Home Thinking Aloud Are You A Visionary? 6 Traits Every Strong Vision Shares

Are You A Visionary? 6 Traits Every Strong Vision Shares

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by Oleg Konovalov, author of “Leaderology

There’s a reason many of the most successful businesses in America – Apple, Amazon and others – had a visionary leader behind them, propelling them to achieve their goals at the highest level.

A vision pushes people not just to do more, but to do more than they think they are capable of. Yet, even though everyone does a lot of talking about the importance of vision, it’s not easy to fully grasp just what it is.

I’ve discussed vision with CEOs of big companies, serial entrepreneurs, creators of unique software, and many others. Every single person with whom I have spoken viewed vision differently. But in the course of all these discussions I discovered that there were some properties of a strong vision that remained constant.

1. Vision reflects the highest purpose of leadership.

A leader’s vision should include actual benefits for those affected by the vision, such as employees, customers, the leaders themselves, employees’ families and society at large. A main stimulus of vision is people and the care of their needs. If a vision is not formed around people and their needs, then it is not vision but personal ambition.

2. Vision doesn’t lead to dead ends.

A vision is always scalable and should show multiple potentials for expansion. But to be able to scale the vision you should maintain an appropriate cognitive distance from it. This allows you to see the broader picture while keeping the important details in sight. Stand too close and you see the details, but lose the whole picture. Stand too far away and you lose the important details from which the vision is created.

3. Vision reveals a path to success.

As you pursue your vision, watch for the signs and clues that will help lead you to success. They will be easy to follow if the vision is strong. Those signs are always around in different forms – words of encouragement, expressions of real need from strangers, and answers to critical questions coming from unexpected perspectives. Paying attention to such signs helps people spot opportunities while crafting the most effective path to success.

4. Vision means taking on responsibility.

If you’re the person with a vision, you are taking on a responsibility that will have an impact on people’s lives. And the greater the vision is, the greater the responsibility. But this huge responsibility also comes with incredible opportunities, the kind of opportunities available only to pioneers. It may be intimidating to take on all that responsibility, but it will reward you in return.

5. Vision should be easy to understand.

Vision involves elegant thinking about complicated things. But that doesn’t mean the vision itself should be so complex that everyone is left puzzling over what you’re saying. Just the opposite. Great vision is genuinely easy to understand. The simpler the vision is in its core meaning, the easier it can be shared with employees, customers, and partners.

6. Vision generates excitement.

A person with a vision isn’t nonchalant about it. Strong vision is always accompanied by excitement. Actually, vision is a strong emotion itself. If someone tells you about his great vision and he sounds ho-hum about it, then most likely he is lying to himself and others. Such a person might have a goal, but they don’t have a vision.

Vision is a great leadership ability and success instrument.

Vision defines and explains why and where effort should be focused. And while vision is normally created by a single person, it quickly becomes the property of many, and that’s important.

No one can accomplish something great on his or her own. Vision is what attracts the people needed to take what you want to accomplish and turn it into a reality.

 

Oleg Konovalov is a thought leader, author, business educator and consultant with over 25 years of experience operating businesses and consulting Fortune 500 companies internationally. His latest book is “Leaderology“. He is a visiting lecturer at a number of business schools, a Forbes contributor and high in demand speaker at major conferences around the world.