OKR Objectives and Key Results
There are a great number of ways company may choose to manage its business. Some companies rely on KPIs or OKRs to keep track of their goals, while others choose to enlist the practice of MBOs, or maybe a combination of these. It is important to understand the differences between these tools and methodologies before deciding which to utilize in your organization. Let’s begin with OKRs.
What is OKR?
OKR (Objectives and Key Results) is a goal setting system,
original concept came from Intel and spread to other Silicon Valley companies
and later used by Google and other companies. It is a simple approach to create
alignment and engagement around measurable and ambitious goals. Google adopted
OKR in 1999, during its first year. It supported Google’s growth from 40
employees to more than 60,000 today. Besides Google, other companies use OKR,
including Spotify, Twitter, LinkedIn use OKR, while OKR is not only for digital
companies. Walmart, Target, The Guardian, Dun and Bradstreet, and ING Bank are
also using OKR.
OKRs is a critical thinking framework and ongoing discipline
that seeks to ensure employees work together, focusing their efforts to make
measurable contributions that drive the company forward.
Based on definition, let’s break it down into more reasonable
bite-sized chunks:
Critical-thinking framework:
The end in mind with OKRs is accelerating performance, but you don’t get there
simply by monitoring your results each quarter. In the preceding history lesson
we introduced the work of Peter Drucker. One of our favorite “Drucker-isms” is
this: “The most serious mistakes are not being made as a result of wrong
answers. The truly dangerous thing is asking the wrong questions.”10 When
examining OKR results your challenge is to go beyond the numbers and, like a
business anthropologist, dig deeper into what they’re telling you so that you
can unearth the stimulating questions that may lead to future breakthroughs.
OKRs, when implemented with rigor and discipline, facilitate this model of
critical thinking.
Ongoing discipline: OKRs
represent a commitment—of time and effort. Earlier, we warned against the
danger of “set it and forget it” goal setting. To ensure you benefit from OKRs,
you must commit to actually (as common sense as this sounds) using the model.
That entails updating OKRs each quarter (or whatever cadence you choose),
examining results carefully, and modifying your ongoing strategy and business
model as necessary, based on results.
Ensure employees work together:
We’ve already noted the importance of cross-functional collaboration and the
value of teams in creating organizational success. OKRs must be structured, and
used, to maximize collaboration and alignment. One of the ways this is
facilitated is through the inherent transparency of OKRs, which are shared
widely so that everyone, from top to bottom, can see objectives and key results
from throughout the organization.
Focusing their efforts: OKRs
are not, and should never be, considered a master checklist of tasks that need
to be completed. The aim of the model is identifying the most critical business
objectives and gauging accountability through quantitative key results.
Strategy pundits are fond of noting that strategy is as much about what not to
do as it is about what to do. So it is with OKRs. You must be disciplined in
determining what makes the final cut.
Make measurable contributions:
As we’ll explain shortly, key results are typically (and almost exclusively)
quantitative in nature. Whenever possible, we want to avoid subjectivity and
note with precision how the business is advancing based on achievement of our
OKRs.
Drive the company forward:
The ultimate arbiter of success is achievement of your goals. Follow the advice
on these pages and we’re confident OKRs will light that path for you.
John Doerr started his career at Intel and went on to invest
in companies such as Google and Amazon. Doerr, who introduced Google to OKR,
has a formula for setting goals:
formula is the best way to explain the structure of an OKR:
I will (Objective) as measured by (this set of Key Results).
So, as the name implies, OKR has two components, the
Objective and the Key Results:
Objectives are memorable
qualitative descriptions of what you want to achieve. Objectives should be
short, inspirational and engaging. An Objective should motivate and challenge
the team
Key Results are a set of
metrics that measure your progress towards the Objective. For each Objective,
you should have a set of 2 to 5 Key Results. More than that and no one will
remember them.
The big difference from traditional planning methods? OKRs
are frequently set, tracked, and re-evaluated – usually quarterly. OKR is a
simple, fast-cadence process that engages each team’s perspective and
creativity.
