The Characteristics of Visionary Leaders

The focus of visionary leadership is to emphasize passion and vision, followed by execution to achieve organizational goals and objectives.

When you look at business leaders like Bill Gates, Sam Walton, Sir Richard Branson, and philosophers like Bertrand Russell, Martin Heidegger, Ludwig Wittgenstein, David Bohm, C. S. Peirce and inventors like Nikola Tesla, Paolo Soleri, Harvey W. Bailey, Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell and Wright brothers and political leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Aung San Suu Kyi, it becomes very clear that they are all connected through one leadership—visionary leadership. They might belong to different streams, but they are all visionary leaders at heart with an urge to take up leadership roles and make a difference in society.

Any leadership starts with a vision, followed by mission and execution. Therefore, vision becomes the bedrock of leadership. It is the first pillar that sets things in motion. Leadership alone focuses on vision, not management, as the latter deals with mission.

A person’s vision comes from his convictions, passion, values, ethics, and etiquette. Vision makes things easier and clearer for others. It clears the clutter and makes the path free from obstacles.

Visionary leadership is not conventional leadership. It is different and unique from normal leadership. The primary focus of visionary leadership is to emphasize passion and vision and, subsequently, on the mission, followed by execution to achieve organizational goals and objectives. It links from the present to the future.

Succinctly visionary leadership is all about looking into the future and predicting the future. It is all about seeing the invisible. It is being enthusiastic about uncertainty and complexity. Here are some hallmarks of visionary leaders.

  • Visionary leaders are farsighted and always look at the implications and complications while making decisions.  They go by the road less traveled. They don’t indulge in continuous firefighting as it diverts their attention from their goals.  They are focused on their goals and objectives. They constantly change their strategies, styles, and approaches but not their goals.
  • They take a long time to fix their goals. Once goals are fixed, they commit to them through thick and thin and work towards them. They have gut feelings and follow intuition.
  • They inspire others, are attentive listeners, successfully facilitate teams, mobilize people towards their dreams, and have the charisma to connect with their people.
  • They focus keenly on the journey to reach their destination. They endeavor to be within the track so they don’t lose sight of their destination.
  • They have vision and vigor.
  • They focus on long-term results, not short-term setbacks. They are highly focused on their goals.
  • They lead from the front. They inspire their people and take them forward energetically.
  • They are imaginative at heart. They have ideas and insights and are bold to take their people forward successfully.
  • They believe in themselves, know where they are going, and hardly care whether others like them. They mind their business and their goals, are undeterred by shocks and setbacks, and are prepared to risk their lives for the sake of their people.
  • They dislike micromanaging.
  • They are very clear and are highly focused. They continuously align themselves toward their goals despite external pulls and pressures.
  • They are born optimists and radiate positive energy and enthusiasm.
  • For them, there are no failures but only lessons.
  • They take the blame in case of failure and spread the fame in case of success.
  • They show visual pictures to their followers to accomplish organizational goals and objectives. Vision gives a kick to the people. It takes the people forward with energy and enthusiasm.
  • They are path-makers and destiny makers
  • They combine emotions to convey and communicate their goals.
  • Above all, they are moral leaders who walk the talk.

What is Vision and Mission?

Vision is all about seeing the invisible through imagination. However, the mission is all about executing activities. Vision indicates where one wants to go, and mission directs how one must go. Visionaries always look for what is possible by discovering potential, and missionaries adopt this through the right planning and execution. The visionaries are directors, and the missionaries are actors.

Importance of Vision and Vision Statement

Vision enhances organizational excellence and effectiveness. It enhances employees’ commitment to the organization and helps them move in the specific direction the organization intends to take.

A vision statement is the highest order of goals that takes the organization to its tipping point. It is for the long term that can transform the organization and keep it different from others. In contrast, the mission statement is different from the vision as it may change from time to time as the strategies to reach organizational goals and objectives change occasionally.

