In a tight basketball game’s closing seconds, a coach will huddle his players and draw up a play designed to result in a winning shot and victory. But, if just one teammate is disengaged, the play can go awry and the team falls short of accomplishing its purpose. Businesses have something in common with that […]

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In a tight basketball game’s closing seconds, a coach will huddle his players and draw up a play designed to result in a winning shot and victory.

But, if just one teammate is disengaged, the play can go awry and the team falls short of accomplishing its purpose.

Businesses have something in common with that basketball team.

A business needs a purpose, and each employee needs to be inspired by and contributing to that purpose. If everyone in an organization feels good about the work they do and is committed to the organization’s purpose, then you’re likely to see good results. But if workers aren’t engaged, their productivity can suffer and the company as a whole may pay the price.

For years, many companies chased quarterly earnings and ignored any overarching purpose beyond keeping shareholders happy. But I believe that to survive and thrive in today’s world, businesses need to think about more than just “shareholder value."

Instead, company leaders need to manage from the perspective of “stakeholder value,” and stakeholders include everyone who impacts the company or is affected by it, from customers to suppliers to communities.

Among the key stakeholders are the employees.

Imagine if you could get employees to look at their jobs as something with a purpose that goes beyond just earning a paycheck. That could result in a more engaged workforce, better productivity, and perhaps less turnover.

In fact, studies have shown that millennials in particular seek purpose in their jobs and are quick to switch employers if they don’t find it.

Numerous companies have developed statements to define their purpose. For example, Google wants to “organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.” Roche, a biotech company, states its purpose as: “Doing now what patients need next."

But once a company comes up with a purpose, how does it get employee buy-in?

It starts at the top. It’s not enough that employees find the purpose inspiring. The leader of the company has to be inspired because the leader will cause others to be inspired. Ultimately, it’s important that the entire management team be on board and enthusiastic. 

Make sure the purpose is clear and meaningful. Company leaders must find a common purpose that’s broad enough to be meaningful and important to employees. In the absence of a clear organizational purpose, people focus on their individual goals and may perceive different purposes for the same organization.

Discard what doesn’t fit. Identify company activities that aren’t aligned with the purpose and remove or transform them.

Purpose isn’t an idea that only lives in a strategic plan or on a website. It lives in the daily operation of a business and in the ongoing communications with stakeholders. And it lives as the internal compass for keeping a complicated organization with many competing interests on course.

Paul Ratoff is president of Strategy Development Group, Inc. and author of “Thriving in a Stakeholder World: Purpose as the New Competitive Advantage.” Contact him at www.ratoffconsulting.com or strategydevelopmentgroup.com.

Paul Ratoff

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