OKR exists to create alignment and to set the cadence for
the organization. The goal is to ensure everyone is going in the same
direction, with clear priorities, in a constant rhythm.
Key Performance Indicators
KPIs are essentially company’s metrics. When you are looking
at KPIs, you will likely see numbers, charts and graphs. All KPIs are directly
measurable. They are a means of measuring how well an individual, team or
organization is performing against their goals according to the numbers.
Benefits of KPIs
Again, we can think of the term KPI as being interchangeable
with the term metric. Metrics are the hard numbers that give context to the
success or failure of your business. By using KPIs as your primary tool for
your management operating system, you will have a clear picture of where your
business’ shortcomings and successes are, and you will have the numbers to prove
it. This is only true however if you are choosing the right KPIs. Use the list
of questions below to help determine whether are not you are on the path to choosing
valuable and effective KPIs.
1. KPIs alignment with overall strategic goals of the
company
You should have different KPIs for different teams,
departments and management levels. Be sure to also avoid KPIs that are too
generic. The purpose of a KPI is to help drive the success of YOUR business, so
make it specific enough to have an impact.
2. realistic KPIs
An easy way to assess this question is to consider the data
points and resources that would be needed to reach the KPI. Consider new
processes that would need to be in place, and whether or not the time spent on
those processes is realistic for those directly tied to the KPI. Ultimately,
you must determine whether the time put into it, will be worth the potential
return.
3. prioritize KPIs
Be deliberate with your choices, and prioritize KPIs that
will benefit the company as a whole. By determining which KPIs are truly
important early on, you will have less maintenance in the long-run.
4. construable
A good KPI has to be something that you can be actively
working on. If your business realistically can not change it, why is it a
measure of your success?
KPIs:
Leading, Latent and Lagging Indicators
Lagging indicators are those that are very easy to measure.
They are the actual output numbers we look back on and learn from. For example,
when measuring the success of a sales team you may consider Quarterly Sales
Revenue as one of your lagging indicators. Easily measurable, and will indicate
how the sales team performed over the quarter. Another example mileage counter
of vehicle.
Latent
Latent indicators are those that describe latent conditions that
have a potential to result in high consequence
Leading indicators
Leading indicators are those that contribute to the success
of the lagging indicators. Going back to our example for lagging indicators,
there are a number of contributing KPIs that could be associated with Quarterly
Sales Revenue–daily outbound calls or proposals sent for example. These are
your leading KPIs.
Management by Objectives
Peter Drucker set the standard for management philosophy and
the theoretical foundations of the modern business corporation. Many of his
more than 30 books are considered classics in the field. It is one book, his
1954 release, The Practice of Management, which is of particular significance
to those of us interested in OKRs. Drucker proposed a system termed management
by objectives, or MBO. He introduces the framework this way:
Each manager, from the “big boss” down to the production
foreman or the chief clerk, needs clearly spelled-out objectives. These
objectives should lay out what performance the man’s own managerial unit is
supposed to produce. They should lay out what contribution he and his unit are
expected to make to help other units obtain their objectives. Finally, they
should spell out what contribution the manager can expect from other units
toward the attainment of his own objectives. . . . These objectives should
always derive from the goals of the business.
What is the difference between OKR and MBO?
MBO, or “Managed By Objectives”, is a
goal-oriented management approach where managers align an employee’s objectives
and KPIs to the organizational goals and mission.
OKR is an evolution from the MBO framework and offers a few
extensions in order to structure your objectives and execute strategy in a more
clearly defined way. It outlines the key ways in which success will be defined,
along with what needs to be done to achieve the goal. It breaks it down into an
objective portion, and key actions and results portion.
Whilst both frameworks set and communicate goals and measure
performance to achieve organizational objectives and strategy, MBO will focus
on what you want to achieve, and OKR will set out what you want to achieve and
the key things you need to do to achieve them.
As MBO was the original performance management approach the
majority of companies and teams are utilizing this. However, OKR is increasing
in popularity and there is a lot of interest due to the level of organizational
goals and objectives being integrated into the review metrics.
