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The 12-Week Year: How to Get a Year's Worth of Results in 12 Weeks

Published: May 16, 2026 | Reading time: 9 minutes

The Problem with Annual Goals

Annual goals have a fundamental flaw: 12 months feels like a long time. When you set a goal in January, you have a full year to achieve it. That distant deadline creates a dangerous psychological effect — you feel like there's plenty of time, so you don't start. You drift through January, February, and March with good intentions but little action. Then suddenly it's June, and you panic. By October, you've given up and started thinking about next year's resolutions.

The 12-week year eliminates this problem entirely. Instead of a 12-month annual cycle, you compress the year into 12-week sprints. You get four "years" in one calendar year. Each 12-week period has the urgency of a deadline that's close enough to feel real but long enough to achieve meaningful results. The concept, popularized by Brian Moran and Michael Lennington, has been adopted by executives, athletes, and entrepreneurs worldwide because it works.

How the 12-Week Year Works

The 12-week year shifts your planning and execution cycle from 365 days to 84 days. In each 12-week period, you commit to achieving outcomes that would normally be ambitious even for a quarter. The compressed timeline creates healthy urgency, eliminates procrastination, and forces you to focus on what truly matters.

Here's the framework at a glance:

Step 1: Set Your 12-Week Vision

Start by asking: What would make the next 12 weeks a massive success? Not incremental progress — a breakthrough. Write 3-5 goals that, if achieved, would transform your situation. These should be specific and measurable:

Each goal must be measurable. "Get healthier" is not a goal. "Exercise 5 days per week and lose 12 pounds" is a goal. Without measurement, you have no way to know if you're on track until the 12 weeks are over — and by then it's too late to adjust.

Step 2: Define Your Lead Measures

Lag measures track the outcome you want (revenue, weight loss, pages written). Lead measures track the actions that drive that outcome. You can control lead measures; you can only influence lag measures.

Example: Book writing goal

Your dashboard for the 12-week year should prominently display both your lag measures (progress toward the goal) and your lead measures (weekly action completion). You need both: the lead measures tell you if you're doing the right things; the lag measures tell you if those things are working.

Step 3: Weekly Execution Rhythm

Each week follows a consistent pattern:

Weekly planning (Sunday, 30 min): Review your lead measures from last week. Plan this week's actions. Identify obstacles. Schedule your most important tasks into specific time blocks.

Daily execution (Every day): Complete your lead measure actions. Don't negotiate with yourself. Your daily actions are non-negotiable commitments, not preferences.

Weekly accountability (Same day each week): Score yourself on each lead measure. Did you hit your targets? Be brutally honest. A 7/10 week is progress. A 3/10 week is a warning signal.

Step 4: The Weekly Accountability Meeting

This is the engine of the 12-week year. Every week, you review your scorecard. If you're falling short, diagnose why:

If possible, find an accountability partner — someone who also runs a 12-week year and reviews their scorecard with you weekly. The social commitment of reporting your results to someone else significantly increases follow-through. If you can't find a partner, use a public commitment (post your scorecard on social media) or a self-imposed financial consequence (transfer money to a friend who donates it if you miss your targets).

Step 5: End-of-Cycle Review and Recovery

After 12 weeks, take a full week off before starting the next cycle. During this break:

Why the 12-Week Year Works

The 12-week year leverages several powerful psychological principles:

Adapting the System for Different Areas of Life

You can run multiple 12-week years in parallel for different domains:

Start with just one area — the most impactful one. Master the system for 2-3 cycles, then expand to other domains. Attempting six parallel 12-week years on your first try is a recipe for overwhelm.

Common Pitfalls

Run Your First 12-Week Year with a Complete System

The 12-week year is a powerful framework, and it works even better with the right tools. Our Life OS Kit includes a 12-week year planner, weekly scorecard template, goal-setting worksheets, and a Notion dashboard to track all four cycles. Stop planning — start executing.

Get the Life OS Kit →

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