the first week's view count on that particular post, which is mostly for understanding which content hit and what doesn't so you can get better.
But simple track the habits, track the actions, not the outcomes.
Don't just write down how much you weigh every day, right?
Track what you're doing to improve the numbers
that are meaningful to your goals, right?
Peter Drucker said, you know,
this is probably one of his most famous lines,
what gets measured gets managed.
You are managing your success by tracking your habits. You're not just holding yourself
accountable. You're building momentum. Each check mark, each data point, each day that you put in
your journal, the positive habits that are getting you to where you're going, right? Day three of going to the gym sucks. Day 30 is way easier.
Looking back, I realized that achieving my biggest goals is not about grinding harder,
although grinding harder is an amplifier. It's about focusing smarter. So grinding harder without smart focus, without
not smart goals, smart focus is a loss. You're a lot of wasted energy, a lot of wasted activity,
right? Grinding harder on top of smart focus is an amplifier. It's about choosing fewer goals, building the right habits, and
adapting as you go. James Clear again, success is the product of daily habits, not once in a lifetime
transformations. Very relevant considering we're just coming off of New Year's. And as I said,
we're a week away from Quitter's Day. And my friends, there is one more piece to this puzzle, the ability to
push just a little further than you think you can. One of the reasons I don't like smart goals
is the achievable. The A. Fuck achievable. George Bernard Shaw has one of my favorite quotes of all time. It's one of the most inspirational things that I've ever read,
and I continue to read it again and again.
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world.
The unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
Be unreasonable.
Ed Milet calls this the power of one more.
You're one more meeting, one more rep,
one more call away from achieving what you want.
When everyone else has done enough, be unreasonable.
Do one more.
Marcus Aurelius, you have power over your mind,
not outside events. Real realize this and you will find
your strength you have one more in you if you want it you can't control the market the competition
or even the timing of how shit happens but you can control the habits that you put into your life, the actions you take, and the mindset that you
bring every single day. When you pair the right habits with the mindset to do one more, you'll
create unstoppable momentum. That one extra action, one more email, one more workout, one more pitch.
It could be the difference between hitting that goal and not,
so why not do it?
Is the pain of one more worse than the pain of not hitting your goal
at the end of 2025?
I don't think so.
We're officially to the call to action portion of this podcast.
And my friends, this is what I want to tell you.
Achieving your goals will require enduring discomfort and overcoming obstacles. To succeed,
the discomfort of not reaching your goal must outweigh the challenges of pursuing it.
Tony Robbins, change happens when the pain of staying the same
is greater than the pain of change.
Transformation occurs when the status quo becomes intolerable,
motivating you to take the necessary steps towards your objectives.
Steven Pressfield, at some point,
the pain of not doing it becomes greater than the pain of doing it.
My wish for you in 2025 is that you destroy your BHAG, your big, hairy, audacious, dare I say, unreasonable goal.
But the only way you get there is by focusing on what you can control. Your actions, your decisions, and your responses.
Your habits.
There is a badass motherfucker inside you.
An unreasonable prick that wants more out of life.
A delusional son of a bitch.
Embrace the suck.
And if you're afraid, good, you should be.
Go listen to the last podcast again.
Fear is your vector for action.
You are a civilized savage and I am here for it.
So here's my challenge.
What's your one more today?
What's the non-negotiable habit that you'll commit to?
That one extra step you'll take.
The thing that pushes you closer to your goal,
I want to know.
Share it in the comments.
DM me, Instagram, LinkedIn.
Let's make this shit real.
This is the way. Outro Music