As companies grow, they’re faced with the challenge of keeping teams aligned on the same mission. But every group of employees has a unique set of priorities, and providing them with the support they need to drive business results isn’t always a straightforward process. 

Read on to learn how managers and leaders can leverage OKRs (or objectives and key results) to create accountability, transparency, and alignment within their organizations.

Introduction to OKRs

As a core component of any performance management plan, goal setting helps businesses overcome the challenges of scaling workforces. OKRs are a popular goal-setting framework that businesses use to define and measure progress across different levels within the organization. When used effectively, OKRs spark innovation, unite teams, and create a clear path for taking companies to the next level. 

While there have been a number of goal-setting frameworks throughout history, OKRs were first introduced at Intel by management scientist Andy Grove and later popularized by Google in the late 1990s. Today, OKRs power thousands of organizations from Spotify and Amazon to the United States Navy. 

How OKRs Drive Business Results

OKRs help businesses manage performance in five core ways:

  • Alignment: OKRs get everyone on the same page around what teams are doing, why they’re doing it, and how their work moves the organization forward.
  • Prioritization: OKRs bridge the gap between broader goals and the daily work necessary to achieve them. This empowers employees to prioritize day-to-day tasks and long-term initiatives. 
  • Transparency: OKRs foster transparent company cultures by informing everyone of the impact and priorities of teams and individuals across the organization, from the CEO down to the intern.
  • Accountability: OKRs create accountability for performance expectations and remove any room for gray areas as to who’s responsible for meeting specific goals.
  • Empowerment: OKRs show employees the impact of their work and give them a sense of ownership over their progress.

The Anatomy of OKRs

As a proven goal-setting framework for companies of all sizes, OKRs are effective because of their basic structure and practical application. Here’s an overview of how they work.

Structure

OKRs divide goals into achievements and the actions that support them. They are structured around two fundamental questions:

Objective: Where do I want to go?

The Objective is the goal of the entire organization, team, or individual. Objectives are typically qualitative and set the direction for what every level of the business wants to achieve in a certain amount of time.

Key Result: How will I get there?

Key Results are the measurable outcomes that need to be achieved in order to meet the objective –– somewhat like a “to-do list” for accomplishing an overall goal. Key Results help track progress and are generally metrics-driven.

Application

The OKR framework is largely effective because of the way it is put into practice and applied across organizations. 

Organizational Levels

Individual and team objectives should be connected via measurable key results to high-level company objectives. This interplay of business goals boosts employee engagement and creates overall business alignment.

OKR
Alignment

Every company should aim for OKR alignment between organizational levels, but there are two different approaches companies can take to achieving this alignment:

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Strict alignment: In this approach, key results translate directly into the objectives of the level below them. 

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Directional alignment: In this more flexible approach, organizations establish objectives that feed into the key results of higher levels but don’t mirror them exactly.

Weighted Key Results

Not all key results are created equal –– some have a bigger impact on progress than others. By assigning different weighted values to key results, businesses can account for the relative influence individual actions have on overall goal progress. 

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Weighing key results helps your team evaluate actions based on their actual level of importance in achieving objectives. Overall, this approach gives businesses greater control over how they measure progress on their goals and communicate their relative impact.

Cadence

Business realities can change drastically in a matter of months, so waiting six months to discuss goals may not be an agile approach. At the same time, weekly OKRs might feel more like a task list than an overall goal-setting strategy. Setting OKRs every quarter gives businesses sufficient runway to accomplish their goals.

Over 50% of company, team, and individual goals have a timeline of 90 days or less, according to Lattice customer data. 

Qualities of a Successful OKR

The OKR methodology distinguishes itself from other goal-setting frameworks with its unique approach to blending both ambition and practicality. They’re also designed to encourage company, team, and individual-level transparency and accountability. 

OKR


Objectives should be ambitious; An inspirational target tends to make people at all levels of your organization think bigger.

Key results should be measurable; Giving goals a finite endpoint allows businesses to accurately quantify how much progress has been made.

OKRs should be transparent; Visibility across organizations creates a sense of accountability, and gives teams context to make informed decisions.

A Step-by-Step Guide to Implementing OKRs

Goal setting isn't a one-size-fits-all process. When an organization sets out to launch an OKR program, there are several steps that need to be taken before, during, and after implementation.

1. Designing an OKRs Program

Organizations must identify how they will configure OKRs in their goal-setting system before launching so that they can design a process that suits their needs. Below we outline what businesses should consider before rolling out an OKRs program.

