It turns out that there’s been  a simple, powerful, customizable and private tool right under my nose all along: Google Forms. Tracking goals with Google Forms, gives you three things:

An easy way to input your data from a computer or a smartphone.All your data in a nice, neat spreadsheet.A graphical summary of your trends and progress.

Because it’s all in Google Drive, the data you plug in about your goals and your efforts can be as public or private as you want. You can share your goals with a spouse or a support group, or you can keep it all to yourself. To get started, I recommend something simple. Start with just a few points of data and expand or refine your form as you get into the groove. I’ll show you how.

Creating a Google Form to Track Your Goals

Log in to your Google Drive at http://drive.google.com. Click the Create button on the left and choose Form.

Choose a title and a theme to make your form pretty. You can change this later.

Build your form. I recommend crafting the form as a daily survey of your activities.

Multiple choice and checkbox answers are the best, since it makes tidy data for analysis later on. However, I also use some textbox items for tracking things like “What did you eat” or “Which long term goal did you work on.”

When you are done tweaking your form, click Choose response destination.

If you have a spreadsheet going already, use that one. If not, create a new spreadsheet with a suitable name, such as “My Goals.”

When you are done, click View live form.

This will take you to the URL where your form can be filled out. Bookmark it in your browser…

…or email it to yourself and add it to your home screen on your phone.

Now all you have to do is fill out this form everyday. I recommend putting it on your to do list, or making it a part of your daily planning routine. Often, I’ll use my phone to fill out the form right before I go to bed.

Analyze and Organize Your Goals

If you’re handy with spreadsheets at work, you’ll know exactly what to do with the data to pull out the reports and analysis you want. If not, Google Drive has some built-in reporting that gives a satisfying summary of your responses. To view a summary of your responses, open the spreadsheet where all your entries are being stored. You can do this by going to your form, clicking Edit this form and then View responses.

Next, click Form –> Show summary of responses.

The responses will be shown with charts and graphs, depending on the type of form item.

From here, you get a quick snapshot of your data. This is only a summary, however, and it doesn’t quite connect all the dots. You can use the usual spreadsheet magic to view correlations. This may not be very revealing in the short term, but if you keep this up for months, it might teach you something about yourself. For example, if we apply a filter to the mood column…

And then filter the results to show us only days where we had moods of 1 or 2…

Then we might notice that blogging and creative writing tend to lead to bad moods, low energy levels and cigarette smoking. Or, perhaps it was the lack of breakfast that set the day all wrong.

This is just a silly example, of course, but you can see the potential.

Conclusion

Google Forms is nothing new,  and this isn’t going to be the most powerful or full-featured way to track your daily activities (there are paid apps that blow this method out of the water). But I do find it to be very simple and very controllable (my data doesn’t belong to anyone but me and Google…). I haven’t discovered anything life changing yet, but it has given me some helpful perspective on my day-to-day existence. Also, it occasionally jogs my memory (“what the heck did I do last Tuesday?”). Give it a try. It only takes 20 minutes to get started and it only takes 2 minutes to fill it out each day. Tips

Google Forms automatically timestamps each entry, but I like to add a field for Day of the Week.If you miss a day, go ahead and enter the data from the form the next day. Then, go into the spreadsheet and tweak the timestamp.Be consistent when entering data. This will be helpful when going back and analyzing trends. For text entries, use semicolons to delimit multiple items so you can parse them later.I’ve found that many of my textboxes become good candidates for multiple choice items. (I guess my life is more monotonous than I thought.)

Got another tip for tracking your goals? Share it in the comments.

Thanks! Echoing Adam’s request: Please share your form with public and post the link so others can use it as a starting template! Would be great to distribute to my employees for tracking their daily goals. Comment

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