At some point in the past decade, we became obsessed with clarity.
Clear communication. Clear workflows. Clear OKRs. Clear wireframes. We built systems to optimise the visible. We ironed out ambiguity with templates and playbooks. We believed clarity was our way forward.
But clarity without vision is a spotlight in a void. It shows you what’s there. It can’t tell you where to go.
Inside companies, we’ve come to conflate direction with design, and momentum with meaning. But in truth, vision is the most overlooked design problem of our time – because it’s not treated as a design problem at all.
The illusion of alignment
Most companies believe they’re aligned. They point to shared values, brand books, cultural artefacts, leadership off-sites.
But when you ask people what the company is building toward, you get polite dissonance. One cites the mission. Another recalls a tagline. A third points to market share or M&A goals.
The higher up you go, the more fractured the story becomes. Not because people don’t care – but because the vision has never been deliberately designed. It’s been softened, deferred, or vaguely agreed upon.
We’ve sat in rooms with brilliant teams who quietly disagree about the future. The result? A culture built on suggestion, not stance. A design team executing with precision but unclear on what it’s stewarding.
It’s not dysfunction. It’s dilution. And it’s everywhere.
Why vision gets neglected
Vision doesn’t collapse in meetings. It erodes in the in-between, when urgency outpaces imagination, when quarterly targets flatten long-term ambition, when brand is relegated to a marketing department instead of a leadership tool.
Vision is inconvenient. It doesn’t fit neatly into a Gantt chart. It resists being crowdsourced. It’s hard to measure and harder to maintain. When it’s treated like something to “align on,” you get language that sounds good but inspires no-one.
It’s easier to design what’s tangible – landing pages, products, playbooks.
But vision is felt before it’s proven. It’s a kind of gravitational force. You know it’s working when people organise around it instinctively. Language sharpens. Priorities shift. The noise fades.
Without it, you can still run a company. But it’s like flying without instruments – all acceleration, no altitude.
Vision is a system, not a sentence
The most dangerous misconception is that vision is a phrase to perfect. In truth, it’s the architecture of belief. It governs decisions, shapes behavior, and holds creative ambition accountable to purpose.
Vision isn’t the “what.” It’s the “why that demands a how.”
At Motto, we help leadership teams define what we call an “idea worth rallying around” – a bold, foundational belief that fuses strategy, story, and culture. And through our workshop, VisionCamp, we help teams operationalise that belief into something durable.
We built VisionCamp after seeing a recurring pattern – companies scaling fast but spinning internally. Founders carrying the vision in their head, but unable to translate it across teams. Teams moving quickly but aimlessly.
We’ve watched organisations go from 30 to 3,000 people without ever asking:
What unites us now?
What are we truly here to move forward?
What will outlast this moment?
VisionCamp is where that changes. It’s where leaders finally design the future, not just for optics, but for alignment that sticks.
These aren’t branding questions. They’re existential ones. And they belong at the centre of both business and design.
The myth of the external audience
Many still treat vision as a message for the market – a way to attract talent, inspire customers, win investors. But the most important audience for vision is internal.
Vision isn’t what you publish. It’s what you protect. It’s what your team reaches for when the market shifts, when products fail, when external momentum fades.
It doesn’t live on the About page. It lives in trade-offs. In hard conversations. In the standards upheld when no-one’s watching.
Without it, companies build extraordinary things for reasons no one can articulate.
You can’t design what you haven’t decided
Design is the discipline of choosing one future over another. But no amount of aesthetic clarity can compensate for a lack of direction. You can’t solve for vision at the visual layer.
This work has to begin at the top – with leaders willing to name what matters. Willing to commit to more than metrics.
Designers can express the vision. Writers can give it voice. But if it isn’t forged at the highest level, it will erode under pressure.
Carl Jung once wrote, “Your vision will become clear only when you look into your own heart. Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens.” This isn’t just spiritual advice – it’s organisational.
A company that wants to endure must design its vision with the same rigour it gives its brand or product. Not what it looks like. What it means.
The opportunity ahead
We are at the end of the vague vision era. The time of poetic mission statements that mean little. The time of culture decks full of empty slogans.
What’s needed now is not more noise, but more nerve. Not messages, but meaning. Vision that holds. Vision that builds belief.
At Motto, we’ve seen what happens when that vision is built with care and conviction. Teams move with clarity. Brands resonate. Culture coheres, not around perks or pressure, but purpose.
The question is no longer “Do you have a vision?”
It’s “Is your vision designed well enough to move you toward a future worth building?”
Ashleigh Hansberger is chief operating officer at Motto.