Want A Purpose-Driven
Business? Know The Difference Between Mission And Purpose
Young people want to work for purpose-driven businesses–but your purpose
has to be something more than just rephrasing your business model.
Over the past decade, leaders in business,
education, and the social sector have become more interested in the development
of purpose. Leading social entrepreneurship incubator Echoing Green hosted a
movement-building Purpose Summit, the John
Templeton Foundation sponsored a nationwide scholarship program to encourage youth to write purpose-inspired college essays, and
the AARP began a big push to encourage “encore” purpose-focused second
careers. Despite this increased focus on
purpose, our organizations are sorely lacking leaders who are aware of and
deeply connected to the purpose behind their work.
We believe this is in part because our
culture conflates being mission-oriented with being purpose-driven. A mission
is the what you’re trying to accomplish, and a purpose is
the why. Toms founder Blake Mycoskie says the company’s mission is
to sell shoes, but his purpose is to provide free footwear to people in need.
Apple’s mission centers on being a leading computer company, but Steve Jobs’s
purpose was to create beautifully designed, innovative tech products. Clearly
the why and the what are two different things.
More specifically, Bill Damon, the director
of the Stanford Center on Adolescence and author of Path to Purpose defines purpose as “a long-term, forward-looking intention to
accomplish aims that are both meaningful to the self and of consequence to the
world beyond the self.” Purposeful leaders act in ways that are personally
meaningful and socially beneficial.
As Simon Sinek notes in his bestselling
book Start with Why, most people know what an organization does, but few know why they do
it. In other words, most purpose-driven leaders can articulate their
mission–but many mission-driven leaders cannot articulate their purpose. As a
result, our culture is inundated by leaders who do not approach work from a
place of purpose, and this can be problematic. Leaders not connected to the
reasons behind what they’re trying to accomplish are more likely to get
distracted by novel trends, to give up when the going gets tough, to be viewed
as opportunistic by customers and employees, and to avoid taking risks that can
lead to innovation.
Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia, offers a good example of a
purpose-driven leader. He is a dedicated nature
lover who, in the late 1950s, started building climbing gear for a few people
in the Yosemite mountains. Today, Patagonia is a $200 million dollar company,
widely recognized as a leader in environmental sustainability. The company’s
success is particularly noteworthy in light of some of the purpose-driven decisions
Chouinard made along the way. Early in Patagonia’s history, the company stopped
making pitons, the metal spikes climbers hammered into rocks–and a mainstay in
the business at the time– because they damaged the environment.
Later, Chouinard took a significant risk by switching his company’s clothes to an organic cotton line. This
required sourcing new products, building a new supply chain, and raising the
cost of his clothing. Both moves were good for the planet and aligned the
company’s work with Chouinard’s own sense of purpose, but had he been only
driven by the bottom line, Chouinard likely would not have made these choices.
They were costly in the short run, but they helped Patagonia thrive in the long
run. The company continues to make news today as, consistent with its leader’s
focus on environmental causes, it fights Trump’s latest move
to shrink Bear’s Ears National Monument.
Tyler Gage offers another powerful example of
a purpose-driven leader. Cofounder of Runa–a fair trade tea company
developed in partnership with indigenous communities in the Amazon–Gage is committed to helping indigenous farmers live fuller lives and
protecting the Amazon environment. Today, just eight years after its launch and
his graduation from Brown University, Runa is sold at 8,000 stores across the
country including in Whole Foods, Safeway, and Amazon and is doing more than
$10 million dollars in annual sales. In his new book, Fully Alive, Gage painstakingly documents the challenges he confronted in building
the company, and he attributes his unwavering commitment to Runa to his initial
purpose. Tyler’s story demonstrates one key finding that we have learned from
research: Leaders with purpose are more
likely to succeed.
Studies find that individuals like Chouinard
and Gage, who are aware of and deeply connected to the why behind their work,
tend to be effective leaders who are likely to be satisfied with their careers
and their lives outside of work. As purpose-driven leaders, they are
likely to inspire purpose-driven employees. A study by Joyce Bono and Timothy
Judge found that when leaders are connected to a personally meaningful
purpose, employees are more likely to
connect to a higher purpose as well, and this is
significant because as Brent D. Rosso and colleagues note, employees who find meaning in
their jobs report being more motivated, engaged, empowered, and satisfied with
their work.
