Forum Discussion
MdavisExonomist
Apr 19, 2023Former Employee
Really, are OKRs just for senior leadership?
Hey folks! My name is Michael Davis, and I've been practicing OKRs for...quite some time. I founded Ally.io's strategic services practice, and lead a team of OKR coaches here at Microsoft.
One...
Roger_Longden
Apr 21, 2023Brass Contributor
Great post, Michael!
In addition to your four reasons, I'd also add:
1. The building of the OKRs is where alignment starts. The analysis and understanding of the OKRs that need to be aligned into creates a deeper understanding and connection to the priorities they are framing.
2. The ideation around solving the challenges they present is where creativity and innovation can surface and the fact that they are being empowered to build their own OKRs is a clear demonstration of the trust and confidence Leadership has in their people.
3. Finally, creating OKRs which are worked on by cross-functional squads is the best way to counteract against the tendency towards the siloed working hierarchical organisations that often find slow down execution and increases waste and cost.
In addition to your four reasons, I'd also add:
1. The building of the OKRs is where alignment starts. The analysis and understanding of the OKRs that need to be aligned into creates a deeper understanding and connection to the priorities they are framing.
2. The ideation around solving the challenges they present is where creativity and innovation can surface and the fact that they are being empowered to build their own OKRs is a clear demonstration of the trust and confidence Leadership has in their people.
3. Finally, creating OKRs which are worked on by cross-functional squads is the best way to counteract against the tendency towards the siloed working hierarchical organisations that often find slow down execution and increases waste and cost.
MdavisExonomist
Apr 25, 2023Former Employee
Roger! Been a while. Great to see you here.
I love your points.
Re: 1 -- I think your call out of understanding which OKRs need to be aligned is important...Because some goals may simply align up to a team-level (or may sit at the individual level). Not everything needs to be aligned
Re: 2 - Yes! We have this vision for work where planning is more inclusive than top-down, and this ...goal development process is a key place to enable this
Re: 3 -- This is still an area we're optimizing our understanding around. This works best when all teams / employees are on one platform.
I love your points.
Re: 1 -- I think your call out of understanding which OKRs need to be aligned is important...Because some goals may simply align up to a team-level (or may sit at the individual level). Not everything needs to be aligned
Re: 2 - Yes! We have this vision for work where planning is more inclusive than top-down, and this ...goal development process is a key place to enable this
Re: 3 -- This is still an area we're optimizing our understanding around. This works best when all teams / employees are on one platform.
- Roger_LongdenApr 27, 2023Brass ContributorHi Michael - yes, great to be connected again 🙂
1 - Yes, and to expand a little further; I find it useful to distinguish between "hard" and "soft" aligned OKRs. Hard being that they have a direct parent/child relationship. Soft in that the link is a little "looser' - ie. the child OKR doesn't contribute to the parent one directly, but it does point in the same direction and aligns into the overall strategic theme. I'm also not a big fan of individual OKRs, certainly not hard-aligned ones as that creates a huge management challenge every quarter when it comes to resetting. I've seen OKRs fail because of this.
3 - if there's anything I can do to help here, just shout. Completely agree; it becomes a major barrier if teams are not on the same platform!