Home Health and Wellness ODs Say They Mostly Met Their Goals Last Year

ODs Say They Mostly Met Their Goals Last Year

Photo credit: jayk7, Getty Images

According to a recent Women In Optometry Pop-up Poll, many eye care professionals set and met their personal and professional goals. Almost half (47 percent) of respondents said they felt they progressed towards those professional goals, and more than half (65 percent) said they progressed towards their personal goals.

PERSONAL GOALS

Four-out-of-five respondents set health-related goals, pushing those to the top of the list for personal achievements. These included nutrition, diet and exercise. Fifty-six percent of respondents also marked financial goals as important, and 38 percent each voted for parenting/household-oriented goals and social goals. Other personal goals noted included lifetime milestones (i.e. having children or buying a house) and focusing more on hobbies. Respondents could select more than one goal.

personal goals results

PROFESSIONAL GOALS

Practice growth was the most aimed-for goal last year, with 65 percent of respondents noting it as a main 2022 goal. Other popular goals were reaching practice milestones (47 percent), education-related goals (29 percent), staff training goals (29 percent) and leadership goals (24 percent).

professional goals results

THE YEAR AHEAD

Respondents seem to be hitting the ground running in 2023; 71 percent of them have already set both personal and professional goals for the year. Some respondents noted specific goals they reached in 2022.  Some noted hitting goals is a challenge.

“We received funding from the National Institutes of Justice. We are submitting funding requests to National Institutes of Health.”

“Hope to give adequate quality time to family, improve personal finance and improve [my] professional network.”

“Procrastination continues to bite me in the butt! Balance is fluid—balancing things in life is never over!”

Seventy percent of respondents work for themselves as an owner or partner. Eighteen percent work as an employee, and 12 percent work as a combination or the two. Of all respondents, 82 percent were female ODs and 12 percent were male ODs. Six percent were non-OD males.

See results from other WO poll here.

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Optometry Embraces Aesthetics, with 57% Offering Services

Aesthetics is a growing opportunity for optometrists, and 57% of the respondents to a recent Pop-up Poll say that they have implemented aesthetic services,...

Meet the Student Board: Isabelle Ampe, CCO | Midwestern University

When Isabelle “Izzy” Ampe dissected a lamb’s eyeball in middle school, she immediately wanted to know more. She had never needed vision correction in...

OD Brings in Technology to Help Patients Get off the Hamster Wheel of Dry Eye Treatments

In 2016, when Melanie Denton Dombrowski, OD, MBA, FAAO, opened Salisbury Eyecare and Eyewear in Salisbury, North Carolina, her to-do list included building a...

What’s the Difference Between Retailing and Marketing?

In this two-part WO Voices podcast, Liza Amlani, principal and founder of Retail Strategy Group, says that there is an opportunity for in both...