The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
Non-notable neologism pushed by various marketing consultants on their blogs and consultancy websites. A Google search revealed no promising hits, but due to the ambiguous term it is extremely difficult to search for it. Both given sources fail
WP:RS.
GermanJoe (
talk) 05:52, 1 July 2018 (UTC)reply
Keep. Try the above alt. searches that combine
CLEAR and
PURE with the older
SMART criteria. If we just look at Google Books hits there are more than ennough to satisfy GNG.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] Google Scholar is giving as well.[9][10][11] That last paper by Day and Tosey is cited by 47. Both PURE and CLEAR date back to at least 1996, so NOTNEO does not apply either. Courtesy ping
GermanJoe. SamSailor 07:11, 2 July 2018 (UTC) --Amended below. SamSailor 21:43, 23 July 2018 (UTC)reply
References
^Bianco-Mathis, V.E.; Nabors, L.K.; Roman, C.H. (2002).
Leading From the Inside Out: A Coaching Model.
SAGE Publications. p. 34.
ISBN978-0-7619-2392-3. Retrieved 2 July 2018. The first step is to translate each goal into objectives. Whitmore (1996, pp. 55-56) stressed that good objectives need to be not only SMART, but also PURE and CLEAR: • SMART: Specific, Measurable, Agreed, Realistic, Time-phased • PURE: ...
^Salazar, M.K. (2006).
Core Curriculum for Occupational and Environmental Health Nursing. Elsevier Saunders. p. 190.
ISBN978-1-4160-2374-6. Retrieved 2 July 2018. Goal-setting must be realistic, yet challenging; enthusiastic, yet disciplined. 2. Qualities of a good goal are: S.M.A.R.T., P.U.R.E AND C.L.E.A.R. (Box 7-1). End goals serve as the final objective to be achieved. 1. These goals are in alignment ...
^Dembkowski, S. (2006).
The Seven Steps of Effective Coaching. Thorogood. p. 38.
ISBN978-1-85418-657-7. Retrieved 2 July 2018. goal. setting. Introduction. Without clear goals, executive coaching relationships can become just a forum for rambling ... our experience those that have proven to be most useful are those based on the acronyms of SMART, PURE and CLEAR.
^Wood, A. (2007).
A Comprehensive Library Staff Training Programme in the Information Age. Chandos Information Professional Series. Elsevier Science. p. 355.
ISBN978-1-78063-106-6. Retrieved 2 July 2018. ... CLEAR (Challenging, Legal, Environmentally Sound, Agreed, Recorded), 110, 193 PURE (Positively Stated, Understood, Relevant, Ethical), 110, 193 SMART (Specific/Stretching, Measurable, Achievable/Agreed, Realistic, Timebound), ...
^Niermeyer, R. (2008).
Teams führen. Kienbaum bei Haufe (in German). Haufe Verlag GmbH & Company KG. p. 67.
ISBN978-3-448-09043-7. Retrieved 2 July 2018. Formulieren Sie Ziele, die motivieren Wer seine Ziele mit der SMART-PURE-CLEAR-Methode formuliert, verhindert die häufigsten Fehler, die bei der Zielvereinbarung vorkommen: SMART PURE CLEAR • Ziele werden zu hoch oder zu ...
^McCarthy, G. (2014).
Coaching and Mentoring for Business. SAGE Publications. p. 46.
ISBN978-1-4739-0432-3. Retrieved 2 July 2018. To identify a goal in a coaching or mentoring context, there are a number of alternatives to SMART, e.g., EXACT (Wilson 2007), OPUS (Stoltzfus 2008), PURE (Whitmore 2009) and CLEAR (Whitmore 2009). Wilson describes EXACT as a goal ...
^de Jong, E. (2014).
Goal Setting for Success. Personal Development for Beginners. p. 14.
ISBN978-1-4954-4884-3. Retrieved 2 July 2018. Goal setting was originally only done in business, but in recent years, this technique has gained popularity as a tool to help ... use SMART, PURE & CLEAR, with each letter representing specific criteria that needs to be met when setting a goal.
^Day, Trevor; Tosey, Paul (2011). "Beyond SMART? A new framework for goal setting". Curriculum Journal. 22 (4). Informa UK Limited: 515–534.
doi:
10.1080/09585176.2011.627213.
ISSN0958-5176. … Goal setting and action planning using NLP's well-formed outcomes framework can be … Churches and Terry (2007) recommend employing an NLP- influenced SMART framework (specific, with … with the addition of further NLP elements using the mnemonic PURE (the outcome is …
Comment : I'm not impressed by the above list. For example,
this cited source is from the Goal Setting for Success book that only mentions the subject once, and disparagingly too. Or take
this book where the subject is mentioned only twice, per its index. The rest seem typical jargon-infested manuals that coach consultants. These are the sources that shall keep this
SPAish-created text up? -
The Gnome (
talk) 11:22, 23 July 2018 (UTC)reply
Comment (1) - first of all many thanks @
Sam Sailor: for the additional hits. Still lots of false positives, but your search parameters are vastly better nonetheless. However, I have checked the listed links, and almost all of them provide only passing mentions or quotes of Whitmore's publication about CLEAR as an additional set of goals, but do not elaborate on the concept in significant detail. Such numerous mentions are a good argument against
WP:NOTNEO, agreed. But without in-depth analysis of the term and its underlying concept these sources still fail to establish notability for a stand-alone article. The term exists and is used by some authors, but Wikipedia is not a dictionary (
WP:NOTDICT). For the sake of efficiency, I won't add a similar comment at the parallel
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/PURE goal criteria just yet, but will wait until the discussion here is over.
GermanJoe (
talk) 08:29, 2 July 2018 (UTC)reply
Comment (2) - would it be appropriate to simply merge/redirect a brief mention of this term into
SMART criteria? All three terms seem very closely connected, both in research and usage as your list of sources clearly indicates. The articles already cross-link each other with significant overlap. Just a random suggestion, but maybe that would be a viable solution to preserve the information without the need for perfect "notability".
GermanJoe (
talk) 08:29, 2 July 2018 (UTC)reply
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Sandstein 08:50, 8 July 2018 (UTC)reply
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Sandstein 18:37, 16 July 2018 (UTC)reply
Delete this corporate-training
neologism that has evidently failed to catch on widely. The sources quoted at length above do nothing to change the lack of
verifiable evidence of
notability. -
The Gnome (
talk) 11:25, 23 July 2018 (UTC)reply
Merge and redirect both this article and the article on
PURE goal criteria into a new section of
SMART criteria. I would be OK with Biogeographist's suggestion. However, the content of the PURE and CLEAR articles is more of a similar style to the SMART article. That article already has a section on "additional criteria"; I would add a section called something like "alternative criteria".
Yaris678 (
talk) 19:50, 23 July 2018 (UTC)reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.