Do You Know the “Five Ws” and How They Can Help You Find Your Purpose?
John Tarnoff MA/MSP
Executive & Career Transition Coach | Unretirement Advocate | Spiritual Psychologist | Helping Mid-Career Professionals Rediscover Their Deeper Purpose, Rebuild Their Confidence, & Pivot to Meaningful, Rewarding Careers
As you grow in your career, you need to be clear on your sense of purpose. Yes, you have skills and experience, but your purpose drives your success. Use the five well-known questions journalists use to find your purpose and deepen your commitment to your career.
Who, What, Why, Where, and When are the "Five Ws." These questions can be turned into an exercise to help you find your purpose if it isn't as clear as you'd like it to be. Maybe it’s ironic, but many of us are more uncertain about our purpose the older and the more experienced we get. This may be because with greater knowledge and experience come new questions about how our work is making a difference or building our legacy.?
Questions come up now that we didn’t think about 20 or more years ago when we were young and starting out. We must find the answers to these questions now in order to successfully continue to work and make an impact. And it is never too late to reflect and find the answers that will give us that purpose and resolve as we face the future.?
How To Use This Article
Each heading below explores one of the "Five W's" and gives you suggestions on how to reflect and develop your answers to each question. Engage with each of these questions separately, as a standalone exercise. Take some time — once a day or once a week — to figure out each question.
Use a notebook or a note-taking app to record your thoughts and answers. Keep it handy to capture your ideas as they come up and on the fly. Make this activity part of your daily flow. If you think you’ll remember your ideas and insights later — you'll likely forget them. So write everything down and then set an undisturbed time window when you’ll be able to work from your notes.
What Does it Mean to 'Find Your Purpose?"
The answer varies for each one of us. Some perceive this notion as more philosophical — they need to feel connected to some deeper aspect of life. Others are more practical; they view their purpose as successfully supporting themselves and their family, building wealth, or self-sustainability. Google this question and you’ll be barreling down a deep rabbit hole!
As a way or getting more motivated in your career, and addressing a certain malaise that can set in mid-career, it can be helpful to start by identifying the values that move you the most. These values and priorities resonate deeply within you and fulfilling them gives you a feeling of connection to something higher or to our shared human experience. Your purpose is the force that drives you to do what you do - at work and in life.?
That awareness guides your actions and decisions in your own life. It is a deeply personal process. As you engage from that awareness, you’re able to better identify opportunities that serve you, situations that don’t serve you, and other signposts to help you stay on an increasingly fulfilling track.
Having a clear sense of purpose sustains you, even when you have setbacks. It is also a constant reminder of what's motivating you and can help you become more resilient and fulfilled in your personal and professional endeavors.
Finding your purpose is not an easy quest, but it failing to address it, especially as you age, could leave you feeling disconnected and rudderless in your work and in your relationships.
1. Who Are You?
This is the first and most important question. The remaining “W’s” in this process hinge on your sense of self. Who you are is the context for everything else you’re going to examine in this exercise.?
These are just four prompts to help you do some introspection. Keep thinking about them as you collect your notes, and explore other aspects of your self as they come up. You can gain a better understanding of who you are, what is important to you, and what makes you unique. This can help you make more intentional choices and decisions that align with your personal and professional goals and purpose.
2. What Do You Do?
Treat this question like you’re drafting your resume. List all the things you do, whether you like doing them or not, and whether you’re good at doing them or not. (NOTE: when you’re done with this step, you may find some takeaways to update your actual resume). Here are a few steps you can take to assess what you do and determine if it aligns with your purpose:
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3. Where Are You?
This question is not about your physical location but about where you are in your career progression. Are you where you imagined being at this stage of your life? Assess your current situation:
4. When Are You?
If you’re not where you want to be, can you develop a timeline to get you there? If you are experiencing a certain amount of satisfaction and a sense of achievement, where do you go from here??
Establishing time-based goals (an important aspect of the SMART goal methodology) is critical to keeping your career going and avoiding a loss of momentum. Be critical but realistic about creating milestones to get where you want to go. To become more self-directed and more fulfilled in your career, you’re going to need to rely more on your own initiative as there will be fewer “hoops” to jump through. It’s up to you to state your intentions and take responsibility for realizing them.
This is the perfect opportunity to double down on your time management skills. How do you use your time? Do you manage it well, or do you need improvement? Do you get distracted easily? Are you procrastinating more than working toward your goals?
This is a more challenging phase of your career. You’ll need to be as productive and proactive as possible if you’re going to succeed.
5. Why Do You Do What You Do?
Knowing your “Why” is what will result once you’re wrestled with - and answered at least to some extent - the first four “Ws.”. Knowing our “Why” is necessary, as Simon Sinek says, “If we want to feel an undying passion for our work or if we want to feel we are contributing to something bigger than ourselves.”
The first four “Ws” are somewhat pragmatic. Answering them helps us get focused and centered and ready to engage with our lives and careers moving forward. But our “Why” is that which sustains us day after day, and through every crisis, setback, or doubt.
As such, our “Why” has to be about how we serve something greater than ourselves. It’s the aspirational aspect of the five “Ws” and the one that is going to bring us into contact with the people who will inspire us, support us, and endure with us.
Here are four “windows” through which we can build our “Why.” You may have others.
There are other windows of focus to explore your “Why.” They all share what is unique about the human condition: that spark to move beyond the status quo and to expand and grow to some greater state. Remember: your life's purpose is a long game, not a short-term goal, so it’s always going to be evolving as you evolve and continue to engage with your world.?
Get Started on Your Mission
This is a lot to digest in a single sitting. As I said at the beginning, take these questions one at a time and gradually your purpose will emerge or become more clear.
A corollary exercise you might want to try is to create a mission statement where you describe what your professional life would be like if you were living up to your fullest potential. It’s another way into this process and could get you thinking about your larger sense of purpose.
Finding your purpose calls for some courage.?It might pose some questions and ideas that can make you uncomfortable.?But it is worthwhile. Your sense of purpose gives you an inner compass that directs all of your actions and choices and steers you toward life-affirming experiences.?
Technical and Commercial Innovation Leader and Consultant. Senior Consultant at P2S. PhD Chemical Engineer and Process Engineering and Scale-Up Specialist. Passionate about making the world better for everyone.
1 年Just went through this exercise over the past few days - I've been "saving" it (on my to-do list!) until I had the time to do it properly. Very valuable in clarifying my thinking. I would describe the experience as being that of turning something that I kind of knew and making it tangible, actionable and data-based. I was always introspective, so I was never going to discover some dramatic new truth about myself :D ... but this really helped me to make the case (to myself) for the direction I want my career to take. I also now have a quite detailed output which I can review, update and ponder regularly. I'm sure it will change over time. Thanks so much for sharing so much great material, John!
Active Aging Speaker, Educator, Advocate, Presenter, CEC Provider, Trainer-Teacher-Coach
1 年And our Purpose will evolve and change as we journey through the stages and decades of life! Thanks for sharing John Tarnoff MA/MSP ????
Director, Changing Gears
1 年Great article! These questions can also be effectively applied to the post-work life stage.
Corporate Executive Office Support | Education | L&D | DEIB | Find Your Why Strategist | Brain Health | Co-Founder Equality Starts at Home | Editing w/Amazon-SP daily devotional for Finding Passion, Purpose & Dream Jobs
1 年Enjoyed this article. When we know our “Five Ws” they reveal our purpose and lead to our HOW. ??