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NM Freemason · Skills & Drills · Chapter 63

Tribes, Social Identity, Mission and Vision

Drawn from published Masonic monitor content. See site Credits for source citations.

Vocabulary (10)

Tribe (Godin)
Seth Godin's published definition from Tribes (2008): a group of people connected to one another, connected to a leader, and connected to an idea. The three connections are necessary; remove any one and the group is something else. Connected only to each other (a clique) but not to an idea has no direction; connected only to an idea but not to each other has no momentum; connected to each other and an idea but without leadership has no movement.
Two requirements for a tribe
Godin's pared-down minimum: a group needs only two things to be a tribe: a shared interest, and a way to communicate. The Lodge has both by design. The chartered identity, the published ritual, the membership rolls, the schedule of stated meetings, the digital and printed channels — all of it is tribe-infrastructure. What's missing in struggling Lodges is usually not infrastructure but a working leader pointing at a clear idea.
Social Identity (Seyranian)
Viviane Seyranian's published research on social-identity leadership: the most effective leaders work in the language of "we" rather than "I", and shape the group's sense of who they are. The published formulation: if you don't know who you are, you don't know how to behave. The Lodge's identity (what kind of Mason this Lodge produces) is a real thing that decides what brothers volunteer for and how they conduct themselves between meetings.
Belief as strategy (Godin)
Godin's published claim: belief happens to be a brilliant strategy. The leader who genuinely believes in what the tribe is doing carries the tribe further than the leader who is faking it for now. The Craft's published charges make the same demand in older words: a Mason's profession is to be tried by the square; his belief in the work is itself part of the work. Don't lead a Lodge you don't believe in; the tribe reads it.
Recipe for building a tribe
The published step-list from the York Rite Leadership 201 curriculum: (1) identify values for the members, individually and as a whole; (2) get group consensus on the top five to seven; (3) create a shared mission-purpose and vision; (4) identify those who will do the work (Secretary, Treasurer, line officers, committee chairs); (5) get on with it; (6) mutual accountability; (7) have fun and do things together. The order matters: values first, mission and vision second, accountability third.
Mission-Purpose Statement (group)
One sentence. Five to fifteen words. Names what benefit for whom. Broad enough in scope that it's durable for a hundred-plus years. Memorable enough that any brother can speak it from memory at a stated meeting. The published guidance: a group's mission-purpose is the cognitive guidepost for decisions; it sets expectations and helps the line decide which tasks to do and which to let go. Distinct from the personal mission statement of chapter 54: this is what the group is for, not what the man is for.
Vision (group)
Usually a short paragraph. As long as it needs to be to paint a picture. The reader should be able to see it. Written as if you have the outcome now (present tense), from the leadership's perspective, in V-A-K representation (Visual, Auditory, Kinesthetic — what it will look like, sound like, feel like). The vision will morph and change with a change in leadership; the mission shouldn't. Critically, the vision must be a shared vision with the members; a vision held only by the leader will not move them.
Law of Buy-In (Maxwell)
Maxwell's fourteenth Irrefutable Law: "People buy into the leader, then the vision." The sequencing is the law: a great vision presented by a leader the room hasn't bought yet falls flat; a modest vision presented by a leader the room trusts gets traction. Build credibility (chapter 60's Levels 2 and 3) first, then introduce the vision. Most failed visions failed because the leader hadn't earned the right to introduce them.
Start With Why (Sinek)
Simon Sinek's published Golden Circle from Start With Why (2009): organizations and leaders that begin with WHY (the purpose, the cause, the belief) inspire action more than those that begin with WHAT (the product, the work) or HOW (the method). Apple's published marketing famously starts with belief; commodity electronics manufacturers start with specifications. The Lodge has the same choice: lead with why we exist, or lead with what we do.
Shared Vision (Senge)
Peter Senge's published frame from The Fifth Discipline (1990): a shared vision is one that the members of an organization carry inside themselves, not one the leader hands them. Senge's distinction: an enrolled vision (people choose it) carries the organization forward; a compliant vision (people accept it because they're told to) collapses the moment the leader leaves. The group-level mission and vision are useful only to the extent they are actually shared.

Sequences (3)

Building a Lodge tribe from values, the published seven-step sequence

The order matters. Don't write the mission statement first; don't pick the workers first. Walk this with the line, not for the line.
  1. Identify values: each line officer (or each brother) names what's important to him about being in this Lodge. Use the elicitation question from chapter 61.
  2. Find the consensus: which five to seven values come up across the room? Write them down. This is the tribe's identity in draft.
  3. Write the Mission-Purpose: one sentence, 5-15 words, what benefit for whom. Don't fight over wording yet; get a draft.
  4. Write the Vision: a short paragraph, present tense, that paints what success looks like a year from now in V-A-K detail.
  5. Name the workers: who is the Secretary? The Treasurer? The line officers? Who chairs which committee? Identify the people who will actually do the work.
  6. Establish mutual accountability: how will the line check in with itself? Monthly? After every stated? Get the cadence on the calendar.
  7. Have fun, do things together. The tribe that only does business meetings is half a tribe.

