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The philosopher and educator John Dewey went a step further: “We do not learn from experience … we learn from reflecting on experience.”
Here are some reflections for closing out an OKR cycle:
• Did I accomplish all of my objectives? If so, what contributed to my success?
• If not, what obstacles did I encounter?
• If I were to rewrite a goal achieved in full, what would I change?
• What have I learned that might alter my approach to the next cycle’s OKRs?
Measure What Matters
John Doerr
Level 1: Conscious vs Unconscious My personal belief is that every single person on the internet, whether they realize it or not, is playing “the game.” The game is simple. When you post a piece of content—whether it’s a picture of you and your family on Facebook, or a video of you jumping into a pool in a bikini on Instagram, or a link to a New York Times article on LinkedIn—you are sharing a part of yourself at scale. The more you share, the more people learn about you. The more people learn about you, the more conversations happen, the more opportunities present themselves, and the more a scalable digital version of your real-life self begins to crystalize on the internet.
The Art and Business of Online Writing
Nicolas Cole
By setting a single Objective with only three Key Results to measure it, you can provide the kind of focus needed to achieve great things despite life’s little distractions.
Radical Focus SECOND EDITION
Christina Wodtke
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