By R+R guest blogger, John Marshall
Have you ever been involved in the development of a strategic plan and found yourself embroiled in seemingly endless debates about the great corporate talisman of “mission and purpose”? Did you think that your peers (and your boss) were taking this debate seriously? Of was it just a “tick the box” exercise, designed to placate the strategic “paint by numbers” framework rolled out by the firm of management consultants you had hired to help you?
In my experience, even if the initial level of enthusiasm for the debate is high and even if you leave the room feeling that you’ve landed on the phrase to inspire, motivate and move the troops – when it comes to operational alignment and delivery, the “purpose” devolves into exactly what you set out to avoid in the first place: a bunch of nebulous rhetoric.
I realise that I might sound cynical here, but the point I am trying to make is that if you are going to go to the effort of agreeing a “purpose” – one which binds and aligns your entire organisation – then it must be a beacon to guide decision-making at every level (but in particular, the executive leadership level); not something that is put in the top drawer and forgotten about until the next restructure.
I have spent the majority of my career at the customer interface – be it sales, service, marketing and/or product management. For any organisation or business, it is at this interface where the authenticity of the purpose is really tested and where its credibility will live or die. And frequently, it dies.
If you are sceptical about this comment, let me ask you a question: how many of your customers think that the reason you (or your front-line staff member) is sitting across the table from them, is the same as the stated purpose of your organisation? For most of us, the answer to this question will be: “not many” – so why is that?
As a starting point, it’s important to conduct a sanity check on the “purpose”. A wise man once advised me that if you are struggling to describe the “purpose” of your organisation, ask yourself two questions: if you closed down your doors tomorrow, who would suffer and why? Is this answer to this question, the same as your stated organisational purpose? If they are not the same, you have some work to do – both internally and externally – the point being that it is your customers who will define your “purpose”, by the value they derive from your service.
Assuming your “purpose” does align to delivering the value that your customers want from you, I would argue that for most of us, not enough focus is placed on using the “purpose” as the touch-stone for the decision-making. When faced with a clash of priorities and the need to make a call between the two, how many organisations ask themselves: “which of these choices will help us live our purpose more effectively?”
And how hard does the organisation work to ensure that the “purpose” is distilled down through every level? Is there a clear line of sight from the customer interface right the way through the organisation’s value chain; and does everyone within that value chain recognise the role they play in making that purpose come to life – in the eyes of the customer? How many staff members, when travelling into work, are thinking about the company “purpose” and what they can do to make it real that day?
To be able to answer these questions positively is a huge challenge; but isn’t that the point? If your customers can’t understand your “purpose”, then it really is just a bunch of words.








