Why Businesses Need Mantras

Does your company have a mantra? If not, stop what you are doing and develop one. Like, right now. It's that important.

What the heck is a mantra? It's the core purpose for why your business exists. If you've ever seen Simon Sinek's TED talk, It Starts With Why, your mantra is the why.

Let's use Acme Electric Wheelchair company as a hypothetical.

What Acme does: sell electric wheelchairs to non-mobile elderly folks.

Why Acme does it: to provide freedom and empowerment through mobility.

Alternatively, here is a real-world example. At GiveForward we give people online fundraising pages to raise money for their loved ones' medical expenses. This is what we do. But our mantra is "create unexpected joy." Creating a little bit of unexpected happiness for families during an otherwise dark period in their lives is why we get up and go to work every morning. It's what makes work fun. It's the core purpose that is driving us.

Now that we have a basic understanding of what a mantra is, the next logical question is why it is important to have one.

Having a mantra is important for many reasons but one of the more practical benefits is it acts as a filter for business decisions. Once you understand the purpose for which your business exists, it makes it a lot easier to understand which path to take when faced with tough decisions. Once you have a mantra in place, ask: Is this opportunity in line with our mantra? If the answer is yes, feel free to proceed. If no, pass.

Here's a recent scenario where we relied on our mantra to guide our business decision.

We used to have an email that automatically went out two weeks after someone donated. It would thank them for their donation and then would explicitly ask the reader to refer others to GiveForward. In exchange, we promised to give them a T-shirt. This email always got marked as spam and no one ever referred people our way.

One day, a donor named Alan wrote to us and told us how much we sucked and how spammy our email was. And he was right. We did suck. This email was spammy and it wasn't creating unexpected joy for anyone. So we changed it to fall in line with our mantra. Instead of asking people to spread the word in exchange for a cheap, cotton T-shirt, we changed the email so it said:

"Thank you for the donation you made a few weeks ago to [Joe's] fundraiser. We hope that your act of generosity filled you with lots of warm-fuzzies. And just in case you are in need of some extra warm fuzzy goodness today, here is the cutest video EVER "

After we made the change, I sent our friend Alan a courtesy email to let him know he was right and we were wrong. [here's my actual email]

"Dear Alan,

A couple of week ago you let us know how sucky our update email was. And you were absolutely correct. It was spammy and it wasn't what GiveForward is all about. We've since changed it. Thanks again for helping us see the light :-)

Sincerely,

Ethan"

Now here's the best part. Since we changed the email, not only have we stopped getting marked as spam, but we've actually started getting fan mail from people telling us how much they love the kitten video. (Duh...everyone loves kittens.)

When you base your business decisions on a core set of values, it resonates with your fans. And if you're trying to build a brand that is going to last for decades or even centuries, the reality is that your fans are never buying what you do. They're buying why you do it -- they are buying an idea, not a product. On the other hand, when you stray from your values and make decisions based on short-term objectives, you end up alienating fans and getting marked as spam.

Mantra > SPAM

Ethan Austin is the Co-founder of GiveForward, an Excelerate Labs company. He also writes a blog called Startups and Burritos. It is awesome. You should read it.

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