Vision isn’t one-size-fits-all.
It’s shaped by how you’re wired, and it lands (or misses) based on how others are wired. If you’ve pitched a strategy that sounded strong in your head but fizzled in the room, you’ve felt the gap. MyHardWired helps you see the kind of future you naturally picture and how to translate it so people actually follow.
Vision sounds powerful. Until it’s out of sync.
Leaders often assume the “big picture” is universal. It isn’t. Your behavior filters what you emphasize. Maybe it’s outcomes? Could it be systems, opportunities, or meaning? Your team’s wiring filters what they trust.
👉 Ever share a vision that sounded clear in your head but fell flat in the room?
Misalignment looks like enthusiasm on your side and hesitation on theirs. It’s not resistance; it’s a translation problem.
None of these is “better.” Each becomes fragile when delivered to a room expecting to hear something else.
Red vision meets Green and Blue skepticism: “Where’s the plan and proof?!”
Yellow vision meets Green doubt: “Feels like hype! Where are the details?”
Blue vision meets Red/Green pushback: “Too abstract, too risky! What’s step one?”
Green vision meets Red impatience: “We’re drowning in process! What’s the win?”
When people don’t buy in, leaders often double down on their own style. This only makes things worse. The fix isn’t to abandon your style. It’s to translate it.
Lead from your core, then add what others need to hear. Use this four-part framing in your next vision share:
Timebox each layer. Keep your natural emphasis, but hit all four notes so different wirings can trust it.
Preferred Mode is where your vision flows. Keep that tone as your anchor. Expectations Mode is how you think you ought to present vision (often copying a past boss). Watch for imitation; it drains credibility. Instinctive Mode surfaces under stress. Reds push, Greens add rules, Yellows over-cheer, Blues over-explain. When stakes rise, name the shift and return to the four-part frame.
MyHardWired maps all three Modes to show not just what you prefer, but how you switch so you can stay consistent when pressure spikes.
Vision isn’t just big picture. It’s whose big picture and whether people can see themselves in it.
When you align your style with how others hear, vision stops sounding good and starts moving people.
For Individuals → Clarify your natural vision style and learn to translate it without losing your voice
For Teams → Align how vision is shared and heard so buy-in happens faster
For Consultants → Help clients build shared language around vision and wiring.