Your business purpose: How to discover your organisation’s compass

By Nick Butler

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Hand holding compass in front of forest view. Your business purpose is a company's compass.

Find out what benefits you get from defining your business purpose, how to discover what your purpose is, and how to embed it in your organisation.

When we’re talking to clients, one of the first questions we ask is what is the impact they hope to have. If the impact is going to be positive and lasting, then we’re the partner they’re looking for. That’s because at Boost we have a single, explicit business purpose:

Supporting others to create a positive and lasting impact.

In this post, Boost CEO Nathan Donaldson explains how we defined our business purpose and shows how you can discover—and achieve—the purpose of your own organisation.

What’s the purpose of defining your business purpose?

Your business purpose is a compass for your organisation. It clearly communicates the direction you want to go, makes sure your whole team—and your customers—are on the same course, and it guides you on the journey.

Every organisation has a purpose or purposes but they’re often unstated, unclear or even contradictory.

“Everybody has a reason for doing something,” says Nathan, “the hard part is discovering it.”

For Nathan, Boost’s business purpose is a communication tool.

“We always had a purpose, we just hadn’t articulated it well,” he says. “We wanted to find a way to articulate our purpose that would resonate with our clients, so that we could find people we could really help.”

So how do you discover your organisation’s purpose?

How to develop your business purpose

“We derived our purpose from our behaviours,” Nathan says. “We did it from the perspective of discovering who we were.

“It took us about a year, so set some time aside,” he adds.

The first step was research. Simon Sinek’s book Start with why was an important inspiration. (You might like to watch Sinek’s talk How great leaders inspire action, currently the third most-watched of all TED talks.)

Watch and listen to yourselves

“We workshopped ideas, talking about behaviours, talking about how we talked about ourselves, internally and externally, to try to discover what it was.

“By listening to ourselves talking and capturing as much of that information as possible, we were able to start to see the patterns that this came from.

“What we often found ourselves talking about, especially when we were talking to new or potential clients, was that we were trying to make New Zealand a better place. That’s what drove us to do the work we do.

“That was just a bit too broad and generic. What we were thinking about when we were trying to articulate our purpose back to ourselves was, what is it that we’re trying to do in order to make New Zealand a better place? What’s the step before that?

“That’s where the idea came from that we were looking for projects and customers where we were helping them make a positive lasting impact.”

One of the reasons our purpose involves making an impact is that we can. As an Agile development shop we specialise in delivering the most value with the least risk. And in our Agile training, coaching and audits we help individuals and organisations maximise their own impact.

Discussing Boost's business purpose with a client.

Give your purpose context

We came up with our vision and values at the same time. Here’s the whole package:

Purpose

Supporting others to create a positive and lasting impact.

Vision

A world where New Zealanders work, learn and play in a safe to fail environment.

Values

  • Speed without compromise
  • Be transparent
  • Always collaborate
  • Make it safe
  • Making New Zealand a better place

Refining our values

In 2019, we realised that these could be tweaked to better describe the values that the team demonstrate in their day-to-day work. You can check out our Core values case study to see how we’re clarifying and reinforcing our values, and the benefits this is bringing. And learn how putting our values in te reo has helped us better understand te ao Māori.

How to embed your purpose in your organisation

Obviously you need to deliver on your business purpose, vision and values. You can’t simply plaster them up on the wall. (That said, we have plastered them around our office. This helps us make sure we walk the talk.)

Focus on the work that helps you achieve your purpose

At Boost, we only work on projects that align with our purpose. We have a matrix for deciding what work we pitch for and the impact is one of the criteria we use to make our decisions.

“We always come back to this question,” says Nathan, “‘Is it going to have a lasting positive impact?’ If it isn’t, then we politely decline and suggest some other people who might be able to help them. It doesn’t mean they’re a bad client or it’s a bad project or anything like that. It’s just that we’re not going to be the right people for it.

