
Using Video for Golf Improvement the Right Way: What Golfers Should (and Should Not) Look For
December 16, 2025Why focusing on how you practice is far more important than what you want to shoot this year.
It’s January. The holiday decorations are down, the gyms are packed (for now), and every golfer is staring at the calendar, swearing that this is the year everything changes.
You’ve probably already caught yourself saying: “This is the year I finally break 90.” “This is the year my handicap drops to single digits.” “This is the year I get rid of my slice.”
These are great aspirations. They get you excited. But here is the hard truth that most golf instruction tends to ignore: Staring at the scoreboard won’t help you put the ball in the hole.
Goals focused purely on the final result (outcomes) often lead to frustration, anxiety on the first tee, and burnout by mid-June when progress inevitably stalls. Golf is too volatile a game to only measure success by a number on a scorecard.
At SMART Golf & Fitness, we believe the path to your best golf in 2026 isn’t found in wishing for better scores. It’s found in falling in love with the daily habits and training routines that make better scores inevitable.
This year, let’s change the approach. Let’s stop making “resolutions” and start building processes.
The Problem with “Outcome” Goals
An Outcome Goal is the destination: Lower my handicap by 5 shots. The problem? You don’t have 100% control over the outcome. You can hit the ball great and get a bad bounce, or play well on a day your opponent plays terribly. Focusing only on the outcome creates pressure on every swing because every shot feels like a referendum on your goal.
A Process Goal is the roadmap: Commit to two mobility sessions and two focused putting drills per week. You have 100% control over this. It doesn’t rely on luck or weather. It’s actionable, sustainable, and, most importantly, repeatable.
If you take care of the process, the outcomes take care of themselves.
Your 2026 Process-Driven Game Plan
Here is how to build a golf roadmap for 2026 that actually sticks, based on the integrated SMART approach.
Step 1: The Cold, Hard Data Assessment
You cannot build a roadmap if you don’t know your starting point. “Feeling” like you need to drive it further isn’t a strategy.
Before setting any goals, you need objective data.
- On the Golf Side: What do the TrackMan numbers actually say about your club path and face angle? What are your strokes gained statistics telling you about where you truly bleed shots?
- On the Fitness Side: Is your inability to turn due to technique, or is it a physical limitation in your thoracic spine or hips?
The Process Commitment: “I will schedule a full golf and fitness assessment by January 15th so I am working with facts, not feelings.”
Step 2: Identify the “Big Domino”
Once you have the data, don’t try to fix everything at once. That’s a recipe for disaster. Identify the one or two biggest inhibitors to your performance.
Is it 3-putting from inside 10 feet? Is it a lack of clubhead speed due to poor ground force mechanics? Is it late-round fatigue causing your back to flare up on the 15th hole?
The Process Commitment: “My Q1 focus is entirely on improving hip mobility and stability to protect my lower back.” (Instead of: “I want to stop hurting.”)
Step 3: Reverse Engineer the Routine
This is where the magic happens. Take your “Big Domino” and break it down into boring, unsexy, weekly habits. These should be so small you can’t fail.
If the outcome you want is… more distance. The PROCESS goal is… two strength training sessions per week focused on explosive power, plus one speed training session in the simulator.
If the outcome you want is… no more 3-putts. The PROCESS goal is… spending 15 minutes on the putt deck before every simulator session, specifically working on start-line drills, before hitting full shots.
Step 4: Measure Adherence, Not Just Score
In 2026, your victory isn’t shooting 79 in April. Your victory is hitting 90% adherence to your workout schedule in February.
At SMART, our coaches are here to hold you accountable to the routine. If you commit to the inputs, the output will eventually show up on the course.
Examples: Flipping the Script
Let’s look at how a typical resolution looks when converted into a SMART Process Goal.
| The “Old Outcome” Resolution | The New 2026 “Process” Commitment |
|---|---|
| “I want to hit my driver 20 yards further.” | “I will attend two strength-focused fitness sessions per week and complete my prescribed mobility homework every morning before work.” |
| “I’m going to stop slicing the ball.” | “I will commit to one lesson every two weeks this winter and spend my practice time only working on the specific path drill my instructor gave me, regardless of where the ball goes right now.” |
| “I want to play pain-free golf.” | “I will arrive 15 minutes early for every practice session to complete my full dynamic warm-up routine, rather than rushing straight to the driver.” |
| “I want to finally break 90 and stop shooting in the mid-90s.” | “I will follow the ‘50% Rule’: I’ll spend half of every practice session on wedges and putting, and I will commit to a ‘center-of-the-green’ strategy during simulator rounds to eliminate double bogeys.” |
Start Your Process This Month
Champions aren’t made during the Sunday back nine in July. They are made on a Tuesday evening in January when nobody is watching, doing the mobility work and the technical drills that build a bulletproof game.
Don’t let 2026 be another year of wishing for a better game. Build the habits that guarantee it.
Ready to define your process? It all starts with the Initial Assessment. Book yours today at your nearest SMART Golf & Fitness location and let’s get to work.



