Why Are You Here

Why Are You Here

Many years ago, I became curious as to why people work for my organization and started to ask people a deceptively simple question, “why are you here?”. Expecting to be enlightened, instead I received blank stares and non-responses. Disappointed at first, I started to sympathize with my team realizing that this is a difficult question to answer.

As a leader, I felt a responsibility to help my team, help me, understand what they value and why. Over a few months, I passively thought about how to answer this question. And started to poll a few people, inside and outside my organization, to help uncover the possible reasons anyone would work for any organization. With contributions from thoughtful friends, I developed a framework to answer this important question:_ why are you here_.

** The Framework**

These are the five possible values that inform why anyone works at any organization:

After building this framework, I shared it with my team and then asked the question, “why are you here?”. People found it easy to answer this difficult and also to explain what these values meant to them. The responses were enlightening for me, bringing new awareness and greater curiosity to really understanding what my team values and why.

** What I have learned**

We have systematized this into our culture. Every six months, people are asked to share with me why they are here. Here is what I’ve learned so far:

** How we use the framework**

Every six months (as part of our semi-annual review process), I ask every team member to complete this simple one-page template. I am asking them to rank their top 3 (of the list of 5) values, their level of satisfaction, to explain in one-sentence why it’s important to them and what their expectations are.

I share the aggregate results and my analysis with the team after each round. This level of transparency builds trust that I am listening.

Here is the template if you are interested in adopting this with your team (many of my friends in leadership roles have adopted it successfully since I first published it).

Additionally, when recruiting new people to our team, I will ask them to share with me what their top 3 values are and why. This supports meaningful conversations and allows me to evaluate whether I believe we can deliver on their expectations.

I’m grateful to Jay Vidyarthi, Lou Pino and Afraj Gill for being involved in the process to develop this framework, and to my team at Polar for adopting this framework with full openness to help me understand what they value and why.

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