Have you ever had problems with OKRs? Or rather, have OKRs ever worked flawlessly for you?
The Q4 OKR rush has just passed, and we’ve all had ups and downs with them. The important thing is to make OKRs work *for* you, not the other way around. Jonas and I revisit OKRs at a high level in this episode:
Typical mistakes seen in companies
Ways to make it work for you
A few real-life examples from platforms running at $100s of millions
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Partial transcript:
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OKRs are failing for various reasons and many teams tried them. I think you know you have to try them for at least three quarters, but understanding the pitfalls I think is one of the essential things for rolling out OKRs. So there's various reasons for which OKRs are not working.
I'll start with if the company you're in does not have clearly defined strategic goals and objectives. It's nearly impossible to run a successful OKR setting. If you think about the OKRs being bad as being a symptom of your lack of alignment and lack of strategic goals or misalignment or miswording or whatever, then it becomes much clearer to you why they're not working.
So it's a sort of a symptom. The second thing I can think of is OKRs are also often treated as goals in themselves and teams get into lots of drama around them. Just don't do that.
OKRs are what they are. Your goals should be existing outside of the OKRs. The OKRs are just a way to write them down.
And so if you can't write the OKR clearly, then it means maybe you're... or if you try to treat the OKR as a thing in itself, like a goal, maybe that's a problem. And we've also seen OKRs used as performance measures for teams. And it then becomes a thing to game for the teams as in they don't buy into the framework.
It's kind of a straining jacket on them and they'll try to avoid that. And then one of the basic errors as well we're seeing is to have elements on the roadmap to be objectives or KRs or key results that are not quantifiable. Be disciplined around how you implement it.
And one example in that regard, I had a few years back, I joined an organization and I wanted to implement an OKR framework to organize the work both in terms of how within the product in person and also in terms of how we worked with other teams within the organization. And over a year and a half, the implementation of OKRs consistently failed. It was lack of the having a company vision and having KPIs at company level stick to those KPIs.
It meant that OKRs became, within my team, became an island in itself as such disconnected. And as such, the value we provided both to other teams and to our company became unclear. That's the reason why we failed.
Yeah, I had an interesting, I had an example as well, where I had objectives or KRs that failed. And basically, we had a couple of teams that put launch Germany or launch France as an objective. And then I thought, OK, so you achieve your objective and then what? You go have a coffee.
The actual objective is to increase your footprint, to increase the user numbers. And for that reason, one of the KRs is launching France. France is alive.
France is alive. And it's France is alive. French customers can log on to the website, transaction, pay, buy stuff.
The launch in itself is not an objective. Launch is a thing you do on the way to the objective. Instead of doom and gloom, let's move to what actually makes OKRs work for you.
And this is the key sentence, I think. OKRs should work for you, not you for them. And people let OKRs become this big daddy thing.
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