I just listened to your entire article. I was completely jazzed in the beginning - thinking “this is just what I need, I’m ready, I’m working” but as I listened more I got lost in the weeds. Everything you said sounded true, but my brain kept saying, “where is the model to accomplish this? Where is the canvas to fill out?”. So now I’ll look through the article for clues of what I have missed to implement this. I’ll keep going. I need to accomplish this. (So that’s my comment)
There isn't a canvas or something you can fill out that will give you the answers — unfortunately! This is "in the weeds" work. The best I can offer (absent a 1:1 convo) is to start where you want to be (the goal) and then start listing what must be true at that time for that to work. Set aside anything that's already true — nothing to be done here! For the rest, go through the same exercise: what must be true for each of those to work? Keep doing that, forming a "tree of indicators", if you will, until you get a point where everything is already true. One step back (where one or two things aren't yet true) is where you'll find the metric.
I just listened to your entire article. I was completely jazzed in the beginning - thinking “this is just what I need, I’m ready, I’m working” but as I listened more I got lost in the weeds. Everything you said sounded true, but my brain kept saying, “where is the model to accomplish this? Where is the canvas to fill out?”. So now I’ll look through the article for clues of what I have missed to implement this. I’ll keep going. I need to accomplish this. (So that’s my comment)
There isn't a canvas or something you can fill out that will give you the answers — unfortunately! This is "in the weeds" work. The best I can offer (absent a 1:1 convo) is to start where you want to be (the goal) and then start listing what must be true at that time for that to work. Set aside anything that's already true — nothing to be done here! For the rest, go through the same exercise: what must be true for each of those to work? Keep doing that, forming a "tree of indicators", if you will, until you get a point where everything is already true. One step back (where one or two things aren't yet true) is where you'll find the metric.
Feel free to ask a more specific followup!