Author John Doerr
“When dealing with numerical data, approximately right is better than precisely wrong.”
Natural resources management gateway
– Carl G. Thor
March 24, 2024
Published in April 2018, I purchased Measure What Matters in December 2018, but didn’t read it – geez. I bought it because wanted to be certain I measured what mattered.
I really don’t know how or why I didn’t finish reading it. There are 9049 reviews on Amazon, 66% of which are 5-star reviews, that’s 66%. There are another 32,179 ratings on Goodreads (as reported by Amazon). That’s a lot of reviews.
As always, I looked at the one-star and two-star reviews. The top one-star review found the book “dry, uninspired and a little creepy.” I disagreed and found the review annoying, but the thing I like about critical reviews is that they frequently recommend other books on the same subject, and sometimes, they are worth reading.
In this case, the recommendation is “High Output Management by Andy Grove – who is considered to be the author of OKRs. I have this book and, again, haven’t read it – so I’m going to add it to this themed read.
This is one of now 4 books in my current themed read about measurement and forecasting.
You can find the Amazon reviews of Measure What Matters here.
May 3rd, 2024
I’m still trying to figure out how to document this project – in the blog – in each book post? I really don’t know YET. I’ll figure it out.
I’ve just finished chapter 20 of this book – I’m going to have to read it again. Reading is great, but doing something with what you read is another ball game altogether, and that’s the point of the project.
My takeaways so far:
- My goals are very small – MINUSCULE really
- My thinking is foggy