Today’s young workers, more than any
generation before, demand a sense of purpose in their jobs. Studies show that
finding purpose in their work is a critical factor for millennials and key to
helping recruit, retain, and inspire a younger generation of workers. If you
are a leader trying to recruit top millennial talent and you are not
prioritizing the creation of purpose for your employees, you are going to miss
out on some of the most coveted people on the job market. As a member of the
millennial generation, one of the first questions my friends ask when joining a
company is: “Is this work going to make the world a better place? And if so,
how?”
We are often amazed at the level of pressure
that leaders face on a daily basis–from bullish investors, disgruntled
employees, or detractors on social media. It is so easy to always do, and never
take time to connect with why you are doing. But it is during those deep,
sometimes dark, reflective, and connected moments that purpose-driven leaders
make their wisest and best long term choices.
WHAT CONCRETE STEPS CAN YOU TAKE
TO CONNECT WITH THE WHY AND PURPOSE BEHIND WHAT YOU DO?
Clarify your purpose:
Why did you start this kind company? What
were you hoping to accomplish? What was your purpose? What values and beliefs
undergird that purpose, and how do those values influence the way you lead at
work? The way you live at home? Are there opportunities to better align your
personal and professional aims and values?
Plan time each week, month, or each year to
reflect on your why:
It is essential for purpose-driven leaders to
make time to step back from day-to-day responsibilities and check in with
themselves. Both Tyler and Yvon tout the benefits of planned time off to
connect. Yvon takes regular wilderness trips to connect with the natural world;
Tyler frequently visits the Amazonian communities his work supports.
How to do it: Pick something that helps you unplug and reconnect with your values:
fishing, backpacking, writing, meditating, or some other activity. Put it on
your calendar, and don’t bump it. Before you go into this time, have a clear
intention for what you hope to get out of it.
Share your why with your employees:
Although most employees can readily recognize
the what behind your company, few may be able to articulate the why, and as
Sinek points out, employees only connected to the what will show up for the
paycheck, but employees connected to the why will give their blood, sweat, and
tears to their work. Make this a two-way street as well: Encourage employees to
share their own reasons for working for your company. And make this an ongoing
conversation, not a one-off PR stunt.
How to do it: To communicate with his employees, Brad Rencher, senior vice
president and general manager of Adobe’s Marketing Cloud, created a weekly vlog
modeled after Zack Galifianakis’s Between Two Ferns. He calls the
show Bradchat, and he uses it to conduct informal interviews with other Adobe
leaders and to share with employees the company’s strategy and purpose.
Employees can share comments, send emails, and participate in online forums;
other leaders share information through internal newsletters and memos. However
you do it, be sure to make your company’s why very clear. Be honest about how
well the company is making progress toward it.
Connect with your end users or
customers:
Once we get to a certain level of leadership,
we often lose contact with our end users. When that happens, we can begin to
lose track of our purpose. As the director of Project Wayfinder, it is easy
for me to lose site of our end users–high school students–when doing the
day-to-day work of emailing and calling our school partners. But when I take 30
minutes a week to connect with one of our students, I am reinvigorated, and I
often learn a lot about our product at the same time. Taking time to talk to
your end users is critical to understand what they like about your company,
what they think your company stands for, and why they believe your company
exists. Whenever I talk to students I better understand what Wayfinder means to
them, what they like and don’t like about it, and how we can improve our
curriculum.
How to do it: Schedule time once every two weeks to talk to your end users of
customers. This will give you a sense of how clearly they understand your
company’s why, and it may simultaneously remind you of your core motivations.
Use your website and other marketing materials to communicate your business
purpose with the people with whom you do business. Include concrete examples of
how your purpose has influenced your business decisions, and provide regular
updates regarding your progress toward your purpose.
BY PATRICK COOK-DEEGAN AND KENDALL COTTON BRONK
https://www.fastcompany.com/40552232/want-a-purpose-driven-business-know-the-difference-between-mission-and-purpose?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=2&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=04022018
1 comment:
Nice Post..! Thank for sharing.
Powerful companies are lead by a purpose driven leader who is simply good at adapting, inspiring, and team leadership. Steve Rodgers is counted amongst the best purpose leader who is proficient in all three aspects
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