Do you have a clear sense of your personal purpose? Can you communicate it on demand or is it more a felt-sense? Does it drive daily decision-making and longer-term thinking? Or do you have absolutely no idea and are seeking greater clarity of purpose - for yourself or your organisation?
For people we work with, eliciting purpose provides an unlock like no other. Purpose can be alluring yet challenging to elicit, especially alone. Many people, especially those who want to achieve their potential, crave it, and when we support them to clarify it, it’s one of the most rewarding things we and they ever do.
Purpose is a bedrock of impact. It fuels self-awareness; connects you to what really matters; brings clarity to decisions; and has the power to ignite people and organisations, often to fuel change, personal progression and social impact in ways that matter. Given its importance and power, in this post we're sharing the basics of purpose and providing a DIY approach. Our purpose is “elevate others to elevate others”, and we figure the more purposeful people there are in the world, the more positive change we will see around us. Let’s get started.
Let’s get clear.
What purpose is not:
So what is purpose? We think about it as our WHY:
Being clear on purpose helps you focus your two most precious resources — time and energy — more effectively. And there is plenty of research on the power of purpose, demonstrating some pretty strong upsides such as:
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Recent research by McKinsey during this pandemic found that “when comparing people who say they are ‘living their purpose’ at work with those who say they aren’t, the former report levels of well-being that are five times higher than the latter. Moreover, those in the former group are four times more likely to report higher engagement levels.”
So while the benefits are clear, the definitions and pathways to it are not, and this can understandably put people off pursuing purpose altogether. Working with leaders on individual and shared purpose, we try to let people come at it personally and from different angles. Examples of purpose statements our clients have articulated include:
The most important thing is that it's meaningful to you. And the best way to elicit purpose is to get your hands dirty.
If you would like to be guided through a purpose elicitation process as part of one of our individual, group or organisational programs, be sure to get in touch. Or if you’d like to learn more about purpose, you can read the story of Visibility Co’s collective purpose or about debunking purpose with disruption strategist Holly Ransom.