From executive
Designs high-leverage execution systems that translate strategic choices into measurable output — building mechanisms (not intentions), managing controllable inputs, and optimizing team topology for flow. Use when designing OKR frameworks, operational processes, or execution rhythms.
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Operational excellence is the discipline of creating high-leverage execution systems that translate strategic choices into measurable output. This skill focuses on building "Mechanisms" (not just good intentions), managing by controllable inputs, and optimizing team topology for maximum flow.
Operational excellence is the discipline of creating high-leverage execution systems that translate strategic choices into measurable output. This skill focuses on building "Mechanisms" (not just good intentions), managing by controllable inputs, and optimizing team topology for maximum flow.
A manager's output is the output of the units under their influence. High-leverage activities—those that affect many people for a long time—must be prioritized over low-leverage tactical "busyness."
If a process fails, do not ask for more "effort" or "better focus." Build a Mechanism—a recurring, automated process that includes a tool, a training, and an audit to ensure the problem is solved structurally.
You cannot control outputs like revenue or stock price. You can only control inputs like selection, price, and convenience. Operational excellence requires identifying and obsessively measuring the inputs that drive the desired outputs.
Management style is not fixed; it must adapt to the subordinate's experience level in a specific task. High TRM requires a hands-off, objective-oriented approach; low TRM requires detailed, process-oriented monitoring.
Design internal operations as modular service layers (APIs). If an internal service is efficient enough to be externalized, it becomes a profit center rather than a cost center. This forces internal units to compete at market standards.
Model the operational flow and identify the "bottleneck" or "limiting step"—the part of the process that is most difficult, expensive, or slow. (Source: Grove, Ch. 2)
Establish a measurement framework that focuses on leading indicators. (Source: Doerr, Ch. 1-5)
Transform a solution into a permanent system. (Source: Bryar, Ch. 1)
Ensure team size and structure support flow. (Source: Larson, Ch. 1)
Predict the consequences of operational changes. (Source: Farnam Street, "Second-Order Thinking")
non-fiction-precision — Use written narratives (6-pagers) to describe operational plans.feedback-coach — Pair OKRs with CFRs (Conversations, Feedback, Recognition).decision-frameworks — To choose between competing operational priorities.npx claudepluginhub joellewis/skill-library --plugin executiveApplies Andy Grove's High Output Management principles to diagnose team productivity, design processes, and guide decisions on team structure, meetings, performance, and leverage.
Sets up an OKR (Objectives and Key Results) system to align team and organizational goals with measurable outcomes. Useful when defining quarterly or annual objectives and cascading them across teams.
Provides OKR design discipline: outcome statements, key results, scoring, mid-quarter recalibration. Distinguishes sandbagged, aspirational, and stretch OKRs. Use for designing or fixing OKR practices.