IRL OKRs - Coté's Commonplace Book - Issue #60
Family pets as OKRs in FY23. Executives to talk about getting better at software. Scroll to the end to see bacon frying.
IRL OKRs
Objective: enhance our comfort, peace of mind, and sense of comradely by owning a dog.
Key Result: walk dog three times a day so that it does not pee on the floor.
Key Result: feed dog twice a day, check for fresh water once a day, clean food bowls once a week.
Key Result: fully groom dog once a month: clipping nails, brushing out hair when the seasons change, washing dog.
Key Result: dog sleeps in bed once a night
Key Result: smile five more times a day.
Key Result: parents perform 100% tasks related to pet care for children who said they would.
Objective: acquire a snake…
I'm Hosting an Executive Get Together on April 26th in Chicago
I do a lot of executive round tables - 13 last year, 4 already this year. We're finally have some in-person ones again. We have one coming up on April 26th in Chicago. Before the usual Executive Hanging-out I'll have a discussion with an executive about how they've been doing all the transformation stuff, probably focusing on the challenges they've faced scaling "doing better software" to more and more teams. We'll probably talk about "we don't talk about PaaS" too.
I don't know how they pick people for this invite only event, but if you think you belong there, register for it and see what happens!
Original content
Software Defined Talk #351: You can’t put it all on one slide — www.softwaredefinedtalk.com
This week we discuss the potential consequences of the EU’s Digital Markets Act, Gaming M&A and Docker’s latest funding. Plus, Coté offers advice about snakes….
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Dunbar’s number and how speaking is 2.8x better than picking fleas — interconnected.org Five people is the average amount of people for holding a single threaded conversation.
Habits are Shifting for a Generation Smitten with Smartphones — itchronicles.com “Millennials are twice as likely to use their phone while on the toilet (69%)” - those other 31% are missing out!
Almost 40% of IT workers are now working fully flexibly — www.computerweekly.com “Just over 30% said they now work from home all the time, and 27% said they work from home several days a week – a contrast to the 2019/20 survey, in which only 10% of respondents said they worked from home all the time, and 46% said they worked from home less than one day a week.”
Developers spend most of their time figuring the system out — lepiter.io
This old, but probably still applies. Once you make developers more productive, they end up doing more and you forget all those little things they used to spend time on.
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