Allan Wille,
Co-Founder
This is the first of three pieces on how to create a deliberate
and measurable plan for growing your company. Today, I look at the importance
of setting a vision and a mission for the company. Next, I will talk about the
yearly planning cycle. Finally, I will set out a series of steps for turning
the long-term objectives for your company into a measurable plan for the coming
year.
When a company is just starting up, its
founders are unlikely to spend a lot of time thinking about vision and mission
statements or even guiding principles.
For one thing, the company founders probably
have a clear vision in their heads. Why write it down?
Besides, as long as the group is small and
working closely together, these things seem to get communicated by osmosis in
the hothouse atmosphere of a startup.
But something important changes when the
number of employees rises beyond a certain point, usually above 40 or 50. Lines
of communication lengthen and the people you hire may not be as naturally
aligned to your mission.
At that point, it becomes important to spend
time and effort creating a clear mission and vision statement for the company –
one that attracts the right employees by creating a work culture employees can
relate to emotionally, and helping them understand why they get up in the
morning and come to work.
Not having clarity
harms you
It’s actually harmful for a company to operate
without a clearly articulated vision of where it’s going, and why.
I didn’t realize this at first, and for a long
time I resisted the idea of taking the time to create a clear vision statement
for the company.
But as the number of employees grew, I watched
as people in various departments started to struggle with everyday decisions.
Should they invest in one type of customer or
go after a different type of customer? What kind of messaging should they use?
What features should they build? Employees couldn’t seem to decide.
And because they couldn’t decide, they started
asking the executives for guidance.
But even within the executive team, things got
fuzzy. Our decision-making wasn’t as crisp as it should be.
Our inability to be decisive about where we
wanted to go was slowing us down, creating inefficiency and anxiety.
At first we thought we just had a problem with
decision-making.
Our first response was to work on ways to help
people make decisions, so they would know which way to turn when they came to a
fork in the road
After surveying employees, and after countless
executive meetings, we came up with five guiding principles for
decision-making:
- Think
like a customer
- Choose the future
- Be open to change
- Think big, start small
- Do fewer things really, really
well
For example, if one of our employees in
support was working through a ticket, they would know to slow down and take the
time to really understand what the customer was trying to accomplish.
If someone in user experience was designing a
customer journey, they would make sure to envision the ideal future journey,
but prioritize and start with the most important features and do them really
well.
If someone was wondering about whether to
invest in a new technology or process, versus refining an existing technology
or process, they now knew they should ‘choose the future’ by investing in the
new stuff – and not resist change.
These guiding principles will help, but not
enough. We are really only scratching the surface of what is needed to be
effective.
In fact, we're realizing that to make the
guiding principles truly effective, we need to anchor them in a vision of the
company – a vision that includes our values, our mission, and a clear sense of
who we are and where we are going.
In other words, the guiding principles are
just tactics for decision-making; they do nothing to help our employees feel
proud of working at Klipfolio – something we felt was necessary if we want good
decisions to become second nature.
Creating a mission and
a vision is hard work
And in retrospect, we realize we should have
created these first.
Why?
Because it helps anchor everything you do in a
framework that touches each employee personally, at an emotional level. And
that stimulates engagement. People not only know where they are going, they
know why they are doing it.
First though, let’s define the idea of a
vision statement and a mission statement.

For example, a medical research company might say:
“Our mission is
to cure childhood cancer.”
"Our vision is
that of a world wherechildren no longer know cancer.”
We worked with an outside expert who helped
us. It was not an easy process; in fact, it’s far more difficult than you can
imagine.
That’s because in order to truly resonate,
your mission and the ideal future have to reach employees at a gut level. They
have to reflect something authentic that touches them emotionally, and
encapsulate something they are passionate about, something that will truly make
the world a better place.
People won’t connect with something that is
slightly ‘off.’ They have to understand at a very deep level why they get up in
the morning and come in to work. They want to feel proud of what they do and be
able to articulate how they are making the world a better place.
I think if you can’t answer that question it
actually harms the company, by limiting how much effort and engagement the
employees demonstrate in their daily tasks.
We started off a few months ago at a meeting
in our office kitchen, and ended up creating an original mission and vision
statement based on our answer to the question: Why do we do what we do?
The mission and vision – which is still up on
the whiteboard in the kitchen – has been massaged and modified at least 10
times.
Working with an outside moderator was very
useful. It helped working with someone who is not consumed by our business. We
also involved our employees in the process; they are an amazing sounding board.
Today, this is our mission:
“Our mission is to help everyday people
succeed with data.”
And our ideal future; our vision is:
“A world of Klips that delivers insights to
millions of people”
We’re proud of the mission and the vision. And
it’s a good first step, and actually fits with our guiding principle number
four: Think big, start small.
Communicating is
essential
Recently, I was interviewing a new hire. At
one point he said: “I have a question for you. What’s the purpose of
the company? Where is the company going?”
The question was like a gift. I responded
immediately by saying that “our mission is to help everyday people
succeed with data.”
And then I watched his reaction.
I could see he connected with it - strongly
and more positively than people had with earlier iterations of the vision.
The opportunity now is to communicate our
vision and purpose – to make it crystal clear in everyone’s minds.
We’re displaying it on our walls in the kitchen
and voicing it in all-hands meetings. As we refine and refresh it, we want to
make sure it gets communicated to everyone – employees, potential hires,
customers and investors.
Already, I am sensing that having clarity of
purpose and direction – even the start of one – is making it easier to apply
our guiding principles to decision-making.
There are also other benefits.
We’ve always said we’re driven, friendly,
helpful, knowledgeable and respectful. Our mission and vision statements help
us make sure we hire people who share our values, and they help employees
understand how to be effective.
We plan to put our mission, vision, values and
guiding principles into a booklet we can use to educate employees as part of
the onboarding process, as well as post on career sites.
This can’t happen soon enough. Because I’ve
seen what happens when people struggle with ambiguity.
And the big lesson for me is that clarity and
purpose just don’t happen spontaneously. You have to work at it.
Allan Wille is a Co-Founder and Chief
Innovation Officer of Klipfolio. He’s also a designer, a cyclist, a father and
a resolute optimist.
https://www.klipfolio.com/blog/creating-clear-vision-statement
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