Tune Up Your Vision to Ignite Your Business
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Tune Up Your Vision to Ignite Your Business Claudette Rowley
Copyright 2003
"Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your
heart. Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens."
- Carl Jung
Creating a vision is the act of embracing what you deeply and
fundamentally desire in any area of your life - business,
career, relationships, health, spirituality or fun. For those of
us who are entrepreneurs, vision represents one cornerstone of
our business foundation. And many of us are entrepreneurs, in
part, because we have a vision to bring to life.
Even the most well-conceived, authentic visions can veer off
course or get lost on automatic pilot. When this happens, it can
be a signal to tune up your business vision. Just as it behooves
us to utilize our common sense as entrepreneurs, refining and
building our "vision-sense" is an often overlooked tool of
entrepreneurial success.
To tune up your vision, ask yourself these questions: (Hint:
These questions can apply to any area of your life.)
1. Does your vision for your business include the word "should"?
If it does, remove all "shoulds" from your vision. Vision is
born of what you truly desire and what's authentic for you. If
it's not authentic for you, it's not going to be an effective
strategy. For example, you have a public speaking business, and
feel that you "should" want to be an internationally known
public speaker. However, as a result of other priorities in your
life, you only want to put enough energy into your business to
be a regionally or nationally known speaker. Once you
synchronize your vision with what you want, it's much easier to
make it real.
If your vision includes a "should" that you feel is essential,
delegate it. Shoulds are a huge energy drain. As an
entrepreneur, it's more effective to focus on what energizes
you. Not only does energy beget energy, it frees up precious
mental space.
2. Have you confused your business vision with your business
goals? This is a common mistake. Vision and goals are NOT the
same. Your vision is the big picture of what you deeply and
fundamentally desire, what charges you up, turns you on and
brings out the best in you. Even in business - especially small
business and entrepreneurship - your vision reflects the essence
of who you are based on your values, creativity, passion and
authenticity. Once you've identified your vision, you then set
the concrete goals necessary to achieve it. Setting goals before
identifying your vision is an example of putting the proverbial
cart before the horse.
3. Are your business vision and goals aligned with each other?
When you tweak or expand your vision, don't forget to adjust
your goals. Serena, head of the sales division for a cookware
company, described her vision and its supporting goals this way.
"My vision is that within five years, my company will be #1 in
sales for this cookware niche. Our cookware will be regarded as
high quality at a tremendous value. We will be bringing in $2
million annually in sales, and have a national and international
presence." In order to build her vision, Serena set these goals:
cultivate national and international distributors to sell her
product in their areas, get large retail chains to carry the
cookware line, and to follow up aggressively with former and
potential customers.
4. Does your vision still excite you? At one point or another,
most visions need to be expanded, tweaked or abandoned. Here are
some common vision traps:
- You feel chained to your vision forever. "Now that I've built
my vision, I must stay with it. Even if I don't want to."
- You have blinders on. You miss recognizing the expansion
necessary to keep your vision alive and insure its success. "My
initial vision is actualized - okay, I'm done."
- You don't honor your own vision style. Some people are
vision-expanders and some are vision-starters. Vision-expanders
build their vision and continue to grow it and move it forward.
For vision-starters, the joy is in the initial design and
implementation of the vision. Once their idea comes to life,
these folks get bored and restless, ready to move on to the next
idea. Both styles are valid. If you feel bored, restless or
frustrated with your business or your business vision, these can
be clues that something needs to change!
Vision is the "big picture" that keeps us going, the carrot in
front of our horse. If our vision is doing its job, we are
continually inspired by its existence and by the refinement and
expansion of it. Set aside time for your tune up today. Paying
attention to your "vision-sense" may just what you need to
recharge your business and reignite your passion.
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- Claudette Rowley, coach and author, helps professionals
identify and pursue their true purpose and calling in life.
Contact her today for a complimentary consultation at
781-676-5633 or claudette@metavoice.org. Sign up for her free
newsletter "Insights for the Savvy" at http://www.metavoice.org.