What it is
Ikigai (生き甲斐) is a Japanese concept meaning, roughly, "a reason for being" — the thing that makes getting out of bed worthwhile. The Western four-circle Venn diagram you've probably seen — overlapping what you love, what you're good at, what the world needs, and what you can be paid for — is actually a Western reframing, often traced to Marc Winn's 2014 blog post, which merged Andrés Zuzunaga's "purpose" diagram with the Japanese word.
It's still a useful lens. The diagram works as a slow, honest audit of where your work currently sits — and where the genuine intersection might be, if you let it form over years instead of trying to engineer it in an afternoon.
When to use it
Ikigai is for big-rock career and life decisions, not weekly planning. Pull it out when:
- Deciding whether to leave a job that pays well but feels hollow
- Choosing between two career paths a decade out from each other
- Returning to work after a sabbatical, parental leave, or burnout
- Picking which side project to commit to seriously
- Coaching someone through a midlife re-evaluation
How to run it
- Draw the four circles on paper: Love, Good At, World Needs, Paid For. Leave the overlaps blank.
- In each circle, list 10–15 specific items. Not "creativity" — "writing in-depth product reviews," "teaching adults to swim," "debugging legacy Rails apps."
- Look for items that appear in two circles. The pair tells you something:
- Love + Good At = Passion (often unpaid)
- Good At + Paid For = Profession (often joyless)
- Paid For + World Needs = Vocation (often unsatisfying)
- World Needs + Love = Mission (often unsustainable)
- Now look for the rarer items that show up in three. These are your candidates.
- The center — items that appear in all four — is your working hypothesis for ikigai. Most people find one or two; if you find none, that's a useful answer too.
- Sit with it for a week before acting. Ikigai is meant to settle, not snap into place.
Common pitfalls
The biggest misread is treating ikigai as a single, dramatic life calling — the Western "find your passion" interpretation. In the Japanese context, ikigai is usually quiet and plural: tending a garden, mastering a craft, raising children well. It's an orientation toward daily life, not a job title. If your exercise produces a single grand answer, you may have flattened the concept.
Second pitfall: filling in the circles with what you wish were true rather than what's currently true. "What you're paid for" means what the market actually pays you right now, not what you hope to be paid for. The diagram only helps if it starts from honest data.
Third: skipping the World Needs circle because it feels grandiose. Scale it down — "the world" can be your neighborhood, your team, your aging parent. Local needs count.
Variations
A close cousin is the Hedgehog Concept from Jim Collins's Good to Great, which uses three circles: what you're passionate about, what you can be best in the world at, and what drives your economic engine. The Hedgehog is sharper for business strategy — it deliberately omits "what the world needs" because that's assumed by the market. Use Hedgehog when you're choosing a company's focus; use Ikigai when the question is more personal and the time horizon is longer.