A vision statement serves as a catalyst. It plays a pivotal role in the success of any organization. It should be clear, crisp, simple, straight, and above all, jargon-free. It must energize employees to contribute their best. They must be able to take pride in the organization. There are no fixed rules, regulations, or formulas for crafting a better vision statement.  For instance, GE’s vision statement is “To become #1 or #2 in every market we serve and revolutionize this company to have the speed and agility of a small enterprise.”

The vision statement’s idea is to ensure that all employees have one visual image of the organization that connects everyone emotionally, ethically, and energetically. Besides, it must transform with changing times and technologies. However, the core content must remain the same, and it should not be diluted because the company has been founded on fundamental ideas and ideals.

How to Craft Your Vision Statement?

To be effective, the vision statement must be preferably under 100 words and in the present tense. Crafting one requires an imaginative mind. We shall look at a few tools to help you craft a better vision statement.

  • Vision must spell out a clear and compelling picture so that there is a strong reason to pursue and persevere. It must be audacious and SMART which is the acronym for specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and time-bound.
  • It should be simple and straight and challenging and inspiring.
  • It must convey the company’s value system, culture, ethics, and etiquette. It should never be a mere rhetoric but must be realistic.
  • It must be challenging enough so that people can put in their energies and efforts aggressively.
  • It must neither be too short nor too big. It must convey the ideals and ideas of the organization for which it stands and aspires to achieve.
  • Avoid jargon and buzzwords as it ensures better clarity.

When the vision statement is made to compete with another firm, the company must revise its vision once it is successful. Besides, if the company reaches the target of magical numbers then it has to revise its vision statement. 

Conclusion

Vision helps us prepare for tomorrow. It is like goal setting. As individuals set their goals, organizations also set their goals. It is like where they want to go. The mission serves as a roadmap to reach its vision. Succinctly, the mission spells out how the organization accomplishes its vision.

Vision is closely connected with leadership. Legendary business leader Jack Welch articulated his vision and took GE to the tipping point through his visionary leadership. To put it in the words of Peter F. Drucker, “Leadership is lifting a person’s vision to higher sights, the raising of a person’s performance to a higher standard, the building of a personality beyond its normal limitations.”

Political visionary leaders such as Theodore Roosevelt and Martin Luther King Jr have provided direction to America when needed. Besides, John F Kennedy envisioned putting a man on the moon through his visionary leadership. To conclude, there should not be any gap between preaching and practicing to make the vision meaningful and realistic. Companies must mobilize their people around a common cause by crafting better vision statements. The success of any company depends on the right presentation of its vision statement and the execution of its mission statement, which is possible only through visionary leadership.

Professor M.S. Rao, Ph.D.
Professor M.S. Rao, Ph.D., is the Father of “Soft Leadership” and the Founder of MSR Leadership Consultants, India. He is an International Leadership Guru with 43 years of experience and the author of 52 books, including the award-winning "See the Light in You" (https://www.amazon.com/See-Light-You-Spiritual-Mindfulness/dp/1949003132). He has published more than 300 papers and articles in international publications, including Leader to Leader, Thunderbird International Business Review, Strategic HR Review, Development and Learning in Organizations, Industrial and Commercial Training, On the Horizon, and Entrepreneur magazine. He is a soldier, entrepreneur, editor, educator, author, enlightener, and philosopher. He is a C-suite advisor and global keynote speaker. He brings a strategic eye and long-range vision, given his multifaceted professional experience that includes military, teaching, training, research, consultancy, and philosophy. He is passionate about serving and making a difference in the lives of others. He trains a new generation of leaders through leadership education and publications. His vision is to build one million students as global leaders by 2030 (http://professormsraovision2030.blogspot.com/2014/12/professor-m-s-raos-vision-2030-one_31.html). He advocates gender equality globally (#HeForShe). He invests his time in authoring books and blogging on executive education, learning, and leadership. Most of his work is available free of charge on his four blogs, including http://professormsraovision2030.blogspot.com. He is a prolific author and a dynamic, energetic, and inspirational leadership speaker. He can be reached at msrlctrg@gmail.com.