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high-output-management by guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills
npx skills add https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills --skill high-output-management像英特尔传奇 CEO 那样思考。应用安迪·格鲁夫的管理操作系统,通过杠杆作用、OKR 和系统化决策来最大化团队产出。
| 方面 | 详情 |
|---|---|
| 来源 | 安迪·格鲁夫 - 《高产出管理》(1983) |
| 核心原则 | "管理者的产出 = 其组织的产出 + 受其影响的相邻组织的产出。" |
| 为何重要 | 管理是一项技能,而不仅仅是一个头衔。格鲁夫对管理的工程学方法创造了现代科技管理实践,包括 OKR(被谷歌、英特尔、领英等公司使用)。 |
| Claude 执行 | 您决定 |
|---|
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在这里展示您的产品或服务
触达数万 AI 开发者,精准高效
| 构建分析框架 | 战略优先级 |
| 综合市场数据 | 竞争定位 |
| 识别机会 | 资源分配 |
| 创建战略选项 | 最终战略选择 |
| 建议实施方法 | 执行决策 |
I'm managing a team of [X] people doing [type of work].
Help me design a Grove-style management operating system.
I'm spending my time on [activities].
Apply High Output Management thinking to improve my leverage.
Help me create OKRs for [team/individual/company].
Context: [current goals, challenges]
## 生产原则
### 格鲁夫的关键洞见
管理无关地位或权威。
管理关乎产出。
**管理者的产出 =**
其团队的产出 +
受其影响的其他团队的产出
### 工厂类比
将您的团队视为一条生产线:
- 原材料 → 在制品 → 成品
- 输入 → 过程 → 输出
**您的工作:**
1. 识别限制步骤
2. 消除瓶颈
3. 提高吞吐量
4. 保持质量
### 管理者活动
您所做的一切都属于以下三类:
**1. 信息收集**
- 一对一会议
- 员工会议
- 报告
- 走动式管理
**2. 信息传递**
- 方向设定
- 教导
- 传达决策
- 反馈
**3. 决策制定**
- 优先级排序
- 资源分配
- 招聘/解雇
- 流程设计
### 杠杆方程
**杠杆 = 产出 / 活动**
高杠杆活动:
- 培训(效果在多人中倍增)
- 决策(解锁受阻的工作)
- 系统(自动化重复性工作)
低杠杆活动:
- 做别人也能做的工作
- 没有决策的会议
- 审查已经做得很好的工作
## 杠杆类型
### 高杠杆活动
**1. 培训**
花一小时培训 10 个人 = 10 小时的改进产出。
培训是所有管理活动中投资回报率最高的。
**问题:**
- 我可以培训团队中的谁?
- 我拥有哪些可以帮助他们的知识?
- 如何将培训系统化?
**2. 解锁工作的决策**
当您的决策成为瓶颈时,就做出决策。
延迟的决策会成倍地放大延迟。
**问题:**
- 人们在等待哪些决策?
- 哪些决策必须由我做出 vs. 可以委派?
- 我的决策速度有多快?
**3. 激励和认可**
巅峰表现需要动力,而不仅仅是方向。
认可对您来说无需成本,却能驱动产出。
**问题:**
- 本周谁值得认可?
- 团队中每个人的动力是什么?
- 我是在提供意义,而不仅仅是任务吗?
### 低杠杆陷阱
**1. 亲自做工作**
如果别人能做到您 70% 的水平,就委派出去。
您的工作是促成产出,而不是亲自产出。
**2. 参加不需要的会议**
每个会议都是无法进行高杠杆工作的时间。
审计:"没有我,这个会议还会开吗?"
