It’s January and by now millions of us have made resolutions and probably broken them already. The second Friday of January is known as “Quitter’s Day.”
OKRs—objectives and key results—are a method for businesses to set and align company goals. The objective is your goal and the KRs are the ways to reach your goals. Venture capitalist John Doerr learned about OKRs while working at Intel, brought it to Google, and later became the framework’s leading evangelist.
Christina Wodtke talks about how to use OKRs for your personal life, and maybe as a way to come up with better New Year’s resolutions. She looked at her past three years of personal OKRs:
Looking at the pattern laid out in front of me, I finally saw what I’d been missing. My problem wasn’t work-life balance. My problem was that I didn’t like the kind of work I was doing.
The key results kept failing because the objective was wrong. It wasn’t about balance. It was about joy.
This is the second thing key results do for you: when they consistently fail, they’re telling you something. Not that you lack discipline—that you might be chasing the wrong goal entirely.
And I love Wodtke’s line here: “New Year’s resolutions fail because they’re wishes, not plans.“ She continues:
They fail because “eat better” and “be healthier” and “find balance” are too vague to act on and too fuzzy to measure.
Key results fix this. Not because measurement is magic, but because the act of measuring forces clarity. It makes you confront what you actually want. And sometimes, when the data piles up, it reveals that what you wanted wasn’t the thing you needed at all.

Your Resolution Isn’t the Problem. Your Measurement Is.
It’s January, and millions of people have made the same resolution: “Eat better.” By February, most will have abandoned it. Not because they lack willpower or discipline. Because …






















