Understanding OKRs
OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) are a goal-setting framework used by organizations to define and track objectives and their outcomes.
What are OKRs?
OKRs consist of two components:
Objectives - What you want to achieve (qualitative, inspirational)
Key Results - How you will measure success (quantitative, measurable)
Why Use OKRs?
Focus - Concentrate efforts on what matters most
Alignment - Ensure everyone works toward the same goals
Transparency - Make goals visible across the organization
Accountability - Clear ownership and tracking
Agility - Adapt quickly to changing priorities
Creating Good Objectives
Good objectives are:
Qualitative - Describe what you want to achieve
Inspirational - Motivate the team
Time-bound - Have a clear timeframe
Actionable - Within your control
Example Objectives:
"Launch a world-class product that delights customers"
"Build a high-performing sales team"
"Establish Elevale as a thought leader in our industry"
Writing Effective Key Results
Good key results are:
Measurable - Have a specific number or metric