Regardless of the framework company chooses to review
performance, company should constantly review output to ensure maximum
productivity and efficiency.
MBOs vs. OKRs
MBO |
Intel OKRs |
“What” |
“What” and “How” |
Annual |
Quarterly
or Monthly |
Private
and Siloed |
Public
and Transparent |
Top-down |
Bottom-up
or Sideways (~50%) |
Tied
to Compensation |
Mostly
Divorced from Compensation |
Risk
Averse |
Aggressive
and Aspirational |
Annual Performance Management Versus Continuous
Performance Management
Annual
Performance Management |
Continuous
Performance Management |
Annual feedback |
Continuous feedback |
Tied to compensation |
Decoupled from compensation |
Directing/autocratic |
Coaching/democratic |
Outcome focused |
Process focused |
Weakness based |
Strength based |
Prone to bias |
|
What’s unique about OKR?
There is not a single way to use OKR, each company or team
can adapt and tweak it, creating different versions of it. But there are some
core concepts:
Agile Goals
Instead of using annual static planning, OKR takes an agile
approach. By using shorter goal cycles, companies can adapt and respond to
change.
Simplicity
Using OKR is straightforward, and the OKRs themselves are
easy to understand. Intel’s original model set goals monthly, which required a
lightweight process. Companies that adopt OKR reduce the time spent setting
goals from months to days. As a result, they invest their resources in
achieving their goals and not on setting them.
Transparency
The primary purpose of OKR is to create alignment in the
organization. To do so, OKRs are
public to all company levels — everyone has access to
everyone else’s OKRs. The CEO’s
OKRs usually are available on the Intranet.
Nested Cadences
OKR understands that strategy and tactics have different
natural tempos since the latter tends to change much faster. To solve this, OKR
adopts different rhythms:
·
A strategic cadence with
high-level, longer term OKRs for the company (usually annual).
·
A tactical cadence with shorter
term OKRs for the teams (usually quarterly).
·
An operational cadence for
tracking results and initiatives (usually weekly).
Bidirectional Goal Setting
Instead of using the traditional top-down cascading model
that takes too much time and does not add value, OKR uses a market-based
approach that is simultaneously bottom-up and top-down.
From the company’s strategic OKRs, teams can understand how
they can contribute to the overall strategy. In this process, around 60% of the
tactical OKRs are set by the teams in alignment with the company goals and then
contracted with the managers in a bubble-up approach.
This model creates engagement and a better understanding of
the strategy while making the process simpler and faster.
Ambitious Goals
The philosophy behind OKR is that if the company is always
reaching 100% of the goals, they are too easy.
Instead, OKR targets bold, ambitious goals. Besides
aspirational objectives, OKR believes in enabling the team to set challenging
goals. Goals that make the team rethink the way they work to reach peak
performance.
Decoupling Rewards
Separating OKRs from compensation and promotions is crucial
to enable ambitious goals. Employees need to know they will not lose money if
they set ambitious goals. It is hard to set ambitious goals when you need the
bonus to pay for your kids’ college tuition.
OKR is a management tool, not an employee evaluation tool.
OKRs never Cascade. OKRs Align.
OKRs should be set in a parallel process in which teams
define OKRs that are linked to
the organization objectives and validated by managers, in a
process that is simultaneously bottom-up and top-down.
From the company OKRs, the teams can get a clear direction
and understand how they can contribute to reaching those OKRs.
Each team then defines a set of tactical OKRs for the
quarter that contribute to the strategic OKRs and that roughly align with them.
Teams’ OKRs don’t have to be 100% aligned with the company’s OKRs since they
may also choose to include a local OKR.
