Cultivate Shared Purpose and Collective Responsibility
As a leader, one of the most important things you can do is cultivate a shared sense of purpose that aligns your organization’s goals with the broader good for your stakeholders and the society you serve. The key here is co-creating your mission with all stakeholders, ensuring it reflects shared values. When people feel like they’re part of shaping the company’s goals, they are more invested, motivated, and ready to contribute (Grow your people. Grow your business) (Mural). This approach is emphasized in W. Edwards Deming’s work on Total Quality Management (TQM) (Out of the Crisis), where co-creating value and fostering a shared purpose is crucial for achieving long-term success and quality improvement.
This isn’t just about making people feel good. Value creation isn’t merely a financial transaction; it’s a meaningful social process. Deming argued that emphasizing collective goals fosters cooperation and reduces process variation, improving overall performance and quality. Focusing on a collective mission minimizes the risk of individuals pulling the organization in different directions for their own benefit. Everyone stays aligned, sharing responsibility for the team’s success (NHS Leadership Academy). Research shows that teams working toward a shared goal tend to make better decisions, have higher morale, and collaborate more effectively (Leaderboy) (Grow your people. Grow your business).
However, maintaining that shared purpose in a large, diverse organization is challenging. Peter Drucker, a major influence on management theory, highlights the importance of consistently reinforcing shared objectives to ensure alignment. It’s easy for the mission to get lost in the daily grind, especially if leadership isn’t consistently reinforcing it. And let’s be honest—reaching a consensus in a large group can be slow. Decision-making might get bogged down as you try to accommodating everyone’s perspective (Leaderboy).
Balancing collective responsibility with efficiency is tricky. If you spend too much time getting everyone on board, you risk delaying important decisions. Worse, your organization may start drifting away from its core mission without clear leadership. Employees might feel disconnected and disengaged if they don’t see tangible progress. As discussed in The Phoenix Project by Gene Kim, large organizations must balance collaboration with maintaining a fast pace of decision-making, or they risk stagnation and inefficiency.
There’s also the challenge of recognizing individual contributions within a shared mission. People want to feel valued for their efforts, and some team members might feel overlooked if the focus is always on the collective. This is a common challenge in large-scale agile and DevOps transformations, as described in Gary Gruver's A Practical Approach to Large-Scale Agile Development.
Cultivating shared purpose and responsibility remains among the most potent ways to build a resilient, motivated team. The key is to strike a balance: keep reinforcing your mission and give individuals room to shine. Doing so creates an environment where collaboration thrives, and everyone still feels recognized and empowered.
Shared purpose is creating a workplace where everyone feels part of something bigger. When that happens, you’re not just fostering a mission—you’re building a culture that drives long-term success.