As part of our digital transformation, my Cisco colleagues and I were getting trained on business agility in our ONEx organization. Any transformation needs an effective way to measure the success at the end and throughout, and as part of our initiative, I could see there was enough awareness and emphasis given to metrics and measurements.
The training also addressed some points from the book "Measure What Matters," which peaked my curiosity and inspired me to start reading it. It is a fantastic book with the origin of theObjectives and Key Results (OKR)concept and how companies have leveraged the framework. I wanted to share a bit here about how Cisco also embraces this framework -and more -in our organization, in a slightly customized and enhanced way, and how it can be extended further.
Although the OKR framework has generated more interest in recent decades, goals and metrics themselves have long been the foundation to any company to identify, set and succeed. As with technology, our approach to goals and metrics has also evolved over the time, namely to include a couple key concepts: MBO orManagement by Objectives, and VSE orVision, Strategy & Execution, extension of this, VSEM, to includeMetrics.
The Vision has represented the true north-star of what the company wants to achieve. If we time box it, perhaps, 3 to 5 years or beyond, Vision does not change often unless the company goes through a major transformation or change of business. However, at an organization level or function level, it could change a bit but still align to the overall company vision. And, as you can imagine, there is still a healthy internal debate about whether one should have ONE single vision for all or a vision at each lower of functional levels -and different companies handle it in different ways.
While Vision is a starting point, we need other elements to take it further. Strategy is the next level of Vision -how you plan to accomplish the vision. This could be multiple levers (or initiatives or methods or ways) to achieve the vision: A strategy, approach, or means to plan for the execution of it and, finally, deliver the desired outcome or results.
If Vision is the desired outcome, and Strategy is the big plan, then Execution is the detailed plan. The key to Execution is measurement, and thus it is often broken into smaller chunks -goals or objectives -which are easier to accomplish and show progress.
In the process of transforming our operations I've found several things to be true, and helpful, during this endeavor:
Operationalization of the OKR framework can include various elements:
Among all of these observations I've made through this process, one of the most critical ones is that the information about meaningful metrics cannot be created and kept safe somewhere secretly. Instead, it needs to be published centrally, so that anyone can check on the goals of their colleagues and leaders at any point in time. This not only brings transparency and trust but also avoids duplication when found.
We are still in the process of creating a more mature, sophisticated practice around our internal OKRs, and in parallel, my colleagues across Cisco are also applying metrics to inform smarter, more efficient operations within our customer organizations.
For those who want to dig into the topic even more deeply,click here to learn more about how Cisco's IoT practice is using metrics as a powerful tool in our customers' digital transformation.
On that note, how isyourteam doing it?What can you share about what it takes to set and achieve measurable goals in your organization's digital transformation?