Dr. Grove’s Basic OKR Hygiene
The essence of a healthy OKR culture—ruthless intellectual
honesty, a disregard for self-interest, deep allegiance to the team—flowed from
the fiber of Andy Grove’s being. But it was Grove’s nuts-and-bolts approach,
his engineer’s mentality, that made the system work. OKRs are his legacy, his
most valuable and lasting management practice. Here are some lessons I learned
at Intel from the master and from Jim Lally, Andy’s OKR disciple and my mentor:
Less is more. “A few
extremely well-chosen objectives,” Grove wrote, “impart a clear message about
what we say ‘yes’ to and what we say ‘no’ to.” A limit of three to five OKRs
per cycle leads companies, teams, and individuals to choose what matters most.
In general, each objective should be tied to five or fewer key results.
Set goals from the bottom up.
To promote engagement, teams and individuals should be encouraged to create
roughly half of their own OKRs, in consultation with managers. When all goals
are set top-down, motivation is corroded.
No dictating. OKRs are a
cooperative social contract to establish priorities and define how progress
will be measured. Even after company objectives are closed to debate, their key
results continue to be negotiated. Collective agreement is essential to maximum
goal achievement.
Stay flexible. If the
climate has changed and an objective no longer seems practical or relevant as
written, key results can be modified or even discarded midcycle.
Dare to fail. “Output will
tend to be greater,” Grove wrote, “when everybody strives for a level of
achievement beyond [their] immediate grasp. . . . Such goalsetting is extremely
important if what you want is peak performance from yourself and your
subordinates.” While certain operational objectives must be met in full,
aspirational OKRs should be uncomfortable and possibly unattainable. “Stretched
goals,” as Grove called them, push organizations to new heights.
A tool, not a weapon. The
OKR system, Grove wrote, “is meant to pace a person—to put a stopwatch in his
own hand so he can gauge his own performance. It is not a legal document upon
which to base a performance review.” To encourage risk taking and prevent
sandbagging, OKRs and bonuses are best kept separate.
Be patient; be resolute. Every
process requires trial and error. As Grove told his iOPEC students, Intel
“stumbled a lot of times” after adopting OKRs: “We didn’t fully understand the
principal purpose of it. And we are kind of doing better with it as time goes
on.” An organization may need up to four or five quarterly cycles to fully
embrace the system, and even more than that to build mature goal muscle.
Recognition
Institute peer-to-peer recognition.
When employee achievements are consistently recognized by peers, a culture of
gratitude is born. At Zume Pizza, the Friday all-hands “roundup” meeting
concludes with a series of unsolicited, unedited shout-outs from anyone in the
organization to anyone else who’s done something remarkable.
Establish clear criteria. Recognize people for
actions and results: completion of special projects, achievement of company
goals, demonstrations of company values. Replace “Employee of the
Month” with “Achievement of the Month.”
Share recognition stories. Newsletters or
company blogs can supply the narrative behind the accomplishment, giving
recognition more meaning.
Make recognition frequent and attainable. Hail
smaller accomplishments, too: that extra effort to meet a deadline, that
special polish on a proposal, the little things a manager might take for
granted.
Tie recognition to company goals and strategies.
Customer service, innovation,
teamwork, cost cutting—any organizational priority can be supported by a timely shout-out.
What are the benefits of using OKR?
The main advantages of using OKR are:
Agility
Shorter goal cycles enable faster adjustments and
better adaptation to change, increasing innovation and reducing risks and
waste.
Alignment and cross-functional cooperation
The use of shared OKRs improves collaboration among
different teams, solving interdependencies and unifying competing initiatives.
Reduced time for setting goals
OKR simplicity makes the goal setting process faster
and easier, drastically reducing the time and resources spent on setting goals.
Clear communication
Transparency and simplicity enable the team to
understand the goals and priorities of the organization as well as how each
individual can contribute.
Employee engagement
OKR bottom-up approach for goal setting connects the
employees with the company’s objectives, increasing engagement
Autonomy and accountability
Teams receive a clear direction and are free to
choose how to achieve their OKRs. They become responsible for their objectives,
with clear success criteria known to the whole company, creating mutual
obligations.
Focus and discipline
The reduced number of goals creates focus in the
organization and more disciplined efforts and initiatives
Bolder goals
Decoupling OKRs from compensation and using stretch
goals, even partially, enable the team to set ambitious, challenging goals.
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