photo: Rick Klau

Superpowers at work: OKRs

Objectives and Key Results — the process by which leaders and their teams set ambitious, measurable goals each quarter — are a critical component of how Google’s leaders managed Google’s growth from day one. By focusing on a few priorities, identifying the metrics that measure progress towards those goals, and quantifying the impact of that progress, OKRs equipped teams at Google with what they needed to think big, get alignment across the organization, and execute on their ambitious plans.

In the years since my video about OKRs became popular, I’ve spoken with hundreds of founders at startups about how they use goals to grow their businesses. I’ve seen the positive impact OKRs can have for startups of all sizes. While there are many advantages to the OKR approach, in my opinion the real reason OKRs work is because they give your company superpowers.

Yes, superpowers.

When OKRs are working well in your company, it’s as if everyone has acquired fluency in a new language. Every employee is familiar with a common vocabulary, and understands how this vocabulary describes what’s most important to the company (and what’s not). After just a couple quarters of relying on OKRs to set and manage goals, people inside a company develop three distinct superpowers: the ability to predict the future, the ability for the company’s founders or CEO to be a part of every important discussion, even (especially) when they’re not there, and the ability to say no.

These superpowers are actually quantifiable. After Sears Holding Company CEO Eddie Lampert saw my OKR video a couple years ago, he started an OKR pilot within the company; less than a year later, revenues increased 8.5% for employees who were participating in the pilot vs. those that were not. More interestingly, employees who were consistently using OKRs were 11.5% more likely to move into a higher performance bracket than their non-participating colleagues.

A founder who is everywhere, always

Because OKRs are shared publicly throughout the company, everyone knows where the company is headed, and how their team’s work connects to the company’s overall objectives. Through the course of a quarter, there will be any number of important decisions that need to get made. With the benefit of clear priorities and an appreciation of how progress will be measured, everyone can channel your founder into the room and use that understanding to inform how she would contribute to the conversation if she were there.

Once the CEO knows that her teams understand where she’s heading and why — their decisions are naturally more consistent with that focus and don’t require her to be a part of every single discussion. The end result? Faster execution, less confusion, and a founder who’s freed up to focus on growing her business. Instead of slowing her team down by imposing process, she’s giving them the tools to speed up and achieve more.

Predicting the future

Failure = data

Just say “No”

Get started with OKRs

This essay originally appeared as a guest blog post on Google’s re:Work site.

GV Library

Advice, lessons, and tips from GV partners and our…

Thanks to Ken Norton

Rick Klau

Written by

Husband. Dad of 3. Working on what’s next. Previously: 13+ years @Google ( @GVteam @YouTube @Blogger ).

GV Library

Advice, lessons, and tips from GV partners and our community of entrepreneurs.

Rick Klau

Written by

Husband. Dad of 3. Working on what’s next. Previously: 13+ years @Google ( @GVteam @YouTube @Blogger ).

GV Library

Advice, lessons, and tips from GV partners and our community of entrepreneurs.

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