Unity of purpose

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Revision as of 11:46, 22 May 2013 by Martien (talk | contribs) ({{p|dot voting}})
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…a joint venture.

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{{{wish full}}}

Steps to discover your purpose and principles.

Initial steps can be taken by the whole group. Once sufficiently matured, involve your key stakeholders to refine it and get consent.

Bottom line of finding a purpose:

  • It’s gratifying to help others.
  • It fills you with a sense of meaning and appreciation.

Therefore, shift your focus to explore how you can best serve and help your primary stakeholders.

  1. Make a short list of the user types or user roles that your team is servicing.
  2. Use this list to penstorm an exhaustive list of answers to these questions:
    1. What needs of the business do we fulfill?
    2. What are the goals of the business and how do we help meet those goals?
    3. What can we do to help them even more?
    4. What would please them? How can we make the other smile?
    5. What do we care most about?
    6. What do we love to do, more than anything else?
    7. What are the special gifts that we can give to those we serve?
    8. What are the things that we are really proud of?
    9. What do we like to leave the world, as our legacy?
  3. Find out what matters most.
    1. Of all the items harvested in the previous step, use dot voting to select the top 3–5: those that matter most; check and refine with those you service.
    2. From the short list, and jointly with your key stakeholders, pick the single one that matters most to those who you want to help and support.
    3. Turn it into a brand click—a single, terse line that communicates the essence. E.g.
      • Volvo Off Road. When there's a will but no road.
      • The Network is the Computer.
      • Interpolis. Glashelder
  4. List all the practical ways (activities) to resolve the issues raised by these questions. Cluster and thicken them. These become your principles.
    1. Phrase them in the form “We verb noun…”. For example:
      1. We welcome change.
      2. We deliver early and often.
      3. We sustain a constant pace.
    2. Add a few lines of explanatory text to each of the principles.
    3. Secure consistency and coherence with your values.
  5. Refine, tune, and tweak with all involved until satisfied.
  6. Design and adopt a team logo or mascotte (optional).
  7. Publish it all in a terse, comprehensive manifesto (e.g. on an A3-sized paper).
  8. Live your purpose and principles—Welcome and reward initiatives that are consistent and resonant with the purpose and principles, and fuel our practice.

Therefore:

{{{therefore full}}}

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Sources