How to define your team's mission

Originally published by Justin Rosenstein on LinkedIn: How to define your team's mission

Originally published on Wavelength, a publication by Asana for teams who aspire to do great things together—through a mindful, purposeful approach.

Spread ideas. Belong anywhere. Organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. Accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy.

These are the mission statements of TED, Airbnb, Google, and Tesla.

As the articulation of your company’s purpose, a mission statement creates clarity of your true north, the reason why you do the things you do, and how everyone’s work ladders up to the bigger picture. From prioritizing bugs to making key branding decisions to product roadmapping, every decision can be made based on the question, “Which choice would be most in service of our mission?”

Many teams, though, generally write their mission statement as an afterthought. They focus first on the product, or the market, or the sales pitch.

But without an answer to the question “why,” it’s difficult to know which feature to develop, what markets to first enter, how employees should collaborate with one another, or how to make the millions of micro-choices required to build an organization. This is true for entire companies as well as individual teams.

So, how do you hone in on the right set of words?

Articulating Asana’s mission

In the early days of Asana—before the big roadmapping and all-out recruiting—we paused to find the right words to capture our purpose. This was not so we could feel warm and fuzzy—a sense of purpose impacts every part of the business, from how we spend our time to how we create brand clarity among customers.

It also impacts employee retention. One study found that employees are 2.3 times more likely stay in a position if there is a feeling of purpose. That number jumps to 5.3 times among millennials.

For me and my co-founder Dustin, this process was as much about self-reflection as market analysis. We needed to dig deep to find exactly why this new company needed to exist. It wasn’t easy, and the roadblocks were both internal (What are we really doing?) and external (Will these words translate to others?).

But the result—that Asana is a company clear on its mission to help humanity thrive by enabling all teams to work together effortlessly—was worth it.

Here’s how we found the right words to capture our mission, in three phases:

Phase 1: The idea-generation phase

Part brainstorm, part brain dump, this phase is about surfacing ideas without judgement or filter. Get in a room, get a whiteboard (or post-its, or chalk, or whatever), and have at it! A neutral facilitator in the room can help participants stay creative, exploring all possible answers to the question “Why are we doing this?”