Coupling OKRs with continuous performance management will help bring about a transparent, healthy workplace culture.
If you work for a large organization, it’s possible that you’ve sat through an annual performance review. These reviews end up costing an average of 7.5 management hours per employee – a huge amount. Meanwhile, only six percent of HR leaders think the process is worth the cost.
Now, just imagine you’re a manager with 30 employees under you. That would mean one and a half months of reviews!
Luckily, change is in the air. Not only have over fifty Fortune 500 companies gotten rid of annual performance reviews, but many are replacing them with continuous performance management and their associated instrument of change – CFRs.
CFRs are the OKRs of the HR world, and are all about having conversations with employees that entail both feedback and recognition.
CFRs are a two-way street. Instead of the unidirectional annual performance review, CFRs involve conversations where real-time feedback and recognition go both ways.
And, in the same way that OKRs replace annual goals, CFRs should happen regularly so that performance improvements can be made throughout the year.
As opposed to traditional annual reviews, which only answer whether or not employees have reached their annual goals, CFRs allow leaders and contributors to sit down and discuss vital topics. Is the objective you’re working toward realistic? Is it even the right objective to be working on? And is it motivating?
Take Adobe, for example. It used to be that every February, right after the annual performance reviews, there would be a brief increase in voluntary attrition – that is, employee resignations and retirements.
However, after ditching their review system in favor of a CFR-esque system called “check-ins,” Adobe’s voluntary attrition has decreased dramatically.
It should be obvious at this point that implementing OKRs and CFRs at an organization will undoubtedly contribute to a better workplace culture. Having teams of contributors working toward common goals – coupled with transparent communication and individual accountability – should be a clear way to increase an organization’s performance.
And whereas OKRs give meaning to contributors’ goals, CFRs provide the life juice needed to complete them. Together with ambitious stretch thinking, organizations can use these techniques to reach for the stars, and nourish the optimistic and people-oriented workplace culture that comes with them.
After all, organizations that treat their employees as partners, not subordinates, tend to be the most successful.