The Romans began each year by making promises to the god Janus, for whom the month of January is named.
In the Medieval era, knights took the “peacock vow” at the end of the Christmas season each year to re-affirm their commitment to chivalry.
And today, we have our New Year’s Resolutions. But how great are we at keeping them?
A 2007 study by Richard Wisemen from the University of Bristol involving 3,000 people showed that 88% of those who set New Year resolutions fail, despite the fact that 52% of the study’s participants were confident of success at the beginning.
So what is going wrong? Here’s 8 useful tips from us to make sure you maximize your chances at meeting your CFA (or any other) New Year’s resolution.
This is the most important tip of all, so it goes first and foremost. Don’t say ‘I resolve to pass the CFA exam this year’, say ‘I resolve to cover X chapters every week and Y practice exams before exam day’. Set a goal that is objective, fully measurable and dependent on your hard work and commitment.
#2 – Keep it simple.
If you can, just focus on one resolution. Identify what is the most important thing that you should achieve this year and zero in on that. Boil that down to one sentence, and this will be your guiding mantra for the rest of the year.
#3 – Make a plan and write it down.
Once you’ve decided what your resolution is, spend 10-15 minutes with a notepad and outline a plan of action. This is obviously key to properly achieving your goal – can’t succeed if you don’t have a plan. But too many people every year make resolutions and don’t even think about any sort of plan to achieve them.
#4 – Start small.
Create small goals for yourself and distribute them across time. If you’re planning to cover the CFA syllabus in 3 months, you should aim to cover 1/12 of the syllabus every week. Plan out each weekly segment and focus on that.
#5 – Make it attainable.
If I started the year saying that I wanted to end the year beating Roger Federer at tennis, I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t do a thing about it. Why? Because it’s just too damn unattainable. Know what your realistic limits are and plan within them. In addition to your minimum required goal, set a stretch goal (a goal in which it would be awesome to hit, but not your minimum required) to help inspire you to greater heights.
#6 – Tell people.
You’re 10% more likely to achieve any goal you set for yourself if you share your targets and plans with other people such as friends or family (or us!). Why? Two reasons:
- Social support. Your friends and family will understand and help when your resolutions mean you have to make different decisions in your normal social life. In a CFA example, this might mean missing a dinner, staying in weekends, or delegating some chores to others temporarily.
- An accountable promise. If you’ve told a whole bunch of people you’re taking the CFA and you have a plan to maximize your pass rate, you’re much more likely to stick to it as you wouldn’t want to be seen going back on your words. By telling people, you make yourself accountable for it, and that will drive you on afterward.
#7 – Think positive.
A task such as planning to face the CFA exam is a fairly large undertaking. Never underestimate the power of positive thinking – be encouraging to yourself and your progress. Focus on what you’ll be getting with the CFA charter. Don’t let the exam defeat you – if you don’t feel like you’re accomplishing enough, you get a defeated attitude. At this point, instead of moping, just shut out everything else, set a study goal for the next 2 hours or so and hit that goal. Nothing beats a lost and/or defeated attitude with some good, hard honest work.
#8 – Attack with the right tools.
Besides prep material, there is a ton of things we at 300 Hours have put together to help you accomplish your CFA goals.
- Be a member: Join our 5000+ members and get full access to our Resources area, including our Ten Commandments and Free Resources Review.
- The CFA Exam Analysis Report: It’s not just about prepping, it’s also about knowing what the exam is about. We’ve analysed the 2012 June exam based on thousands of real candidate data points. Get all the learnings with our printable, tablet-able report.
- Prep material reviews & discounts: make sure you check the latest reviews & discounts on offer before you make any big purchases.
What resolutions are you making for the new year? Practice tip #6 and share them with us in the comments below!
To clear CFA Level 2 this year!
Neha, good luck for Level 2! I personally found it most challenging in terms of the sheer amount of calculation and speed required. But with enough practice it should work. Let us know how things are going and give us all a shout if there’s anything that we (+300hours community) may be able to help with. Sophie
Happy New Year and best of luck with all your resolutions!
Thanks for this – helps me get a good start to the New Year! Happy New Year to all you guys!
Excellent. Thank you for this. Having just seen the New Year in, I need encouraging for June 2019! David