The Melbourne Park victory earned the Serb an 11th grand slam trophy, bringing him level with Bjorn Borg and Rod Laver, and the 28-year-old admitted such milestones are important to him after winning four of the past five majors.
"People start talking about the all-time greats and me coming closer to them, but I still would like to follow the same approach and philosophy of focusing only on the next tournament," Djokovic said.
"I try not to be over-confident because I have lots of respect for other players but being at the peak of my career I'm trying to use this momentum and take everything out of myself and achieve more."
After winning 34 of his last 35 grand slam matches, it is not inconceivable that Djokovic could end up eclipsing Roger Federer's record of 17 majors before too long.
But for all his success, Djokovic has yet to crack the French Open, finishing runner-up on three occasions.
But with rivals such as Federer, Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal unable to keep pace with him in the best-of-five set contests, the Serb is hoping to end his Roland Garros jinx in 2016 and perhaps even become the first man to achieve the calendar year Grand Slam since Rod Laver in 1969.
"I try to approach each tournament optimistically and I believe that I can win every match that I play against anybody on any surface," said Djokovic, who is 12-0 this year.
Anything other than victory in Dubai, where Djokovic will potentially only face two other top-10 players, would be a huge shock especially after Federer withdrew with injury. The duo have won the last seven Dubai titles between them.
Djokovic's most likely challenger in Dubai will be world number four Stan Wawrinka, who beat him in last year's Roland Garros final.
"He has been playing at a different level from the rest of the players. He's number one by far. It's going to be tough to beat him this year," Wawrinka said.