What’s the difference between KPI and OKR?
The main difference is that a key performance indicator (KPI) is a metric you use to measure progress, while OKR is a complete method for setting and completing business goals.
A typical KPI could be sales revenue growth or customer retention rates. They can help you judge how well your project’s going. With an OKR, you set a concrete strategic objective and define crucial results. Even if the focus is on sales revenue growth, you specify a target number.
How to write OKRs?
OKRs consist of two components — the objective and the key result or results.
The objective is the goal you’re looking to achieve. It’s not a numerical or quantifiable goal — at least initially — but tends to be a high-level aspiration that begins with a verb, such as:
- Increase sales volume
- Improve speed to sale
- Reduce employee turnover
The key result aspect of a team OKR is where you get into the details, breaking down that big hairy objective into more tangible, realistic, measurable results. For example, if your objective is to “Increase sales volume”, then key result examples might be:
- 50% lift in new lead generation
- 20% more sales revenue this quarter
- 10 new deals closed above $100k
Setting objectives with impact
When trying to identify objectives, company vision should be your guiding light. Break your long-term strategy down into 30 to 90-day goals.
Follow a structured process, with customized questions like:
- What are the most impactful actions we can take to progress towards our vision right now?
- What do we need to change to improve our market share/product/services?
- What does success look like?
Clear key results help guide your process
Single out a shortlist of 3–5 key results for each objective. Key results act as milestones or checkpoints and should help guide your progress and motivate your team.
They should be:
- time-bound: achieved by set date or timeline
- aggressive
- specific and measurable
- realistic
Why are OKRs important for your business?
OKRs can help you achieve your business goals. Having goals is one thing, but having a system or framework in place to execute and measure those goals is the key differentiator.
In the words of Larry Page, co-founder at Google:
"OKRs have helped lead us to 10X growth, many times over. [ … ] They’ve kept me and the rest of the company on time and on track when it mattered the most."