Goal Setting Okrs

v0.1.0

Set and track goals for a solopreneur business using OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) and related frameworks. Use when defining business goals, creating qua...

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byJatin Khatri@jk-0001
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Purpose & Capability
The name/description (goal-setting, OKRs for solopreneurs) matches the SKILL.md content: a playbook for vision, annual goals, quarterly OKRs, monthly priorities, weekly planning, and review cadences. Nothing requested by the skill (no env vars, no binaries, no installs) is out of scope.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md contains only guidance and templates for creating and reviewing goals. It does not instruct the agent to read files, access environment variables, call external endpoints, or perform system actions outside the stated task.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files are present (instruction-only). This is the lowest-risk install model and consistent with a documentation/playbook skill.
Credentials
The skill requires no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. That is proportionate for a guidance/playbook skill.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill is not force-included (always: false). It is user-invocable and (by platform default) may be invoked autonomously; autonomous invocation is normal and not by itself a problem, but if you restrict autonomous behavior across your agent, remember this skill is subject to those platform rules.
Assessment
This skill is an instruction-only OKR playbook and appears coherent and low-risk: it does not install software or request credentials. Consider whether you trust the publisher (source/homepage unknown) purely for provenance reasons; if provenance matters, prefer skills with a known homepage or publisher. If you want tighter control, restrict which skills your agent can invoke autonomously or only call this skill manually. If the skill is later updated to include installs, code, or requests for secrets, re-evaluate before enabling.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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v0.1.0
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Goal Setting with OKRs

Overview

OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) were designed for large companies, but the core idea is brutally useful for solopreneurs: set a bold, inspiring objective, then define 2-3 measurable results that prove you hit it. This playbook adapts OKRs for a one-person business — simpler, faster, and directly tied to your daily work.


The Goal Hierarchy

Goals exist at multiple levels. Each level informs the one below it. If you only set goals at one level, you either drift strategically or get lost in tactics.

VISION (lifetime / 5-10 years)
  ↓ informs
ANNUAL GOALS (12 months)
  ↓ broken into
QUARTERLY OKRs (3 months)
  ↓ broken into
MONTHLY PRIORITIES (top 3 things this month)
  ↓ broken into
WEEKLY TASKS (what you actually do each week)

This playbook builds from the top down.


Step 1: Define Your Vision (Once, Revisit Yearly)

Your vision is not a goal — it has no deadline and no metric. It is the direction you're heading. One or two sentences max.

Examples:

  • "Build a business that gives me financial freedom and creative autonomy while helping freelancers work more efficiently."
  • "Become the go-to automation consultant for mid-stage SaaS companies, building a portfolio that speaks for itself."

Write it down. Put it somewhere you see it daily. Every goal you set below should move you toward this vision or be cut.


Step 2: Set Annual Goals (Once Per Year)

Annual goals are bigger and bolder than quarterly OKRs. They set the direction for the entire year. 3-5 annual goals max.

Format:

ANNUAL GOAL: [Bold, inspiring statement of what you want this year]
WHY IT MATTERS: [How this connects to your vision]
ROUGH SUCCESS METRIC: [What does "done" look like at year end?]

Example:

ANNUAL GOAL: Grow Khatri Automations to $120K revenue
WHY IT MATTERS: Proves the consulting model is sustainable and funds product development
ROUGH SUCCESS METRIC: Total invoiced revenue ≥ $120K by Dec 31

Annual goals are not OKRs yet. They are the north stars that quarterly OKRs serve.


Step 3: Write Quarterly OKRs

This is the core of the system. Each quarter, write 2-3 OKRs that together move you toward annual goals.

OKR structure:

OBJECTIVE: [Bold, qualitative statement. Inspiring. Slightly ambitious — not guaranteed.]

KEY RESULT 1: [Measurable. Binary or percentage. You hit it or you don't.]
KEY RESULT 2: [Measurable.]
KEY RESULT 3: [Measurable. Optional — 2 is fine if they're strong.]

Key Result rules:

  • Must be measurable. "Improve marketing" fails. "Publish 12 tutorials with avg 500+ views each" passes.
  • Ambitious but not impossible. Aim to hit 70-80% on average. 100% every quarter = targets too easy.
  • Things YOU mostly control. "Get 50 customers" is partly yours. "Go viral" is mostly not.

Example OKR:

OBJECTIVE: Establish thought leadership in the n8n automation space

KEY RESULT 1: Publish 12 in-depth automation tutorials (1/week), avg 500+ views each
KEY RESULT 2: Grow LinkedIn followers from 800 to 1,200
KEY RESULT 3: Get mentioned or linked by 3 external blogs or newsletters

Solopreneur limit: 2-3 OKRs per quarter max. More = nothing gets focus. If you have 5 important things, pick the 2-3 that matter most THIS quarter. The others wait.


Step 4: Monthly Priorities (Top 3)

At the start of each month, look at your quarterly OKRs and ask: "What are the 3 most important things I can do THIS MONTH to move these forward?"

MONTH: [Month]

TOP 3 PRIORITIES:
  1. [Specific, actionable. Tied to a Key Result.]
  2. [Specific, actionable. Tied to a Key Result.]
  3. [Specific, actionable. Tied to a Key Result.]

EVERYTHING ELSE IS SECONDARY. Hit these 3 = successful month.

This is your filter. New task or opportunity comes in? Check: does it serve one of these 3? If not, it waits or it replaces one (only if it's genuinely more important).


Step 5: Weekly Planning (15 min, Sunday or Monday)

Translate monthly priorities into concrete tasks for the week.

WEEK OF: [dates]

FROM PRIORITY 1: [1-2 tasks]
FROM PRIORITY 2: [1-2 tasks]
FROM PRIORITY 3: [1-2 tasks]

TOTAL: 5-8 tasks max. More = not realistic for one person.

Time-block every task. Assign it to a specific day and time slot. Unscheduled tasks don't get done. No one is holding you accountable except your calendar.


Step 6: Review Cadences

Reviews are where learning happens. Without them, OKRs are a document you wrote in January and forgot.

Weekly (Friday, 5 min):

  • Tasks completed vs. planned?
  • Why did anything slip?
  • What's next week's list?

Monthly (last day, 15 min):

  • Hit the top 3 priorities?
  • OKR Key Results — on pace / behind / ahead?
  • Adjust anything for next month?

Quarterly (end of quarter, 1 hour):

  • Score each Key Result: 0-100%. Aim for 70-80% average.
  • What worked? What didn't? Lessons?
  • Write new OKRs for next quarter.
  • Are OKRs still aligned to annual goals, or has the annual goal shifted?

Annual (once, 2 hours):

  • Annual goals hit? By how much?
  • Has your vision evolved?
  • New annual goals for the coming year.

OKR Mistakes to Avoid

  • Key Results that are activities, not outcomes. "Write blog posts" = activity. "Grow organic traffic 30%" = outcome.
  • Too many OKRs. Two strong beats five weak.
  • Never reviewing. OKRs without reviews are just wishes on paper.
  • Punishing yourself for missing targets. OKRs are calibrated to be ambitious. Missing 30% is normal. Reviews are for learning, not guilt.
  • Abandoning OKRs when business gets busy. That's exactly when they matter most — they keep you strategic instead of reactive.

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