Vivid Vision – Craft the Future You Want, Today

By Cameron Herold

Most companies rely on bland vision or mission statements—but they rarely guide day-to-day actions. In Vivid Vision, Cameron Herold introduces a game-changing tool: a detailed, sensory-rich description of your company as it will exist in three years. This “map of the future” inspires alignment, purpose, and momentum across the entire organization (Brandy Sparkman).


Why a Vivid Vision Works

  • Clarity of Direction: Instead of vague aspirations, a vivid vision is written in present tense, describing life in your company three years hence—with specifics about culture, clients, products, and processes .
  • Emotional Resonance: The detail-rich, narrative approach engages people’s hearts—not just their heads, motivating action in a way dry statements never could .
  • Built-In Alignment: It acts like a compass for decision-making. When new ideas come up, you can ask: Does this match our vivid vision? If not, it might not be worth pursuing (Amazon Music).

🛠️ Steps to Create Your Vivid Vision

  1. Ignore the “How”
    Dream freely about the future state, even if it feels audacious. Leave the execution details for later (RESET YOUR THINKING).
  2. Get Out of the Office
    Refuge from daily noise is essential—go somewhere inspiring with pen and paper to spark creativity (Brandy Sparkman).
  3. Visualize in Detail
    Close your eyes and imagine an event at your business, then write it down: sights, sounds, interactions. What’s on the walls? How’s the culture? (RESET YOUR THINKING).
  4. Draft & Refine
    Create an initial draft, then polish it with help from editors or team members. Aim for a concise, compelling document (4 pages max) (RESET YOUR THINKING).
  5. Reverse Engineer Execution
    Once set, each line becomes a goal. Break them into projects, set deadlines, and assign resources (Amazon Music).
  6. Review Quarterly, Adjust Tactically
    Your vision is your fixed “north star.” Adapt tactics as needed, but your overarching direction remains steady (Brandy Sparkman).

📈 Benefits from Real Businesses

  • Tesla envisioned an ecosystem of clean energy, charging networks, and smart products—and brought it to life .
  • Zappos created a vivid picture of a service-focused culture, helping employees deliver on brand promise (bridgestoneinvest.com).
  • Google built a narrative around organizing global information, guiding long-term innovation and strategy (bridgestoneinvest.com).

🚧 Common Missteps

  • Being too generic. Vivid means vivid—generic statements won’t stick or inspire .
  • Skipping refinement. A rough sketch isn’t enough—work on tone, imagery, and readability .
  • Letting it collect dust. Without deliberate quarterly reviews and continuous reinforcement, the vision loses power .

✅ Final Thoughts

Vivid Vision is more than vision-casting—it’s vision experiencing. By creating a clear, evocative picture of the future (and openly communicating it), you empower every team member to move in alignment toward a shared destination.

Whether you’re scaling a startup, leading a team, or shaping your own life, this tool can transform abstract dreams into real momentum—one sensory detail at a time.


Ready to craft your 3‑year Vivid Vision?
Start today: book a retreat, grab a notebook, dream big—and come back when you’re ready to share your story.