An ambition can feel completely real and still fail two simple questions: what do you actually want, and who is it for. The Ambition Test checks a goal against both before you spend any more time on it.
Why most goals never get tested
Most people move straight from an idea to action, and skip the step where the idea gets checked. It feels like momentum. It’s actually a shortcut past the one question that would have told you whether to build on this goal or let it go.
In coaching sessions at the Miller Center, the founders who could answer both questions in one breath were usually the ones whose ventures were still running a year later. The ones who spoke only in ambition, “build something that matters,” usually hadn’t started.
Who this is for, and how long it takes
About 7 minutes. For anyone about to commit real time to a goal they haven’t actually tested yet.
What’s inside
- The goal, written exactly as it sounds in your head, unpolished.
- Two direct questions: what do you actually want, and who is it for.
How to get the most out of it
Write the first field fast, without editing it. If you can’t answer one of the two questions cleanly, that’s the most useful result the test can give you.
What changes if you actually do this
The output is two honest answers. The outcome is knowing, before you invest more time, whether this goal is specific enough to act on. The impact is fewer abandoned goals, because you stopped guessing earlier.
Download The Ambition Test
[Download button placeholder, to be added.]
Next step: The Intention Statement Builder, which turns a goal that passes this test into one finished sentence.
FAQ
How is this different from the full Intention Worksheet?
The full worksheet takes about 20 minutes and produces a complete intention statement. This is the fast version, just the test, for when you want a quick answer before committing more time.
What if my goal fails the test?
That’s a useful result, not a failure. It usually means the goal needs more time before it’s ready to build on.
Can I use this for someone else’s goal, like a team project?
Yes. The two questions work the same way regardless of whose goal it is.