**3. 过度审查工作**
审查是有价值的。过度审查就是微观管理。
根据风险和技能水平匹配审查深度。
### 干预陷阱
**您正在干预的迹象:**
- 做出本该由团队做出的决策
- 审查不需要审查的工作
- 参加每一个会议
- 人们事事等待您的批准
**解决方法:**
委派。然后不要收回。
## 格鲁夫论会议
### 两种类型的会议
**流程导向型会议(定期)**
- 一对一会议
- 员工会议
- 运营评审
目的:信息流、协调、节奏
**任务导向型会议(临时)**
- 需要决策
- 需要解决的问题
- 需要评估的机会
目的:做出决策,然后解散
### 一对一会议
**目的:**
- 信息交换(双向)
- 相互教导和辅导
- 问题浮现
- 关系建立
**频率:**
取决于任务相关成熟度(对于较新/有困难的人更频繁)。
每周是基准。对于资深/独立的人员可以每两周一次。
**议程:**
下属的议程,而非管理者的。
管理者提问,而非说教。
**结构:**
1. 下属分享进展顺利的事项
2. 下属分享挑战/阻碍
3. 管理者提出澄清性问题
4. 讨论发展/优先级
5. 管理者分享相关背景信息
**关键原则:**
一对一会议是他们的会议,不是您的。
### 员工会议
**目的:**
- 跨团队信息共享
- 同级问题解决
- 协调决策
**不属于的内容:**
- 报告可以阅读的内容
- 管理者说教
- 没有合适人员参与的决策
**引导:**
管理者作为引导者,而非主角。
"大家怎么看?"
### 运营评审
**目的:**
- 向高级管理层汇报
- 教学工具(每个人都能学习)
- 问责机制
**格式:**
正式演示 + 问答
每月或每季度
### 决策会议
**目的:**
做出具体决策
**要求:**
- 明确的待做决策
- 合适的人员在场
- 数据/选项已准备
- 以决策 + 负责人结束
**规则:**
如果您没有做出决策,会议就失败了。
## 目标与关键成果
### 起源
安迪·格鲁夫在英特尔发明了 OKR。
约翰·杜尔将其引入谷歌。
现被数千家公司使用。
### 框架
**目标:**
我们想要实现什么?
- 定性的
- 鼓舞人心的
- 有时间限制的(通常是季度)
**关键成果:**
我们如何知道我们实现了它?
- 定量的
- 可衡量的
- 每个目标 3-5 个
### 好的 OKR
**目标:** 成为中型市场公司的首选 CRM
**关键成果:**
1. 将 NPS 从 42 提高到 55
2. 将中型市场 ARR 从 500 万美元增长到 800 万美元
3. 将中型市场流失率从 8% 降低到 5%
4. 推出 3 个由中型市场研究确定的功能
### 差的 OKR
**目标:** 改进产品
**关键成果:**
1. 发布功能
2. 修复漏洞
3. 让客户满意
**问题:**
- 目标模糊
- 关键成果不可衡量
- 没有瞄准的目标
### OKR 原则
**1. 级联对齐**
公司 OKR → 团队 OKR → 个人 OKR
每个层级都支持其上一层级。
**2. 延伸目标**
70% 的达成率 = 成功
100% = 您的目标定得太低
如果您总是达成 OKR,说明它们不够有野心。
**3. 公开透明**
每个人都可以看到每个人的 OKR。
创造对齐和问责。
**4. 与薪酬分离**
OKR 用于聚焦和对齐。
不要与奖金挂钩(会导致压低目标)。
### OKR 节奏
**季度:**
- 季度初设定新的 OKR
- 季度末评审
- 评分(0.0 到 1.0)
**每周:**
- 检查关键成果进展
- 调整活动
- 浮现阻碍
**绝不:**
- 在季度中更改 OKR(除非发生重大变化)
- 让 OKR 变成任务清单
- 忘记评审
## 使管理与成熟度相匹配
### 框架
**任务相关成熟度:**
此人对这项特定任务的经验/能力如何?
