Six real-world OKR examples to use for your team’s goal-setting
The power of OKRs lies in their adaptability. We all have goals, and an OKR is simply a way to state your top priorities and distill them into key results that are measurable and realistic.
Think of OKRs as formulas. Objectives are your goals and intents — the things you aspire to accomplish. Key results are deadline-driven, measurable milestones that tie directly to your goals and intents.Every organization is different, multi-layered, and nuanced. But simplicity is key. Your challenge is to convert the mighty ambitions of your team into the “North Star” — the thing that will anchor your company’s long-term success.Your OKR should look something like this:Objective: Your significant, action-oriented goal here.Key results:
has changed very little since John Doerr created his original presentation deck after he left Intel in the 1980s. Over the last few decades, he has presented this deck to hundreds of organizations. BMW and Schneider Electric were a few of the companies that found success after implementation of OKRs.
Most recently, Doerr spoke about Millennials using OKRs at Whole Foods:
“Somebody recently told me that at Whole Foods, he noticed Millennial workers checking their OKRs on their mobile phones. That makes sense, because Millennials tend to want to know how their own work figures into the big picture, and they want nearly constant feedback, but without being micromanaged.” - John Doerr
and made it their own in their strategic planning, and how you can do the same:
Have a maximum of 5 objectives with 4 key results. If a quarter is 12 weeks, it’s unlikely that someone can handle working on 12 objectives. Limiting the number of objectives with clear key results helps move the needle to success.
OKRS from the bottom, up. Too much top-down dictation of objectives makes it difficult to inspire people because they’re being told what to do. Instead, let them tell you what they believe is the best use of their time and talent.
One page is best. When the OKR framework was written, it was in the era of printing. Thankfully, tools like Coda provide you a way to get all of these OKRs into one table with visibility for your team and company.
OKRs are not a performance evaluation tool. OKRs should not be an element of any evaluation program. However, from an individual reflection standpoint, these OKRs do show your most dramatic results and the work you accomplished can summarize contributions and impact to the company.
Writing OKRs can be easier with a reference point. Below you’ll find six realistic OKR examples that you can use as goal-setting inspiration.We’ve included a number of objectives from a range of business functions including corporate, customer success, engineering, marketing, product, and sales.
We built the Ultimate Coda Handbook for Planning and OKRs to help you get started implementing OKRs at your company. It's full of templates, tips, and recommendations learned from 100s of teams.