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Velocity vs Speed
Speed measures how fast something moves. Velocity measures how fast it moves in a particular direction. The distinction matters enormously in business: you can be very busy (high speed) without making progress toward your goal (low velocity).
Key Differences
| Dimension | Velocity | Speed |
|---|---|---|
| Direction | Includes direction — movement toward a specific goal | Direction-agnostic — just how fast you're moving |
| Measurement | Vector quantity (magnitude + direction) | Scalar quantity (magnitude only) |
| Business analog | Progress toward strategic objectives | Volume of activity and output |
| Pitfall | Can feel slow when you're being deliberate | Can feel productive while going nowhere |
When to use Velocity
- When evaluating whether activity is translating to actual progress
- When setting OKRs or strategic priorities — direction matters
- When coaching teams to focus on outcomes over outputs
When to use Speed
- When execution speed genuinely matters and direction is already clear
- When measuring operational throughput where direction is constant
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between velocity and speed?
Speed is how fast you're moving regardless of direction. Velocity is speed with direction — it measures how fast you're moving toward a specific goal. In business, being busy (high speed) without making strategic progress (low velocity) is one of the most common failure modes.