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Communicating a Vision

Taking the time to initiate a small goal like creating a vision is the first step toward creating a better team, a stronger workforce, and entrepreneurial thinkers. This crucial step initiates the beginning of a transformation within yourself and a larger effect on the group you lead.

by Kerri Harris
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A Crucial First Step in Beginning a Transformation within Yourself and the Group You Lead

Today’s business climate of outsourcing, in-sourcing, virtual teams, and ROI-driven objectives can leave a manager at any level feeling powerless. Yet we often see examples of those who can elicit unwavering support from their teams, driving highly effective projects, and getting the best performance from employees despite ever-increasing workloads. What is it about these individuals that makes them stand out as great leaders? Generally, the answer is the difference between a strict management model and one that includes basic principles of leadership. There are recognizable characteristics in great leaders and simple strategies anyone can adopt to improve employee performance and change the work environment for the better.

Experts have long studied the subtle differences between general management, leadership, and truly great leaders. Thomas Cronin, author of Thinking about Leadership, observes:

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“Managers do things the right way, while leaders are more concerned with doing the right thing.”

A focus on managing projects and deadlines leaves little room for leadership activities, but it can be done in a step-by-step approach beginning with awareness and a little common sense.

The remainder of this article addresses the following areas:

  • Personal evaluation
  • Creating a shared vision
  • The collaborative process
  • Communicating the vision

Personal evaluation

From the beginning, we are taught that outward signs of success are shown through upward promotions and ever-increasing responsibilities. But not all great performers translate into great managers. One has to consciously decide to take on a leadership role, adopting new tactics to lead others. This requires careful thought and consideration of one’s own goals and a willingness to change. Begin with an honest inspection of your own situation by asking yourself the following questions:

  • How well do I understand the department’s role in helping to meet the company’s larger goals?
  • Can I summarize the group’s mission in one sentence?
  • Can I articulate the kind of environment in which I want to work, and can I share that vision with my team?
  • When necessary, am I willing to argue against my superiors to protect the integrity of our work, and will the organization allow such challenges?
  • How well can I identify the strengths and weaknesses of those with whom I work, and can I channel those strengths and weaknesses into positive tasks?
  • Am I willing to delegate assignments and provide the kind of information others need to complete these tasks well?
  • Am I willing to make mistakes, accept others’ mistakes, and use these as opportunities for improvement?
  • Will the group’s role still exist in two years, five years, and beyond?
  • Am I willing to empower others to make decisions and foster creative thinking?
  • Do I believe that I can make a difference, no matter how small?

Objective answers to these questions do not always provide clear direction, but they do help determine a personal commitment to accepting a leadership role. Self-inspection drills like this one can lead to the realization that vast improvements are needed or even that an individual is in the wrong role or wrong organization altogether. It’s a personal decision, but a critical review for any manager, newly promoted or a seasoned veteran, to undertake from time to time. It also lays the groundwork for the most important principle of management: communicating a vision.

If you want to build a ship, then don’t drum up men to gather wood, give orders, and divide the work. Rather, teach them to yearn for the far and endless sea.” —Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Creating a shared vision

The first critical task of any leader is to effectively communicate the vision. A mission statement is the intrinsic “Why?” of your department’s very existence, and the vision becomes the “How?”—a compass from which everything else is driven. The Alliance for Nonprofit Management, a professional association of nonprofit business managers, describes a vision statement in the following terms “…If a strategic plan is the ‘blueprint’ for an organization’s work, then the vision is the ‘artist’s rendering’ of the achievement of that plan. It is a description in words that conjures up a similar picture for each member of the group of the destination of the group’s work together.” This concept highlights the value of your contributions within the organization now and in the future. Every assignment and every objective stem from this vision and define the basic goals for everyone within your group to achieve that vision.

Defining a vision is based largely on the expectations of your superiors within an organization, but there is always room to further define your vision within the scope of those expectations. For example, a department of technical writers may be perceived as necessary for document management and process control, but a mission statement that illustrates a best-in-class performance communicates significance—a statement that the group’s employees may not really understand. Often, employees who do not feel valued or don’t believe that their efforts matter have lower productivity and lower overall job satisfaction.

Establishing a carefully planned and documented vision with your direct reports defines goals for the group and creates a personal ownership for every individual. Including your staff in a collaborative process cultivates buy-in and general acceptance. While not all employees will enthusiastically support the end results, you’ll have far greater success than if you attempt to impose your will and force others to adopt a new guideline.

The collaborative process

When beginning to discuss a vision with your team, first define the core values of your organization. These are the common ideals that everyone can understand, including integrity, creativity, innovation, service and accuracy. If challenged in a new business climate, the organization would retain these principles. Review with your team the core values and mission statements for the company and decide if your team’s performance has adhered to that mission.

The next phase of building a vision includes an examination of what your team will aspire to become or to achieve as long-term goals. James C. Collins and Jerry I. Porras illustrate this technique in Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies. They describe a simple process of inspection that will further define the vision for your team. Begin with a single sentence of what the department does, and then ask the group to explain why it is important. Ask this question five times. If your department ceased to exist tomorrow, what would the company lose? This discussion leads to the heart of your department’s contributions to the organization as a whole.

Example of the “Five Whys” Discussion

Collins and Porras illustrate this technique with examples of visions from identifiable companies that helped shape their mode of operation for years:

  • Become a $125 billion company by the year 2000. (Wal-Mart, 1990)
  • Become the dominant player in commercial aircraft, and bring the world into the jet age. (Boeing, 1950)
  • Become the company that most changes the worldwide image of Japanese products as being of poor quality. (Sony, early 1950s)
  • Crush Adidas. (Nike, 1960s)
  • Transform this division from a poorly respected internal products supplier to one of the most respected, exciting, and sought-after divisions in the company. (Components support division of a computer products company, 1989)

Communicating the vision

After you have established a vision for your department, communicating it becomes an important final step. James O’Toole, author of “Leadership from A to Z,” describes this communication in broad terms: “The task of leadership is to communicate clearly and repeatedly the organization’s vision…all with the intent of helping every person involved understand what work needs to be done and why, and what part the individual plays in the overall effort.”

Communicate the vision often, in both subtle and dramatic ways. Tie the day’s events back to the vision, underscoring its relevance. From internal memos, presentations or posters, the vision serves as a reminder to the team of its purpose and goals. The vision can be incorporated into objective-setting and performance-review standards as well as into interdepartmental projects. These steps serve to energize and direct the group’s actions as stakeholders and advertise your efforts to upper management.

Developing leadership qualities as a manager not only improves the group’s performance but also equips managers to deal with the demands of business performance. Managers today do not have the luxury of time for in-depth strategy sessions, team-building excursions, and one-on-one personal reviews, thanks to an increased virtual work force. Teams are spread across the globe, operating at different hours, across cultures, all while working against critical deadlines and lofty objectives. Yet taking the time to initiate a small goal like creating a vision is the first step toward creating a better team, a stronger workforce, and entrepreneurial thinkers. This crucial step initiates the beginning of a transformation within yourself and a larger effect on the group you lead.

References and Suggested Reading

1. Alliance for Nonprofit Management: www.allianceonline. org/about.
2. Collins, James C. and Porras, Jerry I. Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies. First Paperback Edition. New York: HarperCollins, 1997. 219-239. www.harpercollins.com/.
3. O’Toole, James. Leadership from A to Z: A Guide for the Appropriately Ambitious, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1999. www.josseybass.com.
4. Phi Theta Kappa’s Leadership Development Studies: leadership.ptk.org/.