Get All Access for $5/mo

3 Perspectives of Visionary Leaders A vision is meaningless until other people come to see what you see.

By Tor Constantino Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

PeopleImages | Getty Images

Every leader needs a clear vision. However, much like common sense, vision is anything but common and frequently unclear.

Regardless of the size of your organization, here are three perspectives you can apply in order to create, communicate and advance your vision forward.

Related: Creating a Culture of Innovation Starts With the Leader

1. Diagnostic Perspective

Before a vision can be created, you need to understand what's worked before and what hasn't. It's critical to recognize the current position of your organization and use that as a starting point.

Additionally, it's critical to identify existing obstacles, procedures and personalities that may undermine your vision at various stages. These may be difficult for you to see, especially if you've been with the organization for a long time. Institutional "blind spots" develop over time, unnoticed.

Once you have completed your diagnostics and have a clear view of the organization and its needs, it's important to incorporate the findings into the overall vision.

Related: How to Measure the Effectiveness of Your Company's Vision

2. Innovation Perspective

Innovation is often "hiding in plain sight," which requires a specific perspective to help pop it into view.

Consider the challenges of trying to innovate the following commoditized products: paint, glass and duct tape. Those are pretty dull and boring at first glance with little growth potential. For decades, industry leaders did not see a way to innovate on those products and increase their revenue. Yet:

  • Sherwin-Williams developed a square, stackable, pourable paint container that revolutionized the industry.
  • Corning innovated away from cookware to fiber optic cables, flat-screen TVs and biotech lab tools.
  • Duck Brand duct tape breathed new life and profitability into the category with fashion-focused line extensions in a rainbow of patterns and colors.

In each case, the opportunity for innovation was always there -- anybody could have innovated at anytime but didn't. It took visionary leaders to create an environment where others within the organization could see the opportunity that was right in front of their eyes, articulate it and bring it forward.

Related: How Startups and Legacy Companies Can Both Cash In on Market Trends

3. Unseen Perspective

Visionary leaders ultimately have to lead an organization down a path it has never traveled before. This requires the use of the "unseen" perspective, which will set the course for the desired future state. Past and recent history are packed with examples:

  • Christopher Columbus had to apply this perspective when he set off to find the new world, at a time when everyone thought the world was flat.
  • President Kennedy had to apply this perspective when he pledged 1961 that the US would put an American on the moon "before this decade is out."
  • Steve Jobs did it repeatedly when he challenged Apple to launch the iPod, MacBook , iTunes and iPhone.

As a visionary leader, you need to be your organization's oracle, driving its performance down a pioneering path into the future. To be a positive, transformational leader you need a clear vision if your organization is going to survive and thrive.

But you and the vision are indistinguishable. Without a clear vision, you won't last. And without a visionary leader, neither will the vision.

Tor Constantino

Former Journalist, Current PR Guy (wielding an MBA)

Tor Constantino is a former journalist, speaker, best-selling author and current PR guy with an MBA degree living near Philadelphia with 25+ years experience as a professional writer. He writes regularly at his blog. Tor's views are his own and do not reflect those of his current employer or any other organization. You can connect with him on Twitter and on Facebook.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Starting a Business

Your Business Will Never Succeed If You Overlook This Key Step

A comprehensive guide for startups to achieve and maintain product-market fit through thorough market research, iterative product development and strategic scaling while prioritizing customer feedback and agility.

Starting a Business

How to Find the Right Programmers: A Brief Guideline for Startup Founders

For startup founders under a plethora of challenges like timing, investors and changing market demand, it is extremely hard to hire programmers who can deliver.

Business News

How Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Transformed a Graphics Card Company Into an AI Giant: 'One of the Most Remarkable Business Pivots in History'

Here's how Nvidia pivoted its business to explore an emerging technology a decade in advance.

Business News

Want to Start a Business? Skip the MBA, Says Bestselling Author

Entrepreneur Josh Kaufman says that the average person with an idea can go from working a job to earning $10,000 a month running their own business — no MBA required.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Leadership

Why Hearing a 'No' is the Best 'Yes' for an Entrepreneur

Throughout the years, I have discovered that rejection is an inevitable part of entrepreneurship, and learning to embrace it is crucial for achieving success.