Supercell avoids emotional decision-making by being radically transparent with data. A daily email with key metrics for every game is sent to the entire company. This ensures everyone understands the performance criteria and accepts the rigorous, data-driven decisions to kill projects that don't meet specific thresholds.
The availability of real-time data in ad tech allows for a "daily rigor" management style. Instead of long feedback loops, leaders can steer the business daily in "war room" meetings, tracking deals and numbers to maintain intensity and react quickly to performance.
Founder Jesse Cole largely ignores financial meetings, focusing instead on metrics that directly impact fan experience. He obsessively tracks merchandise line wait times, game speed, and trick plays, believing that optimizing these customer-facing KPIs is the true driver of long-term financial success.
To reignite growth, Supercell created two distinct operating models. Teams managing existing hit games adopted a 'scale-up' playbook, focusing on iteration with larger teams. Teams developing new titles operated like independent 'startups,' focused on high-risk innovation with small, agile teams.
To combat complacency, Supercell's CEO opened an all-hands meeting by showing an animated slide of their declining global ranking year-by-year. This act of transparent and painful self-critique from the top created the psychological safety and urgency needed to rally the team around a new strategy.
To get buy-in for developer experience initiatives, don't use generic metrics. First, identify leadership's primary concerns—be it market share, profit margin, or velocity. Then, frame your measurements and impact using that specific language to ensure your work resonates.
PhonePe practices radical transparency by sharing its board decks, complete with financial data like P&L and burn rates, across the entire company. Unrestricted, cross-departmental data access fosters high engagement, ownership, and unexpected innovation.
To bridge the communication gap with leadership, reframe common product metrics into financial terms. Instead of reporting daily active users (DAU), calculate and present average revenue per daily active user (ARPA-DAU). Similarly, frame quality initiatives not as ticket reduction but as operating expense (OPEX) savings.
Deciding which products or services to cut can be an emotional process for founders. Amy Porterfield advises removing the "drama" by relying on data. By tracking metrics for each offer, she could make objective decisions to retire those that didn't make business sense, simplifying her path to growth.
To avoid "set it and forget it" goal setting, Atlassian teams use a monthly ritual. They score progress on their OKRs and write a public, tweet-sized update. This lightweight, consistent practice ensures accountability, maintains visibility across the company, and prompts regular re-evaluation.
Supercell's culture redefines failure. Instead of punishing unsuccessful projects, they are treated as learning experiments. The company literally celebrates killing a game with champagne, reinforcing that learning from a false hypothesis is a valuable outcome.