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.
A founder's real boss is their customer base. While keeping a board happy is important, some CEOs become so consumed with managing up that they lose sight of the product and customer needs, ultimately driving the company off a cliff despite running perfect board meetings.
Instead of focusing solely on conversion rates, measure 'engagement quality'—metrics that signal user confidence, like dwell time, scroll depth, and journey progression. The philosophy is that if you successfully help users understand the content and feel confident, conversions will naturally follow as a positive side effect.
For Nike's innovators, the ultimate measure of success isn't market performance but the user's genuine joy upon experiencing the product. This "athlete's smile" confirms that a meaningful problem has been solved, serving as a leading indicator that commercial success will naturally follow.
A common OKR failure is assigning teams high-level business metrics (like ARR) which they can only contribute to, not directly influence. Success requires focusing on influenceable customer behaviors while demonstrating how they correlate to the company's broader contribution-level goals.
Escape the trap of chasing top-line revenue. Instead, make contribution margin (revenue minus COGS, ad spend, and discounts) your primary success metric. This provides a truer picture of business health and aligns the entire organization around profitable, sustainable growth rather than vanity metrics.
Instead of tracking hours or rewarding a "996" work culture, the V0 team's performance compass is business impact, measured in dollars. New hires are explicitly expected to deliver millions in impact within their first year by fixing issues that cause customer churn or frustration.
Robinhood is shifting its planning process to focus on what will be announced at its next public product keynote. Instead of setting abstract internal goals, this aligns the entire company around concrete, customer-facing deliverables and creates a powerful, immovable deadline for shipping.
The most durable growth comes from seeing your job as connecting users to the product's value. This reframes the work away from short-term, transactional metric hacking toward holistically improving the user journey, which builds a healthier business.
As a public company CEO, Dylan Field actively avoids focusing on daily stock fluctuations. He believes the only controllable factors are the business inputs—improving the product and creating customer value. This is an application of Bill Walsh's philosophy, "the score takes care of itself," to public market management, prioritizing long-term fundamentals over short-term sentiment.
The team moves beyond surface-level KPIs like open and click rates. They measure success by its contribution to broader business objectives: generating more value with less cost and investment. This focus on operational efficiency ensures marketing activities are directly tied to tangible financial outcomes and long-term customer value.