Measure What Matters
Focus, Feedback & Real Progress
Are You Actually Improving?
We keep score in games.
We check bank accounts.
We track steps, calories, miles, and sleep.
Why?
Because what gets measured gets managed.
So here’s the real question:
Are you measuring your improvement?
Not in a vague way.
Not “I worked hard.”
But specifically.
Did you get better today?
And how?
Why Measurement Drives Progress
Performance psychology research consistently shows:
Athletes and adults who set specific, measurable targets improve at higher rates than those who simply “show up.”
Clarity drives effort.
Directed effort drives progress.
Without clarity, effort gets scattered.
And scattered effort rarely compounds.
The Busy vs. Intentional Trap
One of the biggest mistakes in training?
Being busy without being intentional.
You finish the workout.
You leave practice.
You check the box.
But could you clearly answer:
What improved?
If you can’t define it, you probably didn’t drive it.
The Top 3 Rule
Before your next session, write down:
The 3 most important things you want to improve.
Not 10.
Not 5.
Three.
Ask yourself:
• If I only improved one thing today, what would matter most?
• What’s second?
• What’s third?
Research on focus and cognitive load shows that narrowing attention improves skill acquisition and retention.
Too many targets dilute progress.
Fewer targets sharpen it.
Redefine What Improvement Looks Like
Progress doesn’t always mean:
More weight
Faster times
Higher jumps
It can mean:
• Better technique
• Cleaner reps
• Improved consistency
• Sharper focus
• Less pain
• Better energy
Improvement is measurable—if you define it first.
Final Thought
Go into your next workout with intention.
Leave knowing whether you moved the needle.
That’s how momentum builds.
That’s how dominoes start to fall.
— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team