Performance Management Criteria for OKRs
Jeff Gothelf
Teaching executives to simplify prioritization and decision-making by putting the customer first.
Implementing Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) changes the goals your teams are targeting. I’ve?written?multiple?times?about how to write good OKRs and?what happens after you set new goals. Just last week I discussed?the relationship between OKRs and strategy, however, what I haven’t touched on yet is what needs to change when it comes to performance management criteria and incentives.?
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT CRITERIA IS OUT OF DATE
On,?what Marty Cagan calls, a feature team the goal is to build a feature or a product. The end result is binary. The team ships the product or it doesn’t. This is easy to measure thus easy to manage and reward. The team is rewarded when the feature goes live, regardless of how it was achieved. Did they collaborate well? Who did most of the work? Did they get closer to the customer or build a deeper understanding of their needs? We don’t measure these performance criteria because, frankly, most organizations don’t care about them. The feature got out the door and the team’s velocity went up.?
Individual contributors and team managers are assessed per their traditional criteria, rewarded for individual contribution and heroism and promoted for production. Teams are publicly celebrated for shipping the product.?
OKR SUCCESS RELIES HEAVILY ON TEAM INCENTIVES
OKRs by their very nature require?empowered product teams?(again, a Cagan-ism). Since teams aren’t given a specific feature set to deliver they must practice product discovery, customer discovery, collaboration, humility, empathy and most importantly, tolerance for wrong decisions or bad ideas. If we’re going to make this type of team more common we need to rethink how we evaluate the performance of these teams.?
A quick caveat: I am not an expert in human resource management nor performance management systems. However, what I am confident in is the need for these evaluations to change in an effort to support OKRs, organizational agility and customer-centric teams.
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6 PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT CRITERIA FOR OKRS
I believe companies should move away from traditional measures and consider ways to measure and then reward some or all of the following qualities of a team:
This is by no means a complete (or even accurate) list of potential performance management criteria for objectives and key results. What I hope this does is serve as inspiration for conversations within your organizations and with your HR leaders about how to ensure that not only are we writing great OKR goals for our teams, we’re creating the performance management systems that incentivize a culture where OKRs thrive.?
How do you see performance management criteria and incentives changing in an agile world? Drop your thoughts in the comments.
-Jeff
Founder & CEO, Group 8 Security Solutions Inc. DBA Machine Learning Intelligence
8 个月Appreciate your post!
Insight, analytics, operations head of
3 年Really like this, great food for thought
PIEP :: Head of Operations & PMO :: Board Member - Vice-President at AED Cluster Portugal (Aeronautics, Space and Defence) :: Business Development :: R&D Consultant
3 年Thanks for posting! Great notes...
Senior Technical Leader/Architect
3 年"Closeness to the Customer" is so key to OKR success. If we don't work backwards from the customer or problem space, then we are really just in love with our solutions. (ourselves...)