BOOK SUMMARY 133 The Purpose Effect
·
Summary written by: Alyssa Burkus
"The Purpose Effect is a three-way
relationship between an individual’s personal sense of purpose in life, the
organization’s purpose and a person’s purpose in their role at work."
- The Purpose Effect, page 4
We
spend too much of our life at work to not be able to have a sense of
satisfaction and enjoyment from it. In The Purpose Effect by
Dan Pontefract, we look at the fundamental element of purpose in creating
meaningful work experiences that engage employees, and the tangible and
measurable benefits when purpose exists.
This
book builds from Pontefract’s first book Flat Army, which emphasized the role of leaders in building great
workplace cultures. In The Purpose Effect, Pontefract explores the
shared ownership of great work, both with organizations that must commit to
building roles and experiences that provide a purpose-based experience, and
individuals who need to do the work in understanding and connecting to their
purpose.
When
key factors are aligned, there are benefits to purpose-filled work that make it
worthwhile.
The Golden Egg
Pursuit of A Higher Calling
"The
Purpose Effect results in a higher calling, where individuals and organizations
seek to improve society to benefit all stakeholders."- The Purpose Effect,
page 7
Certainly,
there’s evidence that purpose drives engagement. Deloitte’s research in this
area shows, “in those organizations where individuals felt a high level of
purpose, 73 percent of the workforce indicated they were fully engaged whereas
in organizations devoid of purpose, only 23 percent felt the same.”
More importantly
though, where stronger engagement that is anchored in purpose exists, stronger
individual and organizational outcomes will occur. As Pontefract notes, “the
authenticity that is rooted in such clarity of purpose in work motivates team
members to greater effort and contributions.” When we believe we are working
for deeper, more meaningful outcomes, we are willing to put in much more
effort. Having worked in and with purpose-driven organizations, I know this
feeling is unparalleled and drives a different level of output.
We
can’t ignore the benefits of purpose to ourselves, our organizations and the
communities we serve. We just need to figure out how to get more of it.
Gem #1
Get To The Sweet Spot
"The
more alignment there is – the more a team member believes in the organization’s
purpose and its relationship to their personal purpose alongside the role they
occupy – the greater likelihood there is for an individual to reach the purpose
mindset and thus the sweet spot. If this happens on a continuous basis, both
the organization and the team member will have created The Purpose
Effect."- The Purpose Effect, page 134
It’s
the alignment of key factors of purpose that get us to the level of feeling a
deeper sense of purpose, a higher calling. Pontefract calls this “the sweet
spot”, where purpose is realized in the alignment of three factors:
Personal
purpose: “What motivates someone in life; their
‘why’ … values, experience and beliefs inform personal decisions and
actions”
Organizational
purpose: “Why the organization exists …
principles, ethics and culture inform its ways of operating”
Role
purpose: “Why a role exists in the organization …
an organization establishes a variety of roles to support its mission.”
When
individuals understand their own purpose and feel a sense of purpose in their
role and overall in their organization, that alignment is the sweet spot that
drives benefits from The Purpose Effect.
From a
company perspective, Pontefract defines the work towards purpose that
organizations need to perform as “Good DEEDS”, which includes:
·
Delight your customers
·
Engage your team members
·
Ethical within society
·
Deliver fair practices
·
Serve all stakeholders
However,
despite a company’s best efforts to deliver Good DEEDS, poor leadership can get
in the way of achieving The Purpose Effect.
Gem #2
Leadership Is Key To Achieving Purpose
"…if
a leader does not choose to create a trusting environment – one where team
members might achieve purpose in their role and a sense of value while working
– it is possible cognitive dissonance will overpower and the three categories
of purpose might never align."- The Purpose Effect, page 71
Many
companies struggle with a disconnect between the “message from the top” and what
people experience day-to-day. The same risk exists with the pursuit of
purpose-focused work. Despite the best efforts to pursue purpose within an
organization, there can be a difference between what employees hear about
purpose and what they experience.
Pontefract
points to issues with leadership as a key impact that can prevent the Purpose
Effect from being realized. Failing to provide fair pay practices, politics and
power struggles, and unfair performance management practices such as stack
ranking are just a few examples of the ways leaders can impact an employee’s
interest and ability to pursue their best work. When those issues exist,
purpose and a drive for a higher level of performance never have a chance.
It’s
great to have this book to add to the conversation about deeper ways to improve
the poor levels of employee engagement that exist in organizations today. Too
often, we only hear about the “corporate ROI” from working to improve
engagement, and fail to talk about the personal impact to people from working
in environments that force them to leave their passion and values at the door.
With The Purpose Effect, we can add a new dynamic to move the
conversation forward about the shared ownership for engagement.
In
case you think you’d be leading too far ahead of the curve in implementing
purpose where you work, the range of examples included in this book, from IKEA
to Johnsonville Sausage, prove every company can create purpose-filled work
experiences for their employees, and in turn, realize significant benefits for
individuals, the organization and their customers.
That’s
a sweet spot to be in, if you’re willing to do the work to get there.
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