“We should all be concerned about the future because we will have to spend the rest of our lives there.” ~ Charles Kettering

What do you think is the number one thing a CEO can do to inspire and motivate an entire organization of people?

Create and share a compelling vision for the future.

So…do you have a compelling vision for your organization?  What is it?  Does everyone know what it is?

No vision…no direction…no inspiration…no results

Many organizations forge ahead into their future without a clear direction, or a vision for success.  In some cases, the CEO and executive team are aware of where they want to see the organization go, but those beneath them are clueless.

And in still other cases, members of an executive team may have different ideas of where they see the organization in 5-10 years (in other words, many different directions!).

When the workforce as a whole doesn’t clearly understand the company’s vision, they encounter many difficulties with day-to-day operations, problem solving and decision-making.  Not good.  This all comes back to bottom-line results.

Executive Leadership is typically the root of the problem

There are several ways the executive team can create a lack of vision, and thus, a lack of motivation and results, in the organization:

  1. The CEO doesn’t value creating a visionary goal, and therefore doesn’t uphold creating one with her executive team (This may sound harsh, but how such persons get to the top is disturbing.)
  2. The executive team refuses to collaborate on a shared vision, and therefore a clear vision isn’t upheld amongst them (and they wonder why sales are down.)
  3. The executive team creates a shared vision, but doesn’t communicate it with the entire workforce (this means no one in the company understands what, exactly, they should be doing so they’ll draw inferences along the way and cross their fingers.)
  4. The executive team communicates the shared vision a few times to the workforce, but lack a mechanism for upholding the consistent communication of the vision (the workforce wonders if the vision is to be taken seriously.)

How to create an inspirational force in your organization

Step 1: The Executive Team defines their 5-year Goal (as a guideline for thought, you can download the main types of BHAG’s, or Big Hairy Audacious Goals, here)

Step 2: The Executive Team describes their Vision for success – what it will look like when they achieve the 5-year Goal.

Simply describe your vision for success in bullet phrases.  Once members of the team state their ideas for success out loud, you will be a part of a team discussion like none other!  This is such an important discovery step toward learning if the members of your team should even be in business together.

Step 3: The Executive Team creates a communication system for upholding the visionary goal.

The communication system will be successful if it accounts for repetitious communication of the visionary goal by the executives, management, and supervisors.  If this does not happen, your workforce will not be inspired toward getting company results.  You’ve wasted your time.

Bonus Step For Leadership Organizations: Truly excellent organizations will roll out a strategy and/or strategy map for the workforce to follow and align their daily activities.  No matter how chaotic our business environment, your people will always know what they are to be doing!

In accordance with Kaplan and Norton in their research-based book, Strategy Maps: Converting Intangible Assets Into Tangible Outcomes, a strategy map clearly identifies the critical few objectives necessary for achieving the mission/vision of the organization from the perspective of the customer, internal processes, and organizational learning & growth.

Instead of tracking and measuring 100+ objectives, you have only to track core objectives for achieving results.  I highly recommend following this book!  If you’re not big on reading or implementing this sort of thing, work with someone who is.

A few more important thoughts about creating a vision…

Let’s be clear: I’m not talking about a run-of-the-mill vision.  An “apparently we should have a vision of where we’re going to go, so let’s just take about 5 or 10 minutes or so and figure this out so we can move on” vision.  No…I’m talking about a real, exciting vision…a compelling vision.   A vision that gets you out of bed every day excited to see how much butt your are going to kick on the way up to achieving the vision.

Cautionary note: Of course the vision must first inspire the executive team.  If the executive team isn’t inspired by the vision, no one will be.  No one.

Here’s to the future!

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