Newsletter – How Can You Avoid the Worthless Vision, Values and Mission Trap?

 September 10, 2018

How Can You Avoid the Worthless Vision, Values and Mission Trap?

Most of our clients these days spend time working on visions, values and missions. This is clearly a worthy exercise, yet the results are often disappointing.
Gathering a consensus from relevant stakeholders on these lofty ideals and plans can take a tedious amount of time. Once the ideals and plans exist, everyone, in my experience, breathes a sigh of relief and goes back to putting out the daily fires.
The strategic plan sits on various bookshelves, gathering dust along with training manuals. The vision and mission languish; even if they are framed and on the walls, everyone breezes right by them without a thought, too busy focusing on today to think about tomorrow.

While whole tomes have been written about these issues, here are our three top tips gleaned from our most successful clients.

What Should You Do?

 

1)   Revisit Often. Missions, visions and values should not be left to the communications department but should sit on every leader’s desk, reviewed daily. What actions are they taking today that are consistent with these ideals? What actions are inconsistent?
2)   Change, When Needed. “The best laid plans…” “We plan and God laughs”. We’ve all heard
these rubrics. What’s important is that missions, visions and values are agile, updated and re-examined as needed. When we fail to take account of changing times and changing resources, we are limiting our success.
3)   Use Concrete Visions. When we work with different organizations, we are subjected to many organizations whose visions could have been lifted from their own competitors. “We strive to be a world class company that provides the best value for our customers,” and so on.
Visions frequently sound the same and when the new vision is presented to employees, they nod their heads and fall asleep.

Instead, how about “moon-shot” visions?

“Our vision is to put a man on the moon by ___” (JFK)
“Our vision is to put a computer on every desk by ___” (Apple?)

These kinds of visions help wake people up and move them in a measureable, exciting direction. They may be terrified that the vision is insane but they won’t be bored and — if the leader is strong enough — your people will work with dedication and speed to bring your vision into reality.

What Do You Think?

Have you seen examples of these ideals that worked? If so, how? Do you agree or disagree with this approach?

Did You Know

As part of our leadership workshops and retreats, we are happy to facilitate strategic plans that include missions, visions and values.

Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or
Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:
Be sure to read Lynne’s book “The Power of a Good Fight” and learn to embrace conflict to drive productivity, creativity and innovation.
  
Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
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