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Do you have a vision or are you just a dreamer?

Vision statement by Brian Tracy

 

Do you have a vision or are you just a dreamer?

 

No matter how big or small your business is without a clear vision of where you are going owners and directors often fall into the classic trap of just managing from day-to-day.  Do you have a vision or are you just a dreamer? Is a simple question which I ask leaders, and for many it is just a work in progress, in their head. But every business needs great leadership, and for that they need to create a clear business vision, which will make and deliver long term leadership success.

 

Creating a vision of the Future

 

Leadership is about investing time to create a clear vision the future. Putting in the effort and resources to see into the future and imagine how things could be. This is as important for success as having real passion for the business today and the determination to create something new for the future.

 

These three personal qualities of leaders are vital for successful companies and a vision statement, sometimes called “a picture of your company in the future”, but it’s so much more than that.

 

Vision Statement

 

Your vision statement is your inspiration, the framework for all your strategic planning. A vision statement may apply to an entire company or to a single division within that company.

 

The vision statement answers the question, “Where do we want to go?” What you are doing when creating a vision statement is articulating your dreams and hopes for your business. It reminds you of what you are trying to build. A vision statement is for you and the other members of your company, not just for your customers or clients.

 

Visionary goals should be longer term and more challenging than strategic goals. Collins and Porras describe these lofty objectives as “Big, Hairy, Audacious Goals.” These goals should be challenging enough so that people nearly gasp when they learn of them and realize the effort that will be required to reach them.

Most visionary statements fall into one of the following four categories:

 

  1. Targeted – quantitative or qualitative goals such as Nike: “To bring inspiration and innovation to every athlete in the world” “If you have a body, you are an athlete.”
  2. Common enemy – focused on overtaking a specific firm, becoming the number one in that sector, such as Amazon: “Our vision is to be earth’s most customer centric company; to build a place where people can come to find and discover anything they might want to buy online.”
  3. Role model – to become like another in a different industry or market, the mirror role, Victoria Beckham (Posh Spice) “Right from the beginning, I said I wanted to be more famous than Persil Automatic”.
  4. Internal transformation – creating internal vision, GE set the goal of “Becoming number one or number two in every market it serves”

 

While visionary goals may require significant stretching to achieve, many visionary companies have succeeded in reaching them. Once such a goal is achieved, it needs to be replaced; otherwise, it is unlikely that the organization will continue to be successful. The second most dangerous place for a company is to have achieved its only goal, the most dangerous place is never to have had one.

 

Creating Your Business Vision

 

Simple steps to creating your vision, ask some simple questions:

 

  • What will our business look like in 3 to 5 years from now?
  • What new things do we intend to pursue and how?
  • What future customer needs do we want to satisfy?

 

Write the answers down and focus on developing them into a coherent, motivational and purposeful message which can connect with everyone.

 

Then Question Yourself To Answer:

 

  • Does our vision statement provide a powerful picture of what our business will look like in 3 to 5 years from now?
  • Is your vision statement a picture of your company’s future, which everyone can interpret into their role?
  • Does it clarify the business activities to pursue, the desired market position and capabilities you will need

 

If your statement answers these questions then you have a vision worth owning and sharing. A vision must be motivational to everyone inside an organisation.

 

DO you have a Vision?

 

The classic apocryphal story to demonstrate the effectiveness of great visions is about the time President Kennedy visited NASA. During one trip he came across a cleaner sweeping the warehouse floor, and asked him what his job at NASA was. The cleaner replied “My Job is to put a man on the moon, Sir.”

 

Now I don’t know if this story is true, but it’s inspiring. In a facility full of high-powered individuals and great minds, even the cleaner was completely on board with the strategy. While you may not be planning to put a person on the moon, we can learn a lot from the story. It may sound ridiculous, but every business needs to be a little like NASA.

 

A great VISION can create an unstoppable company

 

Every organisation needs to have a clear vision, owned by everyone inside and outside it. An owned and shared vision creates and sustains great morale and internal strength for companies, which can become a powerful and unstoppable force in any market no matter how competitive.

 

At Cowden we focus on ensuring companies can successfully compete in their chosen or desired market.

 

Like to learn more? Then get in touch with us at Cowden.

 

Or learn more about creating your vision and how to lead your organisation with a clear strategy, but my book: click this link or the book cover below 

 

Strategy The Leader's Role by Richard Gourlay available from Amazon click this link

Successful Leadership starts with a clear VISION

Successful leadership starts with a clear vision.  A vision is a is a mental picture of what you want your business to be at some point in the future. It is a realistic aspiration. That vision gives the leader and leadership team a clear focus and a long-term direction they want to take their business towards. If communicated well to the whole business it creates a common direction and purpose which pulls tams together and drives them towards that vision.. So primarily leadership is all about creating, believing and communicating a clear VISION, and certainly (but not exclusively), because it stops a business heading in the wrong direction, that’s why successful leadership starts with a clear vision. 

Great leadership is about planning your business using business planning tools to match their ambitions to the opportunities in their market. Without a vision, businesses often fall into short-term annual plan, rather than long-term sustainable entities.

Clear Vision

Successful business owners step back to work on their business not in their business. Looking at where they are going and why. A vision is an essential element in a leaders toolkit. It creates a purpose and must be communicated with all stakeholders and employees effectively. It is about being more than just a product or turnover. A good vision must combine not only an aspiration but elude to the values of the business.

Clarity is a powerful skill for any leader to possess. Clarity of purpose and direction creates not only certainty but also enables a wide range of stakeholders to be able to focus their personal objectives towards the leaders vision. Clarity is not simplicity, but quite the opposite in leadership. Being able to create a simplicity from complexity is the art leadership brings to a complex rapidly changing world.  A good leader simplifies problems down through having a clear vision of where they want to go and can explain the why they are doing it in a few clear and effective messages.   

Leaders Vision Must Identify Growth

A leaders vision is about todays business in tomorrows market. It is about demonstrating that they know where they are taking the business and its people within the emerging market within which they wish to compete. Identifying growth is at the heart of why leaders create a vision for their business. The market will look like this, due to these macro factors and that will create opportunities for us within these cohorts to which we have core competencies to deliver real value to existing or new customers. 

Growth is vital for all companies in every sector. That can be organic natural growth in pure numbers, or growth through cross / upsell as well as growth from diversification or acquisition as markets grow, evolve or mature. Growth can be through transformation of the business into a new entity as markets evolve and develop or the introduction of new products and service offerings. Growth is a wide ranging topic but at the core of all leaders role is looking for defining and developing plans to win that growth.   

Leadership Skills

Good visions also aspire to where the business will provide value to customers in the future. What are the opportunities within your market and sector over the next few years. Business Planning is a process of assessing options using tried and tested business planning tools, which provide robust and accurate options for business owners to grow their business successful.

For leaders to develop those skills they need to learn how to be strategic in their thinking which is why leaders often use 3rd parties to support them through a Strategic Planning Workshop.   

Leadership is all about VISION by Richard Gourlay

 
Strategy The Leader's Role by Richard Gourlay