My template for a quarterly review + plan

By Peter Wildeford @ 2026-01-08T13:54 (+56)

This post was crossposted from The Power Law by the Forum team, with the author's permission. The author may not see or respond to comments on this post. 


Subtitle: A free Google doc template for the system I actually use

This template was made by Peter Wildeford and Caroline Jeanmaire.

It’s almost a new year and that often calls for some sort of annual planning.

But in my opinion, annual planning operates on too long a timescale. Annual planning and goal setting is too infrequent, so it’s easy to lose track. You don’t get fast enough feedback and you risk derailing.

Instead, I suggest adopting a quarterly planning cadence (e.g., set goals for 2026 Jan-Mar). I wanted to provide a template that I’ve used many times before and that many people seem to like.

Here’s my template in a Google Doc: 

Click here and make a copy


There are a lot of different templates out there to try and I don’t know if this one is better. It works well for me, but I’m not you. But here’s some principles I was interested in, and maybe that resonates with you:

What’s actually in this thing?

The template walks you through five steps. The fast-track version takes about three hours (seven 25-minute pomodoros), though you can spend longer if you want to go deeper.

Step 1: Reflection. You start by looking back at the prior quarter—key successes, key mistakes, how you did against prior rocks. There’s also a quick 1-5 rating across eight areas: work, sleep, exercise, nutrition, routines, finances, relationships, and environment. The point isn’t to obsess over numbers but to notice patterns and identify 1-2 problem areas that deserve focus.

Step 2: Vision. A quick check on your values and mission (or just jot keywords if you don’t have one), plus a 90-day visualization. What do you want to have/be/feel in three months?

Step 3: Combine and Refine. Take everything from Steps 1-2 and distill it into a raw list of potential priorities, then filter down to 3-5 candidate themes. The template also asks you to identify the “effort type”—is each item a project, a learning goal, or a habit change? This matters because habit changes require different strategies.

Step 4: Set Rocks and Pebbles. The core of the template. You get three major rocks and two optional pebbles. For each rock, you define SMART goals (both input goals for what you’ll put in and output goals for what you’ll achieve), plus IF-THEN planning. You identify one key obstacle and write out “IF [obstacle occurs], THEN I will [specific response].” Each rock also asks: “Who could you share this rock with for support/accountability?” External commitment helps.

Step 5: Sanity Checking. Reality-check your plan: Is there enough time? Do you have slack for the unexpected? What’s your system for weekly/monthly review? Will travel or environment changes derail you?

The template includes a 7-pomodoro fast-track guide if you want structure for completing it in a single ~3 hour session.

Tips Before You Start


If you’re interested, make a copy of the template and get to work!

Click here and make a copy

This template was made by Peter Wildeford and Caroline Jeanmaire. It is based on Gustin’s annual review, the Quarterly Productivity Planner, Ben Todd’s Personal annual review process (2020), Ultraworking’s monthly template, the Beyond Goals workshop, the Forcing Function annual review, Ben Kuhn’s weekly review habit, Alex Beal’s “2022 OKRs”, Eric Barker’s “What’s the best way to set a goal?”, Konrad Seifert’s “Life Review, Planning & Organization”, and Jan’s “Review, reflection, goal-setting prompts”. Intend.do and Zen to Done also serve as inspiration.


Vasco Grilo🔸 @ 2026-01-15T07:07 (+2)

Thanks for sharing, Peter! Have you considered making the doc available for reading even if people do not make a copy? I wonder whether a few people would only check it this way, even though a copy can easily be deleted.

Here are some links shared in the doc which many may find useful regardless of whether they do quarterly reviews, although you note "the point is to do a review and plan!".

Appendix A: Get Inspired

Read…

Though remember not to get too distracted here! Just read enough to get inspired and then stop. The point is to do a review and plan!