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It is highly unlikely that you can successfully implement OKRs within your organization without top leadership’s direct involvement and commitment to the OKR process.
As I mentioned in a previous blog, “Implementation of OKRs is a Cultural Change; Start Small and Grow,” the process of implementing OKRs is establishing a cultural change in your organization. This will not happen without your top leadership buying into the OKR methodology and process and being directly involved in its implementation.
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Choosing the right corporate focus is paramount and this is the responsibility of the top leadership. If leadership misses on the corporate objectives, the entire organization is now moving the boat in the wrong direction by aligning their individual objectives to the wrong corporate objectives.
Establishing strong corporate objectives might sound simple, but it isn’t. This process often takes time, especially when OKRs are new to your organization. This is when leadership discovers there are a lot of competing agendas within the leadership team. Choosing 1, 2, or 3 key areas of focus (Objectives) is never easy and requires a lot of discussion with leadership challenging one another.
When you lock in your corporate objectives, you are putting a stake in the ground that screams this is our company FOCUS and we are COMMITTED to this focus. You are letting the entire workforce understand that, when new opportunities present themselves, the company will be determining if those opportunities are part of the FOCUS or outside the FOCUS. If outside the FOCUS, they are put on hold.
Consistent and steady communication of the corporate objectives is crucial. Leadership must communicate and reference the corporate objectives whenever addressing their teams on a daily and weekly basis. If employees view leadership as committed to corporate OKRs, then they will follow suit.
Leadership will know when OKRs are becoming the fabric of the organization when employees start to reference the corporate OKRs regularly.
As John Doerr mentioned in “Measure What Matters,” when you begin to think you are over-communicating OKRs to your team, they are now just beginning to hear you.
As part of improving the chances of long-term OKR adoption in your organization, it is customary to have weekly or biweekly OKR check-in meetings with all employees.
Top leadership’s involvement in employee 1-on-1 check-in meetings will certainly help with OKR adoption throughout your organization. Leadership’s involvement in these check-in meetings for the first month or two and then the unannounced pop-in will keep your teams engaged. No employee wants to be unprepared in front of top company leadership.
OKRs’ implementation and long-term adoption require the commitment of leadership. Without this commitment, the success rate diminishes significantly.
Leadership's commitment to OKRs early will pay dividends later as employees understand and align their individual efforts and objectives with corporate objectives.
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If your company is serious about growth and or improved profitability, then please reach out to me.
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