注意:不是整体经验。是针对特定任务的。
### TRM 级别与管理风格
**低 TRM:**
- 对任务陌生
- 不确定,需要指导
- 没有支持可能会失败
**管理风格:** 结构化
- 清晰的指示
- 定义好的流程
- 频繁的检查
- 更多指令性
**中等 TRM:**
- 有一定经验
- 能独立完成基础工作
- 在高级任务上需要辅导
**管理风格:** 辅导式
- 多问少说
- 检查结果,而非过程
- 共同解决问题
- 指导决策
**高 TRM:**
- 此任务的专家
- 可能比您更懂
- 自我导向
**管理风格:** 授权式
- 设定目标,让他们执行
- 不频繁的检查
- 需要时可用
- 信任他们的判断
### 匹配原则
**错误匹配 = 问题:**
高 TRM + 指令式 = 失去动力
"你在微观管理我!"
低 TRM + 授权式 = 失败
"我不知道该做什么,也没人帮我。"
### TRM 是任务特定的
**示例:**
一位资深工程师(在编码方面高 TRM)晋升为技术负责人
在管理方面是低 TRM。相应地管理他们。
**重新评估时机:**
- 新任务/新职责
- 新环境
- 绩效下降
- 明确请求支持
输入:
"我管理着一个 8 人的工程师团队。我感觉自己整天都在开会,没有增加价值。帮我设计一个格鲁夫风格的管理系统。"
输出:
8 个直接下属 = 满负荷管理
格鲁夫建议最多 6-8 个直接下属。您已达到上限。专注于杠杆作用。
| 日期 | 上午 | 下午 |
|---|---|---|
| 周一 | 一对一会议(2 个) | 团队规划 |
| 周二 | 一对一会议(2 个) | 专注时间 |
| 周三 | 一对一会议(2 个) | 跨团队同步 |
| 周四 | 一对一会议(2 个) | 专注时间 |
| 周五 | 员工会议 | 决策时间 |
一对一会议总时间: 每周 4-8 小时(每次 30-60 分钟) 会议总时间: 约每周 12 小时 专注/杠杆时间: 约每周 20 小时
一对一会议(每次 30-60 分钟)
Template:
1. How are you doing? (5 min)
- Energy, mood, blockers
2. What did you accomplish? (10 min)
- Celebrate wins
- Surface issues early
3. What's challenging? (15 min)
- Blocker removal
- Coaching opportunities
4. What's next? (10 min)
- Priorities aligned
- Support needed
5. Anything else? (5 min)
- Open floor
员工会议(周五,60 分钟)
Agenda:
1. Announcements (5 min)
- Company updates, logistics
2. Metrics review (10 min)
- Key team metrics
- Trends, anomalies
3. Around the horn (20 min)
- Each person: 2 min
- What's going well, what's stuck
4. Discussion topic (20 min)
- One deep dive
- Rotating owner each week
5. Decisions needed (5 min)
- Quick decisions or schedule decision meeting
高杠杆活动(增加这些):
| 活动 | 当前 | 目标 | 方法 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 培训/辅导 | 每周 2 小时 | 每周 5 小时 | 为每次一对一会议增加 30 分钟技能培养 |
| 决策制定 | 被动反应 | 主动规划 | 安排周五下午的"决策时间" |
| 系统构建 | 每周 0 小时 | 每周 3 小时 | 每周一个系统改进 |
低杠杆活动(减少这些):
| 活动 | 当前 | 行动 |
|---|---|---|
| 状态会议 | 每周 4 小时 | 异步更新,仅针对讨论开会 |
| 代码审查 | 每周 5 小时 | 减少到仅关键 PR |
| 参加会议 | 很多 | 问:"他们需要我吗?" |
每周跟踪:
## Week of [Date]
### Team Output
- [ ] Shipped: [features/projects]
- [ ] Velocity: [points/items]
- [ ] Quality: [bugs, incidents]
### My Activities
- [ ] 1:1s completed: 8/8
- [ ] High leverage hours: [X]
- [ ] Decisions made: [list]
- [ ] Blockers removed: [list]
### Next Week Focus
- [ ] [Priority 1]
