Mission as Living Soil: Grounding Strategy in Why
In moments of crisis or when facing a complex decision, it is easy for organizations to leap straight into strategy. The question becomes, What should we do? How do we fix this? Yet, when strategy leads, it often narrows the field of vision to tactics and immediate outcomes. What happens when we begin somewhere deeper—by remembering why we exist?
A company anchored in mission operates differently. Mission is not a framed statement on the wall; it is the living foundation of culture, decisions, and relationships. When meetings start by reconnecting with why, even for a few moments, it shifts the energy. The conversation becomes less about reacting and more about responding. Teams align more naturally, seeing which options rise to the surface because they resonate with the deeper purpose.
This approach transforms brainstorming as well. Rather than a scatter of possibilities competing for attention, ideas emerge in dialogue with the mission. People begin to ask, Which ideas express who we are? Which of these invite us to become who we want to be? The mission becomes both a filter and a compass.
Jill Taylor’s experience with Burgerville shows how this plays out in practice. When the mission—“Serve with Love”—was fully embedded, it shaped every interaction and decision. The community felt it. Trust and loyalty, both inside and outside the company, grew from that consistency. When mission is neglected, even briefly, people notice. The “soil,” as Jill calls it, begins to lose its richness.
Tending to the mission is like tending a garden. Returning to why is how leaders keep the soil fertile, the roots strong, and the culture alive. It’s a quiet discipline that builds both resilience and clarity—soil and soul, growing together.
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