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Create Your Business Vision Today
3 Steps to Go From Goal to Reality
by
Jacqueline Cornaby
Smart business owners and managers know that the key to
business success is to strive for growth-oriented results that will challenge
you and your employees to achieve more. We’re going to increase
profits 20% in 90 days. We’re going to reduce our overhead costs
by year’s end. We’re going to hire high-caliber, positive
people for our new department. The list is endless. Yet in the quest
for higher profits and increased customer satisfaction, many owners and
managers put their big vision on the back burner in exchange for a short-term
goal. As a result, their business stays the same year after year, with
little indication of any growth at all. What went wrong?
Some company leaders blame the organization’s lack of growth on
outside events. They claim that the competition, the economy, their clients,
and even their employees did or did not do something that made the goal
fall short. Others blame their own goal-setting strategies, believing
their objectives were too lofty for any company to achieve. The fact
is that when it comes to positively changing your business, traditional
goal setting is not enough. The key is to look inside yourself and your
company and determine not what you want to achieve in the next few months,
but rather, what kind of organization you want to become for lasting
results.
What Does Your Company Stand For?
When owners and managers say they want to achieve some business goal,
they naturally look to outside factors for support, advice, and direction.
For example, they can only increase profits if customers spend more;
they can only reduce overhead if the suppliers lower their prices; they
can only hire high caliber people if they get better job applicants.
The mentality is: “As soon as.then.” However, when leaders
decide to positively change their perception of what the organization
stands for and choose ownership instead of excuses, then they hold themselves
personally accountable for their business’s future and don’t
need outside factors to guide them. They can add high achievers to the
payroll because instead of continually searching for the right employees,
they are committed to their big vision and as a result only attract those
people with similar ideals.
In order to change your perspective of your business and reach your organizational
goals, you can follow a simple three-step process that enables you to
turn your future vision into current reality. By doing so, you create
your company’s future today and assure that the coming months and
years will be different and grander if you choose.
- Create your vision.
If you could design the ideal business, what would it look like? Who
would your best employee be? What kind of customers would you attract?
What level of revenue would you be bringing in? What countries would
you be doing business in? What would you tell yourself to ensure your
vision would become real? Whatever it is you create for your business,
that’s the vision you need to focus on to bring the future to you
now.
When you neglect to create your company’s vision, you essentially
allow outside factors to determine your organization’s success.
Creating a vision is about taking control of your business and accepting
responsibility for the choices you need to make. It’s a proactive
approach to business that says you refuse to let external circumstances
get in the way of your success. By keeping your vision firmly in mind
and sharing it with those who work for and with you, you give yourself
and your employees the strength and conviction to transform beliefs
so you can finally become the kind of company customers seek out.
As
you
create this initial vision, take the time to examine other areas of
your company and then determine the focus for each individual aspect.
For
example, you could have a vision for your products or services, your
employee relations, your community contribution, etc. The more focused
you are on how each aspect of your business should be, the more clarity
you have on your future direction.
- Create your company identity in relation to your
vision.
What three qualities or values do you want to own or possess
to make your vision
real? Some examples are “customer-oriented,” “innovative,” “unstoppable,” “strong,” or “committed.” Because
your external world is a reflection of your internal world, what you
create in your business will only be as strong as who you and your employees
are inside. Identity is about taking ownership for your vision and for
what you want your company to become. Without identity come excuses -
all those reasons why you can’t make your vision real. I can’t
build my business because I’ve tapped out my market. I can’t
improve customer satisfaction because I can’t find good employees.
I can’t reduce overhead because I don’t own the building
and rent keeps going up. All these excuses occur because of a lack of
an empowering identity. A business’s identity is a powerful force
within the marketplace. Why not choose one that serves you and your
customers?
When you choose the qualities you want your business to possess, you
prohibit outside factors from slowing you down. You choose to expand
your market so you can grow your business. You choose to be a market
leader so you can attract qualified employees. You choose to think
creatively so you can reduce expenses without sacrificing quality.
Essentially,
your competitors, your stakeholders, your employees, the economy, and
even current events can no longer dictate your company’s direction.
Creating your organization’s identity frees you from others’ control
and enables you to finally act upon the goals you have set and achieve
the desired results. It’s a matter of realizing that there is
no becoming; there is just the declaration of all that your company
is right
now.
- Commit to your vision.
Nothing happens without action. The same is true for making your vision
a reality. With your vision and your identity clear, you now must take
the steps that will positively impact your business and transform it
into the company you have chosen it to be.
When you commit to your vision you take daily steps that will bring
you to your goal. Daily reflection upon your vision is necessary for
achievement,
as are weekly morning visionary meetings that measure your progress.
Some company leaders choose to find photos that remind them of their
vision, and they reflect on the pictures daily; others prefer to read
or recite affirmations that help them connect to precisely what they
want. For example, if your goal is to expand internationally into select
countries, you could find travel brochures of those locations and post
them in your office, or you could remind yourself each day that “I
am in charge of an international organization with headquarters in the
U.S., Hong Kong, and England.” When the mind can envision the completed
goal, you will be more eager to do what’s necessary to achieve
the desired result. The mind does not know the difference between real
or imagined. Why not create an empowering reality?
Finally, give yourself
checkpoints so you can assess your business’s progress. Regularly
ask yourself questions such as, “What is different in my business
now compared to one year ago?” “What steps am I currently
taking to help my company become the market presence I want it to be?” and “What
can I do to bring my vision closer?” If possible, have an accountability
partner who asks these questions for you, who helps point out ways
that you may be sabotaging your goals, and who reveals ways that are
serving
you to bring your future to you today.
Seize Your Opportunities Today
Simply stating goals is not enough to dramatically change your business.
You must also decide what your company’s ideal future looks like,
what qualities you or your employees need to attain it, and finally what
daily steps will bring you to your desired outcome. Without such a plan,
you’ll have nothing concrete to run towards and you’ll be
content to stay where you are.
By following this simple three-step process you can ditch the business
school goal-setting process and create the organization of your dreams
today. Then, instead of looking back at the end of the year and wondering, “What
happened to my goals?” you can further challenge yourself and ask, “Where
can I take my business next?”
Jacqueline Cornaby is the Founder and CEO of Jacqueline International,
Inc. an enterprise for implementing business and life strategies
for individuals and organizations to live an extraordinary
life. Jacqueline
is an international speaker, author, and life strategist offering
strategies and techniques for immediate results with fulfillment.
To request more articles or speaking engagements contact:
booking@jacquelineinternational.com
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