How to Create a Mission and Vision Statement for Your Career

If you manage projects for an organization, you work hard leading teams and working with others to meet your company’s grand mission and vision. And working toward a clear vision that you can get behind makes your job exciting, motivating, meaningful and fun—even during the challenging periods.

But do you have a mission or vision for your career? Even if you work for companies your entire life, you are in the process of building your own personal industry complete with core values, dreams and financial goals. Successful people know this, and they establish mission and vision statements throughout their professional lives. These statements act as a recognition that each of us, in the end, is the real nurturer and driver of our working lives.

A personal mission and vision statement gives you something to strive for at every stage of your career. Consider these statements inner beacons that tell you whether you’re on the right path or not—and whether the values of an organization align well enough with yours.

So how do you go about creating a mission and vision statement? (And what’s the difference between each one?)

We turned to Project Manager Coach and LiquidPlanner blog contributor Susanne Madsen to take us through the steps. This Q&A is set up to help you create a mission and vision statement that can turbocharge your career goals and aspirations.

LiquidPlanner: What is a vision and mission statement?

Susanne: A vision and mission statement is a paragraph that encapsulates everything you would like to be, do, and have in your career.

It defines what success and excellence look like to you. It expresses your vision for where you want to be in the future and it reflects your values, goals, and purpose and how you want to operate.

Everyone’s will look different, but here’s an example:

“My vision is to be an honest, empathetic and impactful project leader and to be recognized internationally within my industry. I am committed to growing as a leader and delivering value-added projects to the end users. My mission is to create and lead a dream team where everyone is playing to their strengths.”

mission and vision statement

Q: What’s the difference between a vision and a mission statement?

A: Vision and mission statements are very similar but they have their differences. Let’s take a deeper look:

A vision statement:

Example: “My vision is a world where everyone is contributing with their full potential; where each person uses their intrinsic genius and leadership to deliver outstanding value-added projects.”

A mission statement: