Course Content
Your Vision your way
Lesson One - V -Velocity - What things have you learned and how have your grown and been successful this last year? I - Intentions - What are your intentions when you think about creating a Vision? Do you need to change them? S - Service - Who are you intending to serve from your Vision?
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The Vision

Part 1: Velocity – Reflecting on Your 10x Jump

What is a 10X jump?

A 10X jump is a growth measurement. It could be a personal growth or growth tied to money or profit.

 

  • What was your 10x jump last year?

    • Reflect on your biggest leap forward over the past year. This could be in your career, personal growth, leadership, or a significant achievement.

    • Think about the specific actions, decisions, or mindset shifts that contributed to this exponential growth.

    • Exercise: Write down one area where you experienced exponential growth. What actions, mindset shifts, or resources contributed to this leap?

    • Here are 2 questions to answer about your past 10X jumps. 
      What are the 10X jumps my business has experienced in the past?What did I learn from my past 10X jumps?
  • What is your projected 10x jump in your vision?

    • Look ahead: Where do you see yourself achieving another 10x jump in the next year? What would success look like?

    • Think boldly and don’t limit your imagination. A 10x jump doesn’t happen with small steps—it requires audacious goals.

    • Exercise: Write a clear, bold statement about your projected 10x goal. Break it down into smaller milestones.

    • In this statement here are 2 questions to write.

    • What 10X jumps can I see in my near or far future?

    • How am I going to achieve these 10X jumps?

  • Practical Tip:

    • Break your projected 10x jump into quarterly goals.

    • What needs to happen every three months to keep you on track?

Key Takeaway: True visionaries focus on exponential growth, not just incremental progress. Velocity is about momentum and commitment to pushing boundaries.


Part 2: Intentions – The “Why” Behind Your Vision

  • What are your intentions in creating your vision?

    • Intentions clarify the purpose and motivation behind your vision.

    • Why does this matter to you?

    • What is driving your passion?

    • Intentions act as the emotional and intellectual foundation of your vision.

    • Exercise: Write a short paragraph starting with “My intention for creating this vision is…”

    • Be specific and honest.

  • Aligning Intentions with Actions:

    • Ensure your daily actions align with your larger intention. Consistency between intention and action creates trust and momentum.

    • Are your habits and routines supporting your vision?

    • Exercise: Write down three daily habits that align with your vision’s intention. Here is an example that I like to do.

    • Every day I like to enjoy a strong cup of coffee and enjoy the quiet peacful house befor begining my day. The intention in doing this is to reflect on my vision and my why and align my day to that. 
  • Overcoming Misalignment:

    • Identify any habits, beliefs, or distractions that might be misaligned with your vision.

    • Exercise: Write down one area where you need to make a change to stay aligned with your intention.

Key Takeaway: Intentions act as the compass guiding your vision. They ensure you stay focused even when challenges arise.


Part 3: Service – Who Are You Going to Serve?

  • Who is your vision for?

    • Every powerful vision serves a greater purpose and impacts others. Your vision isn’t just about you—it’s about creating value for others.

    • Exercise: Identify your target audience. Who will benefit the most from your vision?

  • Understanding Their Needs:

    • What are the needs, challenges, and desires of the people you aim to serve?

    • How will your vision solve a problem or create an opportunity for them?

    • Tip: Write down three key insights about your audience.

  • Building Connection:

    • How will you communicate your vision to those you aim to serve?

    • Think about platforms, messaging, and storytelling.

    • Exercise: Write a one-paragraph statement addressing your audience directly, explaining how your vision serves them.

Key Takeaway: A vision gains momentum when it’s deeply connected to service. Service adds meaning and purpose to your goals.


Part 4: Integration – Bringing It All Together

  • Reflect on the three pillars: Velocity, Intentions, and Service.

  • How do these elements connect in your vision?

  • Exercise: Write a one-page pre-vision statement incorporating these three components. What comes out of that will be added when we build our 3 vision Ideas.

  • Action Plan: Create a weekly action plan that focuses on each of the  key tasks for each pillar.

Key Tip: Review your vision statement regularly and adjust your actions to stay aligned with your goals.


Conclusion: A transformative vision combines bold velocity, clear intentions, and a commitment to service. Reflect on your insights from today’s lesson and prepare to take action.

Reflection Questions:

  1. What stood out most to you in today’s lesson?

  2. What is one action step you will take this week toward your vision?

  3. How will you hold yourself accountable to your vision?

Next Lesson Preview: In Lesson 2, we’ll dive deeper into building Ideas Objects and Necessity around overcoming obstacles on the path to implementing your vision.

Call to Action: Take 15 minutes today to reflect and refine your vision statement based on velocity, intentions, and service. Share your key insights with a peer or mentor for feedback. 

Make this a habit so your Vision and why is what you think about in the morning and the evening. 

Exercise Files
Lesson 1_Workbook.pdf
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