Mission, Vision, & Strategy

Before implementing an OKR program, companies should clearly define the mission, vision, and business strategy that their OKRs can support. Your OKRs should be translated from your strategy, drive the achievement of your vision, and be in alignment with your overall mission.

Operations

A company's business context should dictate its approach to goal-setting. Before establishing OKRs, companies should evaluate different aspects of their day-to-day operations, such as headcount, organizational structure, legacy processes, and more.:

Synchronization

If you’re introducing OKRs to your company for the first time, a best practice is to launch without strict alignment and instead focus on directional alignment. Dependencies increase the likelihood of bottlenecks, so we recommend that companies avoid making things complicated.

Ownership

When HR teams are the sole driving force behind implementing and managing OKRs, it sends the message to the rest of the organization that OKRs are an administrative process. In order for an OKRs plan rollout to be successful, it needs to have public executive sponsorship.

2. Rolling Out Your OKRs Program

Employee Involvement

While it might not be feasible to have every employee involved in every part of the OKR-setting process, employees should be clear on who is responsible for setting and tracking OKRs at each level, what projects and metrics they should prioritize, why the organization is introducing a new goal-setting process, and how their work connects to the business as a whole

Workforce Training 

Goal setting is a learned rather than innate skill, so organizations need to provide proper guidance to employees on how to set quality OKRs. Workshops (for executives, managers, and employees) are a great way to support newcomers to the OKR methodology and, in subsequent cycles, encourage alignment across the organization. 

Organization

For companies of all sizes, tracking OKRs can be a challenging process. Organizations like Google have built internal tools. Others use ad hoc methods like spreadsheets, and a growing number of companies are using dedicated goal-tracking software to keep OKRs transparent and measurable. 

3. Administering OKRs

Grading OKRs

Grading is the process by which organizations objectively evaluate performance on OKRs. OKRs are graded on a scale between 0.0 to 1.0, as pictured below. Each key result is graded, and the average of the key results is used to create the grade for each corresponding objective.

OKR

If you're getting a perfect score on your OKRs all the time, that's a sign you should be setting more ambitious goals. Likewise, if you're consistently scoring below 0.3 on your goals, it might be time to readjust your objectives and key results.

Sharing Progress

OKR recap meetings are essential. At the beginning of every quarter, all levels of your organization should get together and discuss how they measured up to the OKRs set at the beginning of the last goal cycle. Direct reports and managers should integrate OKRs into their one-on-one meetings.

Integrating Learnings

While grading is about objective measurement, learning is about contextualizing successes and shortcomings within a given OKR cycle to achieve better results moving forward. Evaluation of OKRs should happen regularly, but each cycle should also be capped by a deeper reflection on what went well, what didn't go well, and what learnings can be applied to the next cycle.

Examples of OKRs

The following are some examples of effective OKRs. In each example, note how the objective is clear, ambitious, and aligned with an overall theme while the key results are measurable and designed to help accomplish the objective.

OKR for a Company

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OKR for a Team

OKR

OKR for an Individual

FAQ

Should OKRs focus on output or outcomes?

The purpose of OKRs is to redirect focus away from output and towards outcomes. The key difference between these two mindsets is that outcomes focus on what was achieved, whereas output focuses on how things are achieved.

Who should own a cross-functional objective?

As long as there is a clear delineation of responsibilities, it’s okay to give multiple parties ownership over the same goal if it’s truly a cross-functional priority for your business. However, if you find that all of your OKRs are being co-owned by multiple people, that usually is a sign that you need to break your objectives down into smaller key results.

How should OKRs be used in performance reviews?

Ultimately, this is a personal decision that every leadership team has to make for their own company. But regardless of what you decide, OKRs are not synonymous with employee performance evaluations, and companies who intend to connect OKRs to performance shouldn't do so in isolation. Rather, they should be integrating OKRs into a full review of all performance management aspects.

Final Tips

The OKRs framework is a powerful tool for helping businesses define goals and the measurable actions that support them. Here are some final tips for getting OKRs to work for your company:

  • Keep your OKRs flexible. Don’t obsess over alignment between levels. 
  • Use learnings from old OKRs to iterate and create new OKRs.
  • Highlight executive sponsorship when rolling out OKRs plans.
  • Set OKRs frequently –– ideally quarterly but at least every six months.
  • Ensure OKRs are ambitious, measurable, and transparent.
  • Leverage tools that make tracking OKRs easier and top-of-mind.

For more actionable tips and proven strategies for getting OKRs to work for your company, check out our Complete Guide to OKRs ebook.