- [ ] [Priority 2]
- [ ] [Priority 3]
输入:
"帮我为我的产品营销团队创建 OKR。我们专注于推出新产品线并改进我们的竞争定位。"
输出:
关键成果:
| KR | 指标 | 当前 | 目标 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 | 启动资产按时交付 | N/A | 100% |
| 1.2 | 销售团队培训完成率 | 0% | 100% 启用 |
| 1.3 | 前 30 天产生的管道 | $0 | $500K |
| 1.4 | 分析师报道获得 | 0 | 3 位分析师 |
举措:
关键成果:
| KR | 指标 | 当前 | 目标 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1 | 相对于竞争对手 A 的销售胜率 | 35% | 50% |
| 2.2 | 销售使用竞争卡片的比例 | 20% | 80% |
| 2.3 | 竞争内容产出 | 2 个资产 | 10 个资产 |
| 2.4 | 销售信心评分(调查) | 3.2/5 | 4.2/5 |
举措:
关键成果:
| KR | 指标 | 当前 | 目标 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.1 | 从产品简介到启动的时间 | 8 周 | 5 周 |
| 3.2 | 资产复用率 | 15% | 40% |
| 3.3 | 销售对产品营销的满意度 | 3.5/5 | 4.5/5 |
举措:
每周:
每月:
季度末:
| 分数 | 含义 |
|---|---|
| 0.0-0.3 | 未能取得进展 |
| 0.4-0.6 | 有进展但未达标 |
| 0.7-0.9 | 交付强劲 |
| 1.0 | 完全达成(可能太容易了?) |
目标: OKR 平均分 0.7
输入:
"我有一位团队成员,做了 5 年工程师,但刚刚晋升为技术负责人。我该如何管理他们?"
输出:
整体经验: 高(5 年工程经验) 领导力的任务相关成熟度: 低
为何领导力方面是低 TRM:
阶段 1:前 30 天 - 结构化支持
| 活动 | 频率 | 目的 |
|---|---|---|
| 一对一会议 | 每周 2 次 | 密切监控 |
| 检查点 | 每天 | 及早发现问题 |
| 影子跟随 | 关键会议 | 以身作则进行教导 |
辅导重点:
明确指导: "在第一个月,我希望您在做出以下决策之前告诉我:[列表]。不是因为我不信任您,而是因为我想帮助您学习这些决策背后的判断。"
阶段 2:第 30-90 天 - 辅导模式
| 活动 | 频率 | 目的 |
|---|---|---|
| 一对一会议 | 每周 | 反思和学习 |
| 检查点 | 每周 2 次 | 较轻的接触 |
| 事后复盘 | 关键情况后 | 提取经验教训 |
辅导重点:
逐步:
阶段 3:第 90 天起 - 授权模式
| 活动 | 频率 | 目的 |
|---|---|---|
| 一对一会议 | 每周或每两周 | 伙伴关系 |
| 检查点 | 需要时 | 随叫随到 |
此时:
遇到困难(需要干预):
表现出色(值得庆祝):
"[姓名],您一直是一位优秀的工程师,我对您转任技术负责人感到兴奋。我想明确一点:这是一份需要新技能的新工作。
在第一个月,我会比平时更亲力亲为。不是因为我不信任您——我信任——而是因为领导力与工程有不同的失败模式,我想帮助您取得成功。
随着您越来越适应,我会逐步放手。我的目标是在 90 天内让您能够独立管理您的团队。
您有什么问题吗?您最担心的是什么?"
## Week of [Date] - Management Review
### Team Output
- Shipped: [list]
- Progress: [key initiatives]
- Quality: [issues, wins]
### Leverage Assessment
- High leverage hours: [X] / Target: [Y]
- Low leverage activities cut: [list]
- Decisions made: [list]
- Blockers removed: [list]
### People
- 1:1s completed: [X]/[Y]
- Development conversations: [who]
- Recognition given: [who, what]
- Performance concerns: [who, what]
### Improvement
- What did I do this week that only I could do?
- What did I do that someone else should do?
- What should I do more of next week?
## 1:1 with [Name] - [Date]
### Check-in
- How are you doing? (1-10)
- What's your energy like?