“It’s very clear the customers who this purpose resonates with the most, and who it doesn’t. If we’re talking to a customer, or potential customer that this doesn’t resonate with, then we possibly haven’t done a good enough job of validating them.”

When your team and your client share a purpose, the work becomes more productive, and more of a partnership.

Measure how well you achieve your purpose

As Peter Drucker says, if you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it. We call our yardstick One Number.

To make sure our projects have a positive and lasting impact we work with our clients to come up with one key metric that measures how well the project delivers their outcomes.

Having a clear target brings people together. It clarifies the purpose of their work and the impact they’re able to have. It helps make decisions easier and prioritisation more effective.

We offer our clients a big screen for their offices so they can share their One Number with their colleagues, building buy-in and demonstrating your project’s achievements. Making progress visible reminds us of the impact we are having on a daily basis.

Our clients find it an effective approach.

“It was clear, concise and easy to keep our focus narrowed to achieving a key performance indicator,” says Jess Limbrick from Life Education Trust. “The live number was visible to the whole team which helped with buy-in, we even shared the display with remote team members.”

Involve the team

As a freedom-centred workplace, keeping the whole team involved in the direction of the company is part of our DNA.

When it comes to our purpose, vision and values, we ran a specific workshop so the team could feed into the discussions.

Printouts of Boost's values with pos-it notes showing how we follow them.

As Boost’s writer, when I interview our developers and designers for pieces about our projects it’s clear that Boost’s purpose resonates for the team. They’ll tell me how much they enjoyed seeing the difference they were making, the people they were helping, the impacts they were having.

Of course, that’s partly a result the people we hire.

Recruit with a purpose

Recruitment is another way to embed your organisation’s purpose.

When we hire, we specifically look for people who want to make an impact, who are aligned with our purpose, vision and values.

Our purpose in practice—positive and lasting impacts

When you look at the impacts we’ve had it’s easy to see why they mean something to us and our clients.

Take Life Education Trust for example. Their mission is to “educate and inspire generations to embrace positive choices for a healthy mind and body”, and we know we’ve had a major influence on this mission.

We’ve watched Life Education’s One Number metric of resource downloads jump tenfold and feedback from the Trust has confirmed the difference we’ve made.

“Boost has had a massive impact,” Life Education CEO John O’Connell says. “It’s been a critical part of where we’re at today.”

And what’s not to like about growing a stronger New Zealand by keeping kiwi kids healthy?

Kids cheering in Life Education lesson.

Free Agile training for a positive impact

Another way we achieve our purpose is by offering charities free seats on the Agile Professional Foundation, our two-day Agile certification course. By showing charities how Agile can help them consistently deliver more value to their clients, we increase the long-term impact they can have.

Free Agile training for a positive and lasting impact

What gets you out of bed in the morning?

For Nathan, Boost’s purpose is critical.

“It’s what drives me to get out of bed in the morning, and to do this work,” he says.

“Obviously, I’m CEO and sole shareholder, so the organisation’s purpose and my purpose have to be reasonably well-aligned.

“I suppose what I’d like to see Boost having is a legacy—not a statue in a garden, or a fellowship named after us at a university, but a legacy of New Zealand being improved.”

So, what’s your business purpose? What gets you out of bed in the morning?

Further reading

Harvard Business Review: Your Company’s Purpose Is Not Its Vision, Mission, or Values

IDEO U: 5 Studies on the Benefits of the Purpose-Driven Workplace

On the Boost blog

Work that delivers your purpose — Choosing clients: Why it’s important and how you can do it

Projects that achieve Boost’s purpose — The ideal Boost project: our recipe for success

How our team drives the purpose— Employee engagement: helping the team create our culture

Benefits of being a purpose-led workplace — Award for “the best place to work in New Zealand”

Embedding our purpose — Boost 2026: maximising our future impact

Our purpose in the media

NZBusiness investigates the power of Boost’s purpose-led culture — Boost blog

The National Business Review on Boost’s lasting positive impact — Boost blog

Make a bigger impact tomorrow

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