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Getting More Value from Objectives and Key Results
Getting More Value from Objectives and Key Results
More and more companies use Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) to set goals, but few are getting the benefits they should.
Article
More and more companies use Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) to set goals, but few are getting the benefits they should.
The Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) framework is an increasingly popular tool for setting goals. It combines aspirational, qualitative descriptions of what companies should achieve—the objectives—with a quantifiable determination of whether they achieved them—the key results. And, unlike other goal-setting frameworks, OKRs can be used to link the goals of the entire organization to each business unit, team, and even individual (see Figure 1).
Google, Intuit and many other companies have made OKRs famous. They use them to ensure employees are focused on the right outcomes, aligned in pursuit of the company’s overall goals, committed to and accountable for delivering those goals, and able to make decisions more confidently.
The OKR framework is especially powerful for organizations looking to become more Agile. OKRs reinforce such Agile principles as transparency. They help companies focus on real business outcomes rather than just features or output, and empower teams to determine “how” to deliver the “what” that senior leaders define. Each Agile team has its own set of OKRs and designs its backlog to deliver them. It’s no coincidence that many of the most Agile enterprises in the world, Netflix and Google among them, use OKRs.
“I’ve seen mature companies do turnarounds and change people and processes. No company is too young to adopt OKRs, and for no company is it too late.”
Most companies get three important things right in their OKRs:
Where things often go wrong is the selection of key results. Without the right “KR,” the entire OKR exercise loses value.
Here’s a hypothetical example. The executives at a ride-hailing company are excited for their first quarterly review of objectives and key results. They recently implemented OKRs in parts of the company, believing they’d help accelerate growth. However, when they review the OKRs for the teams responsible for expanding in a new market, something’s wrong. The OKRs themselves seem sufficiently aggressive, and every team hit its individual goals, but overall revenue for the new market lags expectations. What went wrong?
The ride-hailing company’s driver-acquisition team may have had a good objective—“have the largest driver base in the city.” But the key result tied to that—“increase the number of new driver sign-ups by (X number)”—led to signing up thousands of drivers using tools like social media ads, only to find that few ever completed their first ride. If the team changed the key result to “increase number of new drivers that complete their first ride by (X number),” it might quickly realize that encouraging driver-to-driver referrals works better. Progress on that new key result could advance the team toward the broader goal of higher revenue.
“It took courage to write an OKR that might well fail, but there was no other way if we wanted to be great… Our stretch OKR gave the team direction and a barometer to measure our progress.”
Importantly, the teams closest to the business or customer often are best positioned to identify an OKR issue and fix it. Some management oversight is required to ensure that OKRs create real business value for the enterprise. But teams generally are best suited to choose the specific OKRs, especially for companies with numerous empowered Agile teams. All levels of these organizations see the benefits of integrating OKRs and Agile (see Figure 2).
The specificity of OKRs enables leaders to feel confident holding their teams accountable for them and using them to make important decisions (for more on this topic, see “How to Plan and Budget for Agile at Scale”). The level of detail also helps team members feel ownership of those OKRs and empowered to influence them.
OKRs can run into trouble when their connection to an end result isn’t clear. Thrilled with a climb in their Net Promoter ScoreSM—an important key result for the enterprise—an online retailer would want to invest more in whatever led to that improvement and maintain the upward trajectory. But if it isn’t sure which team or initiative was responsible for the change, or whether an exogenous factor played a role, how can they capitalize on its momentum?
To clearly understand what moves their OKRs, companies should keep three principles in mind:
“When a new project comes up for discussion, [teams will] ask one another how it fits into our OKR template. If it doesn’t, they’ll rightly raise a red flag: ‘Why are we doing this?’”
When implementing these best practices, companies must prioritize. Not all OKRs are created equal. Some are significantly easier to measure, attribute and report than others. Some are significantly more valuable to measure, attribute and report than others.
Here are some key results for a hypothetical restaurant chain that illustrate these differences:
Key results that are neither valuable nor easy to report on shouldn’t be used in the first place. Initially, companies would be smart to focus their leadership’s attention, investment in automation, and testing on category 1. Whether to invest next in categories 2 or 3 depends on just how difficult it is to track specific key results in category 2.
“Everyone [at the company] knows their OKRs. And that is a good, simple organizing principle that keeps people focused on the three things that matter — not the ten.”
While prioritizing OKRs may seem obvious, many companies have hundreds of OKRs and invest in them equitably. This wastes significant time and money, and reduces the insight drawn from the OKRs that are really worth investing in.
When done right, the benefits of OKRs include increased focus, alignment, commitment, accountability and agility. But simply adopting OKRs isn’t enough. By thoughtfully implementing these best practices, companies can be sure to get the most out of this useful tool.
Darren Johnson is a principal with Bain & Company and is based in the firm’s Washington, DC, office. Joost Spits is a Bain partner with the firm’s Consumer Products practice and is based in Boston.
Net Promoter®, NPS®, and the NPS-related emoticons are registered trademarks of Bain & Company, Inc., Satmetrix Systems, Inc., and Fred Reichheld. Net Promoter Score℠ and Net Promoter System℠ are service marks of Bain & Company, Inc., Satmetrix Systems, Inc., and Fred Reichheld.