### Their Agenda
-
-
-
### My Questions
-
-
### Discussion Notes
### Decisions/Commitments
- [ ]
- [ ]
### Follow-ups
- [ ] Me:
- [ ] Them:
### Next 1:1
- Date:
- Topic to revisit:
模式 : centaur
name: high-output-management category: leadership subcategory: management version: 1.0 author: MKTG Skills source_expert: Andy Grove source_work: High Output Management difficulty: intermediate estimated_value: $5,000+ management training tags: [management, Andy Grove, Intel, OKRs, leverage, meetings, performance] created: 2026-01-25 updated: 2026-01-25
每周安装量
58
代码仓库
GitHub 星标数
44
首次出现
2026 年 2 月 13 日
安全审计
安装于
gemini-cli57
opencode57
codex56
github-copilot55
cursor55
kimi-cli54
Think like Intel's legendary CEO. Apply Andy Grove's management operating system to maximize your team's output through leverage, OKRs, and systematic decision-making.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Source | Andy Grove - High Output Management (1983) |
| Core Principle | "A manager's output = Output of their organization + Output of neighboring organizations under their influence." |
| Why This Matters | Management is a skill, not just a title. Grove's engineering approach to management created modern tech management practices, including OKRs (used by Google, Intel, LinkedIn, etc.). |
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures analysis frameworks | Strategic priorities |
| Synthesizes market data | Competitive positioning |
| Identifies opportunities | Resource allocation |
| Creates strategic options | Final strategy selection |
| Suggests implementation approaches | Execution decisions |
I'm managing a team of [X] people doing [type of work].
Help me design a Grove-style management operating system.
I'm spending my time on [activities].
Apply High Output Management thinking to improve my leverage.
Help me create OKRs for [team/individual/company].
Context: [current goals, challenges]
## The Production Principle
### Grove's Key Insight
Management isn't about status or authority.
Management is about OUTPUT.
**A manager's output =**
Output of their team +
Output of other teams they influence
### The Factory Analogy
Think of your team as a production line:
- Raw materials → Work in progress → Finished goods
- Input → Process → Output
**Your job:**
1. Identify limiting steps
2. Remove bottlenecks
3. Increase throughput
4. Maintain quality
### Manager Activities
Everything you do falls into three categories:
**1. Information gathering**
- 1:1s
- Staff meetings
- Reports
- Walking around
**2. Information giving**
- Direction setting
- Teaching
- Decisions communicated
- Feedback
**3. Decision-making**
- Prioritization
- Resource allocation
- Hiring/firing
- Process design
### The Leverage Equation
**Leverage = Output / Activity**
High leverage activities:
- Training (multiplies across many people)
- Decisions (unlock blocked work)
- Systems (automate repeated work)
Low leverage activities:
- Doing work others could do
- Meetings without decisions
- Reviewing what's already done well
## Types of Leverage
### High Leverage Activities
**1. Training**
An hour spent training 10 people = 10 hours of improved output.
Training has the highest ROI of any management activity.
**Questions:**
- Who on my team could I train?
- What knowledge do I have that would help them?
- How can I systematize training?
**2. Decisions that unblock work**
When your decision is the bottleneck, make it.
Delayed decisions multiply delays.
**Questions:**
- What decisions are people waiting on?
- Which decisions must be mine vs. delegated?
- How fast am I making decisions?
**3. Motivation and recognition**
Peak performance requires motivation, not just direction.
Recognition costs you nothing but drives output.
**Questions:**
- Who deserves recognition this week?
- What motivates each person on my team?
- Am I providing meaning, not just tasks?
### Low Leverage Traps
**1. Doing work yourself**
If someone else can do it 70% as well, delegate.
Your job is enabling output, not doing output.
**2. Attending meetings you don't need**
Every meeting is time not doing high-leverage work.
Audit: "Would this meeting happen without me?"
**3. Over-reviewing work**
Review is valuable. Over-review is micromanagement.
