The tool

Your Legendary Intent

By James Carter · Updated June 2026

The short version

Your Legendary Intent is one sentence that declares how you'll make a difference. Borrowed from the military's Commander's Intent, it becomes a filter — goggles you wear through every day — so the opportunities that match your deepest belief stop slipping past you. It's how the mindset gets a steering wheel.

The two-minute version. Prefer the full walkthrough? It's further down.

Borrowed from the battlefield

The military runs on a concept called Commander's Intent: a plain statement of the mission's purpose, so that when the plan falls apart — and it always does — every soldier still knows what success looks like and can act without waiting for orders. It's the one thing that survives contact with reality.

Your life needs the same thing. A Legendary Intent is your personal version: a single sentence that says how you intend to make a difference, clear enough to guide you when the day gets noisy and the plan goes sideways.

Why one sentence changes what you see

Remember the moon-walking bear — how focus makes us miss what's right in front of us? Your Legendary Intent flips that mechanism in your favor. It creates a deliberate selective attention around your core belief: a semi-permanent filter, like goggles, that makes the opportunities matching your intent suddenly impossible to miss. You don't try harder to notice. You change what you're tuned to.

The exercise · ~5 minutes

How to write yours

  1. List your beliefs. On paper, write what you believe matters most. Don't edit — just get them down.
  2. Cut to the core. Cross off 25% of the list. Then 25% of what's left. Then 25% again — until one to three beliefs remain.
  3. Choose one. From your gut, pick the single most important belief standing.
  4. Complete the sentence. Finish this, out loud: “If I accomplish nothing else in this life, I will ___.” One rule: it can't be about your family or friends. That's the easy answer, and you're more complicated than that — this is about the difference only you are here to make.

It won't be perfect the first time — mine wasn't. This is a declaration of how you'll make a difference; give it the time it deserves and refine it over weeks, not minutes.

What it looks like in the wild

An executive I worked with kept circling one core belief: joy. Her Legendary Intent became — “to create joy in the lives of those around her.” She decided that if those words were on her headstone, she'd be content.

Then she used it as a filter. She'd noticed neither she nor her team laughed much at work — so her daily mission became simple: find a way to make someone laugh. Within a few months the culture of her office had changed completely. Everyone was taking cues from her. One sentence, worn like goggles, rewired a whole team.

The full walkthrough

The same move, for a company

Begin with the end in mind — and watch the answers change

A Legendary Intent works on an executive team, too — and it's one of the most powerful things we do. Most companies plan incrementally: “We're at $100M — how do we get to $110M next year?” The question itself caps the answer. Ask a bigger one — “How do we get from $100M to $500M in five years?” — and something changes in the room.

The size of the question sets the ceiling on the answer: incremental planning ('how do we go from $100M to $110M next year?') leads to stagnation, while a Legendary Intent ('how do we get to $500M in five years?') grows awareness, challenges beliefs, and demands courage.

Watch the ABCs fire in sequence: the bigger question grows awareness (new options appear that 10% growth never surfaced), it challenges beliefs (“that can't be done” — why not?), and then it demands courage (are we willing to commit to something that big?). When an executive team starts talking this way, it starts believing this way — and everything changes. This isn't a workshop exercise; it's how we've helped companies grow beyond what they thought was possible.

Your Legendary Intent is the personal version of a shared north star. When an executive team needs that same clarity — two or three priorities precise enough to steer every decision — that's the Flag at the center of the Flag Model™. Start with your own sentence. It's free, and it's yours.

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