Chapter 3 – Do You See What They Are Saying? page 33.
- Great companies have leaders who communicate a crystal-clear vision to the entire company.
- A company’s vision, simply put, is a matter of defining who you are, where you are going, and how you will get there.
- When the Vision is not written down, it is difficult for a leadership team to know if they are on the same page – not to mention sharing it with everyone else in the company.
- This leads to poor communication, confusion, and wasted effort.
- The EOS tool that helps your leadership team define, document, agree on, and share the company Vision is called the Vision/Traction Organizer or V/TO.
- The V/TO aligns your leadership team around the answers to 8 essential questions.
- The V/TO helps the team get their vision out of their heads and down on paper so it can be shared.


Question 1: What Are Your Core Values?
- Core Values are a timeless set of guiding principles.
- Companies typically have just 3-7 Core Values.
- They define:
- What are the behaviors you expect from each other?
- Your culture – who fits and who doesn’t?
- What makes your company unique and different?
- Your company will use its Core Values to hire, fire, and review.
- When you work with people who share the same Core Values, communication is easier, things get done faster, and the work environment is more fun.
Question 2: What is Your Core Focus?
- Core Focus defines what you are and keeps the company and its employees focused on the areas where your business excels.
- Core Focus keeps a company from getting distracted.
- It comes from an intersection of why your company exists and what you do in the world.
- Your why is:
- Known as your Purpose, Cause, or Passion.
- It is the thing that makes you want to get out of bed every day.
- Your what is
- Known as a niche.
- It defines the space in which you do business.
- It identifies what you do better than anyone else.
- Once these two truths are clarified and put together, you have your Core Focus.
- Your Core Focus serves as a filter that allows your organization to say no to good ideas and yes to great ones.
- As a result, all efforts, people, systems, processes, and even products will be designed and aligned to keep you true to what you do best.
Question 3: What is Your 10-Year Target?
- The 10-Year target is your long-term, larger-than-life goal.
- It unites everyone around one common objective.
- It gets everyone asking the right questions, like:
- What does your company need to start doing differently to reach our 10-Year Target?
- What do we need to change?
- What could we do better?
- A clear 10-Year Target that is shared by all will direct your organization’s energy, resources, and decisions to help you grow faster and reach your target.
Question 4: What is Your Marketing Strategy?
- Defining your Marketing Strategy requires crystallizing who your ideal customer is and clarifying the message that is most appealing to them.
- Doing this will create a laser-like focus for your sales and marketing efforts.
- Many companies waste thousands of dollars trying to be everything to everyone.
- The Marketing Strategy will help you stay focused, sell to the most receptive customers, and spend less organizational time servicing.
- Your Marketing Strategy is made up of 4 key elements:
- Target Market
- Identifies the characteristics of your best customers.
- Who they are.
- Where they are.
- How they think.
- Allows you to focus your energy and resources on those customers.
- Identifies the characteristics of your best customers.
- 3 Uniques
- The three things that make you better than the competition.
- The three reasons why your customers buy from your company.
- Proven Process
- A visual of what you do, time and time again, to deliver value to your customer over the life of the relationship.
- It creates a picture of what your customers will experience when they work with you.
- Guarantee
- Designed to take away your customers’ biggest fear when it is time for them to buy.
- Target Market
Question 5: What is Your 3-Year Picture?
- A picture of what your company will look like in 3 short years.
- Helps everyone see the same image 3 years down the road.
- Contains just a handful of numbers: Revenue, Profit, and Key Measurables.
- In addition, it contains 5 to 15 bullets that help “paint” the picture.
- Once everyone in the organization sees the same Vision, it is more likely to happen.
- Once clear, it will give you the context in which to set goals for the next 12 months.
Question 6: What is Your 1-Year Plan?
- Your 1-Year Plan defines your objectives for the year.
- It identifies and crystallizes your revenue target, profit target, and key measurables, along with 3 to 7 goals for the year.
- Why only 3 to 7 goals? Because:
- When companies try to get too many things done, they lose focus and, as a result, accomplish very few of them.
- With too many goals, organizations spread resources too thin, failing to complete many of their objectives.
- Once your 1-Year Plan is clear, you’ll know exactly what you need to accomplish over the next 12 months to put you on a path to reach your 3-Year Picture and ultimately achieve your 10-Year Target.
Question 7: What are Your Rocks?
- Rocks are the 3 to 7 most important objectives the company must get done in the next 90 days to achieve your 1-Year Plan.
- Why 90 days? Because:
- At the beginning of the year, energy is high, but even with the best intentions, life gets in the way.
- People get distracted easily.
- Energy is lost and plans start to unravel.
- Deadlines get pushed back, and priorities get lost in the hustle and bustle.
- By November we have lost all momentum and our goals for the year are off-track.
- Rocks help solve this problem by breaking down annual goals into smaller, manageable chunks with short-term goals along the way.
- Human beings tend to lose focus, get off-track, and fray about 90 days into any project. Rocks get everyone refocused right on the 90th day as the unraveling begins, maximizing everyone’s efforts and energy.
- By setting Rocks every quarter, everyone will know the most important priorities for the company every 90 days.
Question 8: What are Your Issues?
- To achieve your company’s Vision, it is vital to openly admit all of your company’s obstacles to the opportunities that lie before you.
- This is simply a list of all the things that could prevent your company from reaching its Vision, or things that will help it get there faster.
- All organizations have issues. The problem is when no one admits them, or when they do and everyone just talks about them but does nothing.
- Putting all of the issues (and opportunities) on one list will help your company get a handle on them.
- Once your issues are listed, your company can start to prioritize and work on them one at a time.
Short Recap
| V/TO Question | What It Answers |
| Core Values | Who you are? |
| Core Focus | What you are? |
| 10-Year Target | Where you are going? |
| Marketing Strategy | Which potential customers you are target with what message? |
| 3-Year Picture | What you will look like in 3 years? |
| 1-Year Plan | What your goals are for the next 12 months? |
| Rocks | What your priorities are for the next 90 days? |
| Issues | What will stop you or get you there faster? |
Questions to Ask Your Manager
- How can our department help achieve the company Vision?
- What role do I play in this?
- What is our greatest challenge in achieving our Vision?