Match review depth to risk and skill level.
### The Meddling Trap
**Signs you're meddling:**
- Making decisions your team should make
- Reviewing work that doesn't need review
- Being in every meeting
- People wait for your approval on everything
**The fix:**
Delegate. Then don't take it back.
## Grove on Meetings
### Two Types of Meetings
**Process-oriented meetings (Regular)**
- 1:1s
- Staff meetings
- Operations reviews
Purpose: Information flow, coordination, rhythm
**Mission-oriented meetings (Ad hoc)**
- Decisions needed
- Problems to solve
- Opportunities to evaluate
Purpose: Make a decision, then disband
### The 1:1
**Purpose:**
- Information exchange (both ways)
- Mutual teaching and coaching
- Problem surfacing
- Relationship building
**Frequency:**
Depends on task-relevant maturity (more often for newer/struggling people).
Weekly is baseline. Bi-weekly for senior/independent people.
**Agenda:**
Report's agenda, not manager's.
Manager asks questions, doesn't lecture.
**Structure:**
1. Report shares what's going well
2. Report shares challenges/blockers
3. Manager asks clarifying questions
4. Discussion of development/priorities
5. Manager shares relevant context
**Key principle:**
The 1:1 is their meeting, not yours.
### Staff Meetings
**Purpose:**
- Cross-team information sharing
- Peer-level problem solving
- Coordination decisions
**What doesn't belong:**
- Reporting what could be read
- Manager lecturing
- Decisions without the right people
**Facilitation:**
Manager as facilitator, not star.
"What does the group think?"
### Operations Reviews
**Purpose:**
- Present to senior management
- Teaching tool (everyone learns)
- Accountability mechanism
**Format:**
Formal presentation + Q&A
Monthly or quarterly
### Decision Meetings
**Purpose:**
Make a specific decision
**Requirements:**
- Clear decision to be made
- Right people in the room
- Data/options prepared
- End with decision + owner
**Rule:**
If you didn't make a decision, the meeting failed.
## Objectives and Key Results
### Origin
Andy Grove invented OKRs at Intel.
John Doerr brought them to Google.
Now used by thousands of companies.
### The Framework
**Objective:**
What do we want to achieve?
- Qualitative
- Inspirational
- Time-bound (usually quarterly)
**Key Results:**
How will we know we achieved it?
- Quantitative
- Measurable
- 3-5 per objective
### Good OKRs
**Objective:** Become the preferred CRM for mid-market companies
**Key Results:**
1. Increase NPS from 42 to 55
2. Grow mid-market ARR from $5M to $8M
3. Reduce mid-market churn from 8% to 5%
4. Launch 3 features identified by mid-market research
### Bad OKRs
**Objective:** Improve the product
**Key Results:**
1. Ship features
2. Fix bugs
3. Make customers happy
**Problems:**
- Objective is vague
- Key results aren't measurable
- No targets to aim for
### OKR Principles
**1. Cascading alignment**
Company OKRs → Team OKRs → Individual OKRs
Each level supports the level above.
**2. Stretch goals**
70% achievement = success
100% = you aimed too low
If you always hit OKRs, they're not ambitious enough.
**3. Public and transparent**
Everyone can see everyone's OKRs.
Creates alignment and accountability.
**4. Separate from compensation**
OKRs are for focus and alignment.
Don't tie to bonuses (creates sandbagging).
### OKR Cadence
**Quarterly:**
- Set new OKRs at quarter start
- Review at quarter end
- Score (0.0 to 1.0)
**Weekly:**
- Check in on key results
- Adjust activities
- Surface blockers
**Never:**
- Change OKRs mid-quarter (unless massive shift)
- Let OKRs become task lists
- Forget to review
## Matching Management to Maturity
### The Framework
**Task-Relevant Maturity (TRM):**
How experienced/capable is this person at THIS specific task?
Note: Not overall experience. Task-specific.
