Thursday, March 31, 2011

Characteristics of Empowering Mission Statements



According to Stephen Covey's book, First Things First, an empowering mission statement:

1. represents the deepest and best within you. It comes out of a solid connection with your deep inner life.

2. is the fulfillment of your own unique gifts. It's the expression of your unique capacity to contribute.

3. is transcendent. It's based on principles of contribution and purpose higher than self.

4. addresses and integrates all four fundamental human needs and capacities (to live, to love, to learn, to leave a legacy). It includes fulfillment in physical, social, mental, and spiritual dimensions.

5. is based on principles that produce quality-of-life results. both the ends and the means are based on true north principles.

6. deals with both vision and principle-based values. It's not enough to have values without vision - you want to be good, but you want to be good for something. On the other hand, vision without values can create a Hitler. An empowering mission statement deals with both character and competence; what you want to be and what you want to do in your life.

7. deals with all the significant roles in your life. It represents a lifetime balance of personal, family, work, community - whatever roles you feel are your to fill.

8. is written to inspire you - not to impress anyone else. It communicates to you and inspires you on the most essential level.


Personal Mission Statement Prompts


"To ... [what you want to achieve, do or become] ... so that ... [reasons why it is important]. I will do this by ... [specific behaviors or actions you can use to get there]." 

"I value ... [choose one to three values] ... because ... [reasons why these values are important to you]. Accordingly, I will ... [what you can do to live by these values]."

"To develop and cultivate the qualities of ... [two to three values or character traits] ... that I admire in ... [an influential person in your life] ... so that ... [why you want to develop these qualities]." 

"To live each day with ... [choose one to three values or principles] ... so that ... [what living by these values will give you]. I will do this by ... [specific behaviors you will use to live by these values]." 

"To appreciate and enjoy ... [things you want to appreciate and enjoy more] by ... [what you can do to appreciate/enjoy these things]." 

"To treasure above all else ... [most important things to you] by ... [what you can do to live your priorities]." 

"To be known by ... [an important person/group] ... as someone who is ... [qualities you want]."


A Personal Mission Statement - An Example



* To bring light into the dark, the integration of life experience and the re-integration of souls
* To heal wounds of individuals, groups, society, working with the angels at their core
* To dispel ignorance and deception with knowledge, wisdom and truth
* To be trustworthy, honest, honoring, empowering, nurturing
* To work as a guide, consultant, developer, networker
* To bring beauty and hope, life itself, through innovative and creative expressive views; words and images    that last beyond present existence
* To have a peaceful familial beauty-filled home base where nurturance abounds and needs are met.

* As a healer, I will need to be healed
* As a guide, I will need to be led
* As a teacher, I will need to learn
* As a developer, I will need to develop
* As a bringer of beauty and hope, I will need optimism and vision
* As a minister, I will need ministration and prayers
* As a light bearer, I will need light
* As a spiritual being, I will need spiritual nurturance and direction.

May 1996

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Five Questions to Ask When Writing Your Personal Mission Statement



The five greatest questions to answer when writing a personal mission statement:

1. What will be the centre of my life? 
    What is most important to me?

2. What will be the character of my life? 
     What kind of person will I be?

3. What will be the contribution of my life? 
    When I am gone, what will I be remembered for?

4. What will be the communication of my life?

5. What will be the community of my life? 
    What people are most important to me?

The Purpose-Driven Life, Rick Warren

Sample Personal Mission Statement Phrases

These are based on the book
Setting Your Genius Free: 
How to Discover Your Spirit and Calling
by Dick Richards





The basic idea from this book is that you can describe your purpose or mission in just two or three words.  It should be a phrase big enough in scope to be true no matter what job or role you have in life.  In other words, not tied to a specific career or job you hold, but something that comes from deep inside you that stays with you wherever you go, whatever you do.  It’s what you bring to the world.  Clues to your purpose can be found in your values, experiences, characteristics, skills, talents, and passions.






 Advocating positive change
Building platforms
Clearing the way
Connecting theory & practice
Considering alternatives
Creating harmony
Cutting through
Digging deeper
Discover deeper connections
Discovering new knowledge


Encouraging human potential
 Engaging the heart
Exploring pathways
Facilitating growth
Facilitating meaningful conversations
Feeling deeply
Finding the positive
Finding the way
Generating ideas
Generating warmth
Helping others


Looking for truth
Making connections
Making meaning
Making things work
Opening doors
Organising chaos
Overcoming obstacles
Promoting peace
Providing hospitality
Pursuing understanding


Raising awareness
Questioning authority
Searching for clues
Seeing possibilities
Solving puzzles
Straightening up
Surveying the landscape
Supporting families
Taking care
Telling stories
Upholding principles