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If you want to find an instructional book on Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) that will define exactly how to implement them in your organization, you will be disappointed. The brilliance of the OKR Framework is that it is open-ended and flexible allowing all organizations with their vast nuances, cultures, sizes, and industries to benefit from them. For this reason, it’s not practical to create a paint-by-number, “How to” book on OKRs.
I have worked with numerous organizations that have benefited from OKRs. Each organization’s relationship with OKRs is completely different based on the organization's size, culture, industry, and growth trajectory.
In my opinion, the most important element of successfully implementing OKRs into an organization are: what to focus on, what to measure, and how to track OKR progress.
Universally this is almost always a challenge. Trying to choose 1-3 core areas of focus from the many competing agendas of the leadership team is never easy. A company and or individual will have difficulty successfully attending to more than three initiatives at any given time. The question that companies face is what 1-3 areas should the entire weight of the organization focus on within a given period?
When you commit to one area of focus, you also have to set aside another. These are difficult decisions.
Determining what to measure is critical. Just being aware of WHAT your company needs to focus on isn’t enough. You then need to establish the Objectives and Key Results in a way that forces you to measure your success.
As I mentioned in my recent article, “OKRs Must be Measurable and Time-Bound,” the first step in measuring OKR progress is to specifically know where you are starting from. It’s not uncommon when initiating OKRs to propose a Corporate or Employee Objective and discover you haven’t tracked a certain metric. When this happens, you must create a plan to benchmark the metric so you can establish a starting measurement and track progress.
When you determine what you want to focus on and what you need to measure, then you must put in place a mechanism for tracking progress along the way. By tracking OKRs progress along the way, you now know how you are performing at any given time in the life of that Objective or Key Result.
For more on tracking OKR progress, click here.
Every Corporate or Individual Objective or Key Result must: 1) be measurable with a quantifiable starting point and ending point; 2) be trackable; and 3) be time-bound. If you omit any of these three components, then the Objective or Key Result will be weak. In my experience, both leadership and employees perform at a much higher level when they know exactly where the company wants to go and how their contributions help the company achieve those goals.
Implementing OKRs into your organization is forcing a cultural change. It might be uncomfortable at first, but within 6-12 months, it often morphs into the fabric of your new culture leaving the old culture behind. To help improve the chances of long-term adoption, the top leadership has to be consistent with their commitment to and communication of OKRs. Insisting that all employees, including CEO and leadership, participate in weekly or bi-weekly check-ins is imperative. Employees will watch leadership and if leadership is committed, they will most likely follow.
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