
The OKR Method for HR: The Guide to Align Strategy and Performance
Align your HR strategy with clear OKRs. Discover our practical guide with examples for recruitment, engagement, and performance of your teams.
In a world where HR departments are increasingly called upon to be strategic partners, one question remains: how can we ensure that the daily actions of our teams truly contribute to the company's overall vision? How do we move from 'busywork' to 'impact'?
This is precisely the challenge that the OKR method (Objectives and Key Results) aims to address. In an enlightening discussion led by Amelie Alleman, expert Thomas Dusart, founder of DOKR and OKRscore, unraveled the secrets of this transformative approach. We have synthesized for you the essential points to make OKRs a lever of performance for HR.
OKR: What exactly is it?
Beyond the acronym, the OKR method is a management framework that helps organizations align their teams around ambitious and measurable goals. Its power lies in a fundamental distinction that Thomas Dusart emphasizes: the difference between the 'output' (what we do) and the 'outcome' (the benefit that we generate).
- The Output: "We have launched a new software." It's an action, a task completed.
- The Outcome: "We have increased our recurring revenue by 15%." That's the result, the impact of the action.
The OKR method forces teams to focus on the outcome. The structure is simple:
- Objective (O) : This is the direction, the destination. It should be qualitative, ambitious, and inspiring. It answers the question: "Where do we want to go?"
- Key Results (KR) or Key Outcomes: These are the milestones that indicate whether we are on the right track. They must be quantitative, measurable, and time-bound. They answer the question: "How will we know that we have arrived?"
Simple example:
- Objective: To significantly improve employee satisfaction to become an employer of choice.
- Key Result 1 : Increase the eNPS (Employee Net Promoter Score) from 20 to 40 by the end of the quarter.
- Key Result 2 : Reduce the voluntary turnover rate from 15% to 10% over the same period.
The Crucial Difference: OKR vs. KPI
A common confusion for HR professionals is the distinction between OKR and KPI (Key Performance Indicators). Thomas Dusart offers a simple and powerful analogy:
- The KPIs measure the health of the business (the business as usual). They are like the dashboard indicators of your car (speed, fuel level). They should remain stable or improve slightly. Examples: monthly turnover, absenteeism rate.
- OKRs measure the transformation and ambition. They are the GPS that guides you towards a new destination. They are temporary and aim for significant change. Examples: Launching a new market, implementing a new HRIS.
In summary:
KPI (Key Performance Indicator)OKR (Objective & Key Result)GoalMeasure ongoing health and performanceDrive change and transformationNatureQuantitative, often permanentQualitative (O) and quantitative (KR), temporaryFocusBusiness as UsualAmbition, new projectsExample HR Employee retention rateIncrease engagement by 20% following an action plan
Implementing OKRs in HR: Concrete Examples
How does the OKR method actually apply to HR performance management? Here are some examples from the expertise of Thomas Dusart:
1. Strengthen the Employer Brand
- Objective: To become a benchmark in employer branding to attract the best talents in the industry.
- Key Result: Increase the number of qualified unsolicited applications by 30% within 6 months.
2. Optimize the Productivity of the HR Department
- Objective: Implement a new HRIS to free up time on administrative tasks and focus on strategy.
- Key Result : Increase the number of employees managed per HR staff member by 25% without compromising service quality.
3. Conquer a New Market
- Objective: Implement an effective recruitment process for our expansion into the American market.
- Key Result: Hire 5 strategic talents based in the United States by the end of the year.
The Keys to Success (and the Pitfalls to Avoid) for a Successful Implementation
Embarking on OKRs is not just a matter of tools, it's primarily a cultural shift. Here are the key success factors identified by Thomas Dusart:
1. Top Management Sponsorship: Non-Negotiable
This is an essential condition. If the management does not 'speak' OKR, does not use them to communicate its own priorities, and does not lead by example, the approach is doomed to fail. Alignment must start from the top.
2. Autonomy and Focus: Less is More
OKRs are not "cascaded" from the top down. The management sets the vision (the company's objectives), and each team autonomously defines how it will contribute. The key is focus: a team should not have more than 1 or 2 transformative OKRs per quarter. This protects teams from impromptu "good ideas" and helps them concentrate on what creates the most value.
3. The Right to Make Mistakes: Separate OKR and Compensation
This is a critical point. Directly linking variable compensation to the achievement of OKRs kills ambition. Teams will set easy-to-achieve goals to secure their bonus, at the expense of innovation. OKRs should promote an environment of psychological safety where one can make mistakes, learn, and adjust.
4. Discipline and Rituals: Creating Champions
The OKR method requires discipline: regular progress check-ins, quarterly retrospectives to analyze successes and failures. To maintain this momentum, it is essential to appoint "OKR Champions" within the teams. These referents become the guardians of the method, trained to assist their colleagues and ensure the consistency of the process.
Conclusion
The OKR method is much more than just a tracking tool. It's a comprehensive framework for translating an ambitious HR strategy into concrete and measurable actions. To succeed in its implementation, remember these three pillars:
- Focus on the impact (outcome) rather than on the activity (output).
- Ensure full sponsorship from management to guarantee alignment.
- Decouple OKRs from compensation to encourage ambition and the right to fail.
For a full immersion into the topic and to listen to the entire exchange, find Amelie Alleman's podcast.
Adopting OKRs is ultimately about choosing to transform the performance culture by giving everyone the clarity and purpose needed to not only work more, but more importantly, work better.