The Difference Between Purpose & Meaning and How to Create Both
Jacob Morgan
Keynote Speaker, Professionally Trained Futurist, & 5x Author. Founder of "Future Of Work Leaders" (Global CHRO Community). Focused on Leadership, The Future of Work, & Employee Experience
Attracting the best talent used to just take perks and a nice paycheck. But that’s no longer the case. Today’s employees care about a sense of purpose and meaning in their work--and are often willing to take a pay cut to get them.
But how can leaders and organizations create more purpose and meaning for their employees?
Creating meaningful work is a process. Your job is what you do, and your purpose is the intention of the job. Your purpose creates an impact or outcome, which drives meaning, or why you do what you do.
Job
You got hired to do this, whether it is writing code, handling customer service issues, or selling.
Purpose
Purpose bridges your work and its impact on customers, employees, or the world. Many employees struggle with their purpose because organizations are so focused on completing tasks and projects that employees don’t see what happens because of their work.
Impact
Impact is what happens from your purpose. Your purpose in customer service is to resolve issues and improve customers’ lives. But is that the actual impact that you are having? Your purpose is about the potential, but the impact is about reality. You want your impact to be greater than or equal to your purpose. But unfortunately, many employees don’t know the impact of their work.
Meaning
Meaning is subjective and unique to each of us. It’s about why we do something and the feeling we get from doing it. If you write code, you might get meaning from working on complex problems or challenges. If you’re in sales, you might get meaning from building relationships.
Creating Purpose and Meaning
The balance of power has shifted towards employees, and organizations are now focusing more on employee experience and creating an environment where employees want to show up to work. Leaders and organizations aren’t just there to make money or drive profits. They can’t be isolated; they must work towards something bigger and more meaningful.
Where to begin:
- Leaders must first understand their purpose and meaning and the difference between them.
- Help employees see how their work impacts the business, employees, or the world.
- Get to know employees as human beings, not just as workers. What do they value and why?
- Make purpose and meaning a core part of your messaging with your people.
- Align the organization's values with the purpose and the meaning of the people who work there.
Every employee deserves to understand how the work they do makes an impact. We all need to look inwards to get a better sense of who we are and why we are doing the work we do.
Leaders can’t just focus on the bottom line--they have to deliver purpose and meaning to employees.
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Congratulations on clarifying this truth.
Workplace Wellbeing Strategist | Author | Producer & Host of The Award Winning Mindshare Podcast | ex-Google
2 年Good article I agree with all you say here, and this is an important distinction. We all need some self-assessment as well!
Senior Manager - Valvoline Global Corporate Engineering
2 年Companies that bring clarity to the question - why we do what we do? inspire colleagues, clients and communities to support it.
The Modern Family Lawyer.
2 年If your employees are going home upset or frustrated about their job, you've failed as an employer on 2 counts: 1. You haven't been paying enough attention to realize they're unhappy. 2. You don't have a good enough relationship with your employees for them to talk to you about things they're unhappy about. When you start genuinely caring about your people, they will do incredible things for you.
Monitoring And Evaluation Project Manager @ ARCA DE ALIANZA INC | Process Improvement, CRM, Analytical Skills
2 年I totally agree!!! I am one to believe that Purpose gives Meaning to whatever we do - which does not always coincide with what is expected - In other words - You have to enjoy what you do to be satisfied - it is that satisfaction that jumpstarts the purpose to give meaning to what will be done - Imagine an artist with a blank canvas at the beginning of a day and at the end of the day has painted a beautiful sketch that satisfied him/her - gets compliments/approvals and finally sells the painting - all that involved joy, satisfaction, purpose, and meaning - whoever buys that painting - will see and feel all that involved to get to the final product - joy, satisfaction, purpose, and meaning - The purpose of anything we do - is to give meaning to what has been created - Conversely, Joy and Satisfaction comes before Purpose and Meaning.