16 goals tracking table part one

16 goals tracking table part one, minimal, corporate-clean, light

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A wide goals-tracking table with baseline, target and status columns marked by dot-and-arrow indicators, under an italic-serif title.

Summary

The first page of the "16 goals for a healthier future" tracker: a wide multi-column table listing each goal with its metric, baseline, target and a status indicator, grouped by pillar.

Visual description

Cream page. "16 goals for a healthier future" runs across the top with the last words in italic serif, and a short intro paragraph follows. A small "Key" legend at top-right maps three glyphs (a filled dot, a single arrow, a double arrow) to "Goal met", "In progress" and "Needs acceleration". Below, a dense table with column headers (Pillar, Focus area, Goal, Metric, Baseline year, Baseline, 2021, 2022, Goal, Goal year, Status) lists goals row by row, grouped under pillar labels ("Be Human", "Be Well"). The Status column shows the legend glyphs per row. Thin hairline rules divide the rows; footnotes run along the bottom.

Key takeaway

A genuine progress tracker rendered as a calm editorial table: a compact glyph key (dot / arrow / double-arrow) encodes status in a single column, so a reader scans the rightmost column to see what is on track. Baseline-to-current-to-target columns make progress legible without charts.

Reuse notes

A reusable pattern for any goals dashboard, OKR tracker or commitments scorecard in a report. The status-glyph legend plus a dedicated status column is an honest, low-chrome alternative to traffic-light fills. Tables this wide need disciplined column widths and hairline-only rules to stay readable. Splitting a long goal set across two pages (as here) keeps each page from overflowing.

From this deck: 16 goals tracking table part one

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