// description
A Japanese concept meaning "reason for being" — the intersection of four questions: What do you love? What are you good at? What does the world need? What can you be paid for? The overlap of all four is ikigai — a purpose that is personally fulfilling, skilfully expressed, useful to others, and economically sustainable.
// history
Ikigai is a longstanding concept in Japanese culture, particularly in Okinawa, which has one of the world's highest concentrations of centenarians — a fact researchers have linked to a strong sense of ikigai. The Western version of ikigai as a Venn diagram framework was developed partly by Héctor García and Francesc Miralles and popularised through their book "Ikigai: The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy Life" (2016). Note: the original Japanese concept is closer to "daily joy and purpose" rather than a strategic career framework, but the Western Venn diagram version has proven useful for career and business clarity.
// example
A creator's ikigai mapping: Love (making art with AI, teaching, building tools). Good at (Midjourney, curriculum design, writing clearly about complex topics). World needs (accessible creative education, tools for non-designers). Paid for (courses on AI art, KDP low-content books, software tools). The overlap reveals a clear positioning: educator-creator at the intersection of AI tools and accessible design for everyday people. That's a sustainable business with a genuine reason for being.
// katharyne's take
Ikigai is worth mapping even if you've been in business for years — it's a clarity check as much as a starting framework. The question "what does the world need?" is the one most creators skip, which is why some people make things they love that nobody buys. And "what can you be paid for?" isn't crass — it's the thing that makes the whole system sustainable. My Venn diagram overlap lands squarely on what I actually do, which is reassuring. If yours doesn't, that's useful information.
// creative uses
- Use the ikigai Venn to audit a new product idea before building it: does it sit in the overlap of all four circles? A product you love making but nobody needs and nobody will pay for is a hobby, not a business. The "world needs" and "paid for" circles are the filters most creators skip — and the reason most new products underperform.
- Apply ikigai to your course topic selection: map your skills (Midjourney, KDP, Canva, Etsy SEO) against what your audience consistently asks about, what's currently searchable and underprovided, and what they've demonstrated they'll pay for. The topic in the centre of those four answers is your next course.
- Use ikigai as an annual clarity ritual: once a year, re-draw your Venn diagram with fresh data. What you love changes. What the market needs changes. What you can be paid for changes. A diagram that was accurate two years ago may be pointing you in the wrong direction now.
// quick actions
- Draw the four Ikigai circles right now and spend 5 minutes filling in each one honestly. Don't overthink it — write whatever comes to mind first. The patterns across circles are more revealing than any individual answer. Look for words that appear in more than one circle — those are your ikigai anchors.
- Check your current primary income stream against all four circles: does it sit in the overlap? If it scores well on "paid for" but poorly on "love" or "good at," that's a sustainability warning — not to panic, but to plan your next product or offer pivot now rather than when you hit burnout.
- Share your completed ikigai diagram with three people who know your work well and ask them: "Does this look accurate? What would you add to 'good at' that I haven't listed?" Other people see your strengths more clearly than you do, and the "good at" circle is where most creators massively underestimate themselves.
// prompt ideas
Walk me through an Ikigai mapping session for my creator business. Here's what I currently do: [describe your work and income streams]. For each of the four circles — what I love, what I'm good at, what the world needs, what I can be paid for — probe me with specific questions until we arrive at a clearly articulated ikigai statement that's specific enough to guide my next product or offer decision.
I'm considering two potential directions for my business: [describe option A] vs [describe option B]. Run both through the Ikigai framework and tell me how each one scores against all four circles. Which sits more clearly in the overlap, and what's the most honest gap I'm ignoring in the one that feels more exciting?
Help me identify my next KDP niche / Etsy product line / course topic using the Ikigai framework as a filter. Here's what I love working on: [list your interests]. Here's what I'm skilled at: [list skills]. Use the "what the world needs + what you can be paid for" circles to cross-reference my interests against actual market demand — and suggest 3 specific niches that land in the full ikigai overlap.