Writing a Mission-Purpose Statement, the constraint method

Sit with the line for one session and walk this sequence. The constraints (length, content, durability) do most of the work.
  1. Constraint 1: one sentence. No bulleted lists, no paragraphs, no exceptions.
  2. Constraint 2: five to fifteen words. Count them. Anything outside that range gets rewritten.
  3. Constraint 3: identifies a benefit and the recipient ("to do X for Y"). Stress-test: cross out everything that's not a benefit or a recipient.
  4. Constraint 4: durable for a hundred years. Read it as if you were a brother of this Lodge in 2125. Does it still apply?
  5. Constraint 5: memorable. Recite it from memory the next day without looking. If you can't, it's not memorable yet.

Writing a Lodge Vision, the as-if-now method

Vision is hard because the future tense ("we will", "we plan to") drains it of energy. Write it as if it already happened.
  1. Pick the time horizon. One year for a line's year. Three to five years for a longer arc.
  2. Describe what success looks like in present tense, as if you're standing in it: "The Lodge floor is full at every stated. New brothers are sponsored within sixty days. The Past Masters are mentoring at least one brother each."
  3. Add Auditory and Kinesthetic detail: what does the room sound like (conversation? laughter? ritual delivered well?) and feel like (energized? settled? proud?)
  4. Read it aloud to the line. Watch their faces. The lines that make them lean forward are the ones to keep; the ones that make them check their phone are the ones to cut.

Multiple-choice (10)

1. What are the three connections in Godin's definition of a tribe?
  1. Past, present, future
  2. People connected to one another, to a leader, and to an idea ✓
  3. Money, time, attention
  4. Charter, bylaws, ritual
2. What are the two minimum requirements for a tribe in Godin's framing?
  1. A budget and a building
  2. A shared interest and a way to communicate ✓
  3. A leader and a follower
  4. A name and a logo
3. What does Seyranian's social-identity research say is the published function of a leader, in language form?
  1. Speak in "I" language to take responsibility
  2. Work in the language of "we" rather than "I", and shape the group's sense of who they are ✓
  3. Speak in the third person
  4. Avoid identity language entirely
4. What does Godin claim about the role of belief in leadership?
  1. Belief is irrelevant; the work speaks for itself
  2. Belief happens to be a brilliant strategy; the leader who genuinely believes carries the tribe further than the one faking it ✓
  3. Belief should be hidden until results arrive
  4. Belief is for religion, not leadership
5. What's the published order of the recipe for building a tribe?
  1. Mission first, then values, then accountability
  2. Identify values, get consensus on top 5-7, create shared mission and vision, name the workers, get on with it, mutual accountability, have fun ✓
  3. Logo, charter, building, members
  4. Leader, vision, results, growth
6. What are the published constraints on a group Mission-Purpose Statement?
  1. One paragraph, comprehensive, formal language
  2. One sentence, 5-15 words, names benefit for whom, durable, memorable ✓
  3. A bulleted list
  4. A single word
7. What's the published guidance on writing a group's Vision?
  1. Bullet points, future tense, kept short
  2. A short paragraph, written as if you have the outcome now (present tense), with Visual / Auditory / Kinesthetic detail; must be shared with the members, not just held by the leader ✓
  3. A one-word slogan
  4. A long manifesto only the leader writes
8. What's the sequencing claim of Maxwell's Law of Buy-In?
  1. People buy into the vision first, then the leader
  2. People buy into the leader first, then the vision; build credibility (Levels 2-3) before introducing a vision ✓
  3. Buy-in is unrelated to leadership
  4. Vision should be introduced before leadership is established
9. What does Sinek's Golden Circle from Start With Why argue?
  1. Always start with the product specifications
  2. Organizations that begin with WHY (purpose, belief) inspire action more than those that begin with WHAT or HOW ✓
  3. Why questions should be saved for the end
  4. Strategy and purpose are unrelated
10. What does Senge mean by a shared vision in The Fifth Discipline?
  1. A vision the leader writes and announces
  2. A vision the members of the organization carry inside themselves (enrolled, not compliant); compliant visions collapse when the leader leaves ✓
  3. A vision that all organizations should share
  4. A vision posted on the wall