The SMART Framework is a criteria-based model used to design effective goals, KPIs, and performance targets. Each letter represents a quality that a well-constructed objective or indicator should possess. It was first formally described by George T. Doran in a 1981 management paper and has since become one of the most widely adopted goal-setting standards in business, project management, and personal development.
S — Specific
The goal must be clearly and precisely defined. Vague objectives lead to inconsistent interpretation and unfocused effort.
- ❌ Weak: “Improve customer satisfaction”
- ✅ SMART: “Increase the Net Promoter Score (NPS) from 42 to 55 in the Asia-Pacific region”
Questions to ask: What exactly needs to be achieved? Who is responsible? Which area or segment does it apply to?
M — Measurable
Progress must be quantifiable. If you cannot measure it, you cannot manage it. A measurable goal has a defined unit of tracking — a number, percentage, ratio, score, or binary outcome.
Questions to ask: How will we know when it’s achieved? What data source will we use? What is the unit of measurement?
A — Achievable (also: Attainable)
The goal must be realistic given available resources, constraints, and current baseline performance. Aspirational is good; impossible is demoralising and counterproductive.
- ❌ Weak: “Triple revenue in 90 days with no additional budget”
- ✅ SMART: “Grow quarterly revenue by 12% through expansion into two new market segments”
Questions to ask: Do we have the capacity, budget, and capability? Is this realistic based on historical performance and market conditions?
R — Relevant (also: Realistic or Results-oriented)
The goal must matter to the organization’s broader strategy. A KPI that is measurable and achievable but not aligned to strategic priorities is a distraction.
- ❌ Weak: “Increase the number of internal email newsletters sent” (if the goal is customer retention)
- ✅ SMART: “Improve customer retention rate by 10% through a redesigned onboarding program”
Questions to ask: Does this goal support a strategic objective? Is now the right time to focus on this? Does it align with organizational priorities?
T — Time-bound (also: Timely or Time-limited)
Every goal needs a defined deadline or time horizon. Without a timeframe, there is no urgency and no clear point at which success or failure can be assessed.
- ❌ Weak: “Eventually reduce average support response time”
- ✅ SMART: “Reduce average customer support response time from 24 hours to 4 hours by 30 June 2025”
Questions to ask: By when does this need to be achieved? Are there interim milestones? What is the review cadence?
Putting It All Together — A Full SMART Example
| Element | Applied |
|---|---|
|
Specific
|
Increase monthly recurring revenue (MRR) in the SME segment
|
|
Measurable
|
From $1.2M to $1.6M MRR
|
|
Achievable
|
Based on current pipeline and 3 new sales hires approved
|
|
Relevant
|
Aligns with strategic objective to double SME market share
|
|
Time-bound
|
By 31 December 2025
|
Full SMART Goal: “Grow SME segment MRR from $1.2M to $1.6M by 31 December 2025, supported by three new sales hires and a revised pricing strategy.”
SMART Variants
Over time, extensions of the original acronym have emerged:
| Variant | Additional Letters | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
|
SMARTER
|
+ E, R
|
Evaluated (reviewed regularly) and Revised (adjusted as needed)
|
|
SMARTEST
|
+ EST
|
Adds Exciting, Stretching, Trackable
|
|
SMART-C
|
+ C
|
Adds Challenging — ensuring goals push performance upward
|
The original five-letter version remains the most widely used in corporate and investment contexts.
Why SMART Matters in KPI Design
A KPI that does not meet SMART criteria is often the root cause of failed performance management. Common failures include:
- Not Specific → Different people interpret the goal differently
- Not Measurable → Progress cannot be objectively assessed
- Not Achievable → Teams disengage when targets feel impossible
- Not Relevant → Effort is spent on metrics that don’t move the needle
- Not Time-bound → Urgency is absent; reviews are indefinitely deferred
Applying the SMART framework at the KPI design stage — before targets are communicated — significantly increases the likelihood that KPIs will drive the intended behaviour and deliver meaningful performance insight.