Loach is the OKR management solution for start-ups and scale-ups. We allow your team to seamlessly align daily work with quarterly objectives, creating clarity, focus, and inevitable goal achievement.
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Loach's answer
Growing your Start-up or Scale-up is all about execution. OKRs help you set the direction, but Loach enables you to connect daily work with those overarching goals. With Loach, every employee knows exactly what they need to do to help the company move forward and leadership knows exactly what people are doing to help move the company forward. A win-win for everyone.
Loach's answer
Loach is the only solution that focuses on helping startups and scale-ups be successful with OKRs. Loach aims to be simple yet powerful to help your employees work on the things that move the company forward.
Loach's answer
Start-ups & Scale-ups who want to be successful with using OKRs.
Loach's answer
Hi, I'm Frank Smit, Founder of Loach and previous COO of a SaaS company (OBI4wan), which I helped grow from 300K to 10M EUR in revenue and 5 to 75 employees in 6 years.
We used OKRs to set the direction of our company.
However, I learned that setting goals alone is not enough. Our employees simply forgot about our OKRs.
We set up a process where all employees would know what they need to do each week to help move the company forward.
However, tracking all goals and initiatives became impossible without a proper solution, and I didn't find any in the market that focussed on connecting daily work to quarterly goals.
So, I decided to create Loach!
Loach is the tool I wish I had back in the OBI4wan days.
Loach's answer
Vormats Cammio Deedmob Wantly Matrixian
Based on our record, Google Scholar seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 999 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
A few may know, that google scholar(https://scholar.google.com/) does not offer a feature for arranging the search results based on the number of citations. Several years ago, one developer published a Python code (https://github.com/WittmannF/sort-google-scholar) to handle this. I had been inspired by his work, but I wanted to show the list of... - Source: Hacker News / about 1 month ago
To that point, https://scholar.google.com/ is still useful. - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
1) find the doi number [1a][1b] 2) find sources that cite the doi number -> google scholar[2][3] 3) filter for 'github' ----- [1a]resolve a doi name : https://dx.doi.org/ [1b]find a doi number : https://answers.lib.iup.edu/faq/31945 [2] : https://scholar.google.com/ [3] : google with "site:http://doi.org/" [4] : finding a doi in document page :... - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
Half of those are about science, during my Ph.D., I was told to use scholar.google.com, which works great as far as I can tell. Couple it to sci-hub and you get all the scientific literature you need. Source: 5 months ago
Scholar.google.com exists also which is what you use for studies. Source: 5 months ago
Tability - Get your goals out of spreadsheets
PubMed.gov - PubMed comprises more than 29 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Citations may include links to full-text content from PubMed Central and publisher web sites.
Weekdone - Market leader and innovator since 2013. Set structured quarterly goals, keep track of activities, and focus on getting real business results. Track weekly progress, provide feedback, and move everyone in a unified direction.
SCI-HUB - It provides mass and public access to tens of millions of research papers
Perdoo - OKR methodology, software and coaching
Forge - Static web hosting made simple