A Quick Introduction to OKRs

14
OKRs Achieving our most important goals Vicente Goetten – Aug 2016 @goetten

Transcript of A Quick Introduction to OKRs

Page 1: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

OKRs

Achieving our most important goals

Vicente Goetten – Aug 2016@goetten

Page 2: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

“Many companies get comfortable doing what they have always done, with a few incremental changes. This kind of incrementalism leads to irrelevance over time, specially in technology, because change tends to be revolutionary not

evolutionary”

Eric Shmidt, Jonathan Rosenberg

Page 3: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

“Don’t tell people how to do things, tell them what you need done and let them surprise you with their results”

General George Patton

Page 4: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

4

What is OKR?

Page 5: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

55

What is OKR?

OKR stands for OBJECTIVE KEY RESULT

System originated at Intel (Andy Grove implementing Peter Drucker’s Management by Objective system) and used by folks at Google, Zynga, LinkedIn, and General Assembly to promote rapid and sustained growth. O Stands for Objective, KR for Key Results. Objective is what you want to do, Key Results are how you know if you have achieved them. OKRs are set annually and/or quarterly and unite the company behind a vision.

But it all starts with a MISSION!

Page 6: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

66

What is OKR?

Mission

“Our mission is to build unrivaled products adding value for our clients, through the knowledge, creativity, and dedication of our people, leading to superior results to our shareholders”

Page 7: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

77

What is OKR?

Mission

“Open Happiness”

“Ideas worth spreading”

”Organize the world’s information”

“Positively impact one billion people”

“Connect the world through games”

Uniquely yours

Highly aspirational

Neither narrow nor technology specific

Aimed at Heart & Mind

Declared with sincerity & confidence

Page 8: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

88

What is OKR?

Objective

The Objective is inspiring and motivates you and your team. It’s a single sentence, it should be qualitative and inspirational! Use the language of your team! It’s like a mission statement, only for a shorter period of time.

”You know you have a good objective when you leap out of bed in the morning eager to make it happen”.

Examples:

- Build a valuable platform for restaurant suppliers to manage orders

- Launch an awesome MVP for our game to iOS

- Cloud a round that lets us kill it next quarter

- Transform Palo Alto’s coupon using habits

Page 9: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

99

What is OKR?

Key Result

Key Result (KR) is about how to meaningfully measure progress. The progress is measured by output not outcome. It helps to make sure your team are always making progress toward that desired end state. No matter how many other things are on your plate. Key Results keep the objective Real. You know you have the right KR when you are a little scared you can’t make them.

Performance Revenue Quality Growth Engagement

• 25k downloads / day• Revenue of $50k/day• Invited users invited 2 more to join the app• Satisfaction score of 8/10

Page 10: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

1010

What is OKR?

This week

P1: Finish compsP1: Debug order flowP2: Call customer XP2: Plan team picnic

Your objective

KR: X acquisition 5/10KR: X Retention 5/10KR: X Revenue 5/10

Next 4 weeks pipeline

Item 1Item 2Item 3

PS: Only big stuff

Health Metrics

Customer satTeam healthCode health?

Page 11: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

1111

Quick guide to implement OKRs

Page 12: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

1212

OKRs – How to implement (A Quick Guide)

Once you have a GOOD mission statement:

• Collect suggestions for objectives (each leader bring suggestions from the teams)

• Define with the leaders 2 objectives for the period (year or quarter). Not more than 2

• Define 3-4 metrics for each one of the objectives (quality, growth, engagement, revenue, performance)

• Make your OKRs PUBLIC for the entire company (everyone needs to know how they can make a difference)

• Have the teams to break down the OKRs into their own OKRs (traceability)

• Begin the weekly meetings with OKRs (every Monday?)

• Have weekly celebrations about your achievements (every Friday?)

• Define your OKRs once a year or every quarter

• Don’t forget your Health Metrics!

Page 13: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

If you shoot for the moon, you may not make it but it’s a hell of a view!

Christina Wodtke – Radical Focus: Achieving your most important goals

Page 14: A Quick Introduction to OKRs

/totvs

@totvs

blog.totvs.com

company/totvs

TOTVS Labs

@goettenfluig.com