### TRM Levels and Management Style
**Low TRM:**
- New to task
- Uncertain, needs guidance
- Might fail without support
**Management style:** Structured
- Clear instructions
- Defined process
- Frequent check-ins
- More directive
**Medium TRM:**
- Some experience
- Can do basics independently
- Needs coaching for advanced
**Management style:** Coaching
- Ask more than tell
- Check results, not process
- Problem-solve together
- Guide decisions
**High TRM:**
- Expert at this task
- Knows more than you might
- Self-directed
**Management style:** Delegation
- Set objectives, let them run
- Infrequent check-ins
- Available when needed
- Trust their judgment
### The Matching Principle
**Wrong match = Problems:**
High TRM + Directive = Demotivation
"You're micromanaging me!"
Low TRM + Delegation = Failure
"I didn't know what I was doing and no one helped."
### TRM Is Task-Specific
**Example:**
A senior engineer (High TRM at coding) who becomes a manager
is Low TRM at management. Manage them accordingly.
**Reassess when:**
- New tasks/responsibilities
- New environment
- Declining performance
- Explicit request for support
Input:
"I manage a team of 8 engineers. I feel like I'm in meetings all day and not adding value. Help me design a Grove-style management system."
Output:
8 direct reports = Full management load
Grove recommends 6-8 direct reports maximum. You're at capacity. Focus on leverage.
| Day | AM | PM |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | 1:1s (2) | Team Planning |
| Tuesday | 1:1s (2) | Focus Time |
| Wednesday | 1:1s (2) | Cross-Team Sync |
| Thursday | 1:1s (2) | Focus Time |
| Friday | Staff Meeting | Decision Time |
Total 1:1 time: 4-8 hours/week (30-60 min each) Total meeting time: ~12 hours/week Focus/leverage time: ~20 hours/week
1:1s (30-60 min each)
Template:
1. How are you doing? (5 min)
- Energy, mood, blockers
2. What did you accomplish? (10 min)
- Celebrate wins
- Surface issues early
3. What's challenging? (15 min)
- Blocker removal
- Coaching opportunities
4. What's next? (10 min)
- Priorities aligned
- Support needed
5. Anything else? (5 min)
- Open floor
Staff Meeting (Friday, 60 min)
Agenda:
1. Announcements (5 min)
- Company updates, logistics
2. Metrics review (10 min)
- Key team metrics
- Trends, anomalies
3. Around the horn (20 min)
- Each person: 2 min
- What's going well, what's stuck
4. Discussion topic (20 min)
- One deep dive
- Rotating owner each week
5. Decisions needed (5 min)
- Quick decisions or schedule decision meeting
High Leverage Activities (Increase these):
| Activity | Current | Target | How |
|---|---|---|---|
| Training/coaching | 2 hr/wk | 5 hr/wk | Add 30 min to each 1:1 for skill building |
| Decision-making | Reactive | Proactive | Schedule "Decision Time" Friday PM |
| System building | 0 hr/wk | 3 hr/wk | One system improvement per week |
Low Leverage Activities (Reduce these):
| Activity | Current | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Status meetings | 4 hr/wk | Async updates, meeting only for discussion |
| Code review | 5 hr/wk | Reduce to critical PRs only |
| Attending meetings | Many | Ask: "Do they need me?" |
Track weekly:
## Week of [Date]
### Team Output
- [ ] Shipped: [features/projects]
- [ ] Velocity: [points/items]
- [ ] Quality: [bugs, incidents]
### My Activities
- [ ] 1:1s completed: 8/8
- [ ] High leverage hours: [X]
- [ ] Decisions made: [list]
- [ ] Blockers removed: [list]
### Next Week Focus
- [ ] [Priority 1]
- [ ] [Priority 2]
- [ ] [Priority 3]
Input:
"Help me create OKRs for my product marketing team. We're focused on launching a new product line and improving our competitive positioning."
Output:
Key Results:
| KR | Metric | Current | Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 | Launch assets delivered on time | N/A | 100% |
| 1.2 | Sales team trained | 0% | 100% enabled |
| 1.3 | Pipeline generated in first 30 days | $0 | $500K |
| 1.4 | Analyst coverage secured | 0 | 3 analysts |
Initiatives:
Key Results:
| KR | Metric | Current | Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1 | Sales win rate vs. competitor A | 35% | 50% |
| 2.2 | Battle cards usage by sales | 20% | 80% |
| 2.3 | Competitive content produced | 2 assets | 10 assets |
| 2.4 | Sales confidence score (survey) | 3.2/5 | 4.2/5 |
Initiatives:
Key Results:
| KR | Metric | Current | Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.1 | Time from product brief to launch | 8 weeks | 5 weeks |
| 3.2 | Asset reuse rate | 15% | 40% |
| 3.3 | Sales satisfaction with PMM | 3.5/5 | 4.5/5 |
Initiatives:
Weekly:
Monthly:
End of Quarter:
| Score | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 0.0-0.3 | Failed to make progress |
| 0.4-0.6 | Progress but fell short |
| 0.7-0.9 | Strong delivery |
| 1.0 | Fully achieved (maybe too easy?) |
Target: Average 0.7 across OKRs
Input:
"I have a team member who's been an engineer for 5 years but just got promoted to tech lead. How do I manage them?"
Output:
Overall experience: High (5 years engineering) Task-relevant maturity for leadership: Low
Why Low TRM for leadership:
Phase 1: First 30 Days - Structured Support
| Activity | Frequency | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 1:1s | 2x/week | Close monitoring |
| Check-ins | Daily | Surface problems early |
| Shadowing | Key meetings | Teach by example |
Coaching focus:
Explicit guidance: "For the first month, I want you to tell me before you make these decisions: [list]. Not because I don't trust you, but because I want to help you learn the judgment behind them."
Phase 2: Days 30-90 - Coaching Mode
| Activity | Frequency | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 1:1s | Weekly | Reflection and learning |
| Check-ins | 2x/week | Lighter touch |
| Debrief | After key situations | Extract learnings |
Coaching focus:
Gradually:
Phase 3: Day 90+ - Delegation Mode
| Activity | Frequency | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 1:1s | Weekly or bi-weekly | Partnership |
| Check-ins | As needed | Available when called |
By now:
Struggling (intervene):
Thriving (celebrate):
"[Name], you've been a strong engineer, and I'm excited about your move to tech lead. I want to be clear: this is a new job with new skills.
For the first month, I'm going to be more hands-on than usual. Not because I don't trust you—because I do—but because leadership has different failure modes than engineering, and I want to set you up to succeed.
As you get more comfortable, I'll step back. My goal is for you to be running your team independently within 90 days.
What questions do you have? What are you most nervous about?"
## Week of [Date] - Management Review
### Team Output
- Shipped: [list]
- Progress: [key initiatives]
- Quality: [issues, wins]
### Leverage Assessment
- High leverage hours: [X] / Target: [Y]
- Low leverage activities cut: [list]
- Decisions made: [list]
- Blockers removed: [list]
### People
- 1:1s completed: [X]/[Y]
- Development conversations: [who]
- Recognition given: [who, what]
- Performance concerns: [who, what]
### Improvement
- What did I do this week that only I could do?
- What did I do that someone else should do?
- What should I do more of next week?
## 1:1 with [Name] - [Date]
### Check-in
- How are you doing? (1-10)
- What's your energy like?
### Their Agenda
-
-
-
### My Questions
-
-
### Discussion Notes
### Decisions/Commitments
- [ ]
- [ ]
### Follow-ups
- [ ] Me:
- [ ] Them:
### Next 1:1
- Date:
- Topic to revisit:
Mode : centaur
name: high-output-management category: leadership subcategory: management version: 1.0 author: MKTG Skills source_expert: Andy Grove source_work: High Output Management difficulty: intermediate estimated_value: $5,000+ management training tags: [management, Andy Grove, Intel, OKRs, leverage, meetings, performance] created: 2026-01-25 updated: 2026-01-25
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