A support, motivation, and accountability group to help members achieve short term goals with long term benefits!
Favorite Goal Setting and Tracking Website
Day Zero Project * The Home of the 101 Things in 1001 Days Project
Day Zero Project is an online community of people all over the world who love creating lists, setting challenges, and making positive changes in their lives.
Hey everyone!
I thought I'd take the time today to stop lurking and to share my favorite goalsetting, goaltracking website and community (besides this one!).
Day Zero Project works pretty simple, you add goals (either from the larger community, or personal styled ones), to one of your lists, and then you can easily add progress notes and pictures, deadlines, and DONE's to them.
You can find people who share goals with you, see how other people achieved their goals, and find a whole lot of inspiration of fun things to do.
Their most popular goal list is 101 Things To Do in 1001 days, which is a bucket list type of goal setting, only for now instead of later in life. It's really motivating (this is how I quit smoking!).
You can have personalized lists as well though, so why not add your 30 Day goals to it?




Thanks for sharing this! I'd not heard of this website before, and as I've said, I LOVE lists apps, and productivity tools, and all sorts of goal-setting doodads. So I'll definitely be poking around.
I think it might work really well for some of my longer-term goals that don't necessarily have set due dates, and aren't absolutely vital, but that I still want to do at some point in the vaguely defined future. Like, places I want to visit, that sort of thing.
you can only add your 30 day goals to it 3 times before you have to start deleting lists every time you want to make a new one...
Depends if you want to be a free member, or a paying member.
I'm a free member, but the limit of lists doesn't bother me. Personally, I tend to recycle my 30 Days list. At the end of the month, I check what I've accomplished, what I've started, and what I haven't done/failed to do, and reassess. Things I've accomplished are automatically moved to the Done list anyway. Things I still want to do, I keep on the list, to have another go at it for the next month. Things I've realized I'm no longer interested in, I delete or move to the Someday list. It's a good way (for me), to make sure that the things I want to achieve are truly things I want to achieve.
It's not going to be perfect for everyone, no system ever can be, but it really works for me, so it might work for others.
I really love Wunderlist but that is just more general task management, though you can use it for really anything and any time frame!