Notes on OKRs
Introduction to OKRs
Objective and Key Results (OKRs) - a framework used as a goal-settings system known for its "management by key results" strategy
Components:
Objective - The WHAT. This describes the goal, i.e. where the organization wants to go. Here, the organization's direction for the future is considered.
Key Results - The HOW. This measures the progress toward the Objectives.
Initiatives - The WHY. This shows includes projects and tasks that are being worked on in order to push progress on the key results
Deciding on the Objective
Significant
Concrete
Action-oriented
Inspiring
❗️Points to consider❗️
When writing the objective, it should be:
Easy-to-understand
Easy-to-Remember
Should not contain technical jargon
Writing the Key Results
Specific and time-bound
Aggressive yet realistic
Measurable
Verifiable
❗️Points to consider❗️
When writing the Key Results, consider the outcomes, not the outputs
Output - something that you do, i.e. a project or task
Outcome - a result of what you do
The Formula for Initiatives
Ambition
Passion
Purpose
Benefits of Measuring the Key Results:
Helps quantify the objective and make it specific
Helps measure progress toward objectives
Provides Metrics - qualitative or quantitative measures to monitor how the organization is performing
Provides a Start Value - the levels of performance the company begins with before achieving a given metric
Provides a Target Value - the levels of performance the company wants to achieve for a given metric
Why adopt the OKRs?
Improve alignment across the organization
Transparency
Collective Commitment - It needs to be made sure that everyone is pulling in the same direction and working along a common goal
A Brief History of OKRs
Peter Drucker - The Father of Management Thinking
George Doran
Andrew Grove - The Father of OKRs
Robert Kaplan & David Norton
John Doerr
Larry Page and Sergey Brin
Goals vs. OKR vs. KPI
Goals
it is the direction in which the company wants to go in
subsets of OKR.
OKRs
a framework with best practices to help the organization achieve its goals
a way to formulate those goals
roadmaps that guide you toward the destination
temporary goals that are aimed toward the destination, and are constantly changing once waypoints are passed
solves problems, improves processes, and drives innovation
KPI (Key Performance Indicator)
a metric to measure performance used to evaluate the success or growth based on quantity or quality outputs of an organization
permanent indicators that are needed to be constantly done
monitors performance and identifies problems and areas for improvement
can be used together with OKR as they complement each other, but they are not the same ideas
Implementing a Strategy
Strategy - Due to limited time and resources, choose only the items that are important to you and your organization. Makes the OKRs actionable
Ultimate Goal - the organization’s ultimate winning aspirations
What is the purpose of the business?
For whom is the organization fulfilling this purpose?
When will the venture be considered a success?
Strategic Pillars - how-to-win choices that reflect what you’ll do to differentiate yourself in the market and support your ultimate goal
Cadence - the frequency with which the organization and its respective teams set and review their OKRs
Company level - usually done annually
Department/Team level - usually done on a quarterly basis
Format
Objective - Something you’re striving to achieve in this year or period
Key Results - are normally quarterly-based specific outcomes needed to be delivered to achieve the desired outcome
So typically, this would give the following format to follow:
Objective
Key Result 1
Key Result 2
Key Result 3
...
Key Result N
For one Objective, there can be multiple Key Results, but not vice versa.
Best Practices
Frequently update and review goals on a Quarterly, monthly, or weekly basis.
Remember to Close OKRs. Collect and share the learnings from the previous OKRs before working on something new
Less is more. Don’t set too many OKRs as it can get too overwhelming
Strategy First, OKR second
Transparency - involve everyone in the organization to make sure that you’re moving towards your goal
Create a rhythm (cadence) for the OKR - standardize the time frames of processes in the OKR
Set
Close
Update
Review
Shared (team) objectives, individual KRs
Use an app - make use of a process or tool to enable automated, self-directed reporting and management of OKRs
References:
Objectives and Key Results explained (New OKR Crash Course) | Perdoo
Why the Secret to success is setting the right goals | John Doerr
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Written by
Grace Icay
Grace Icay
JLPT N3-certified QA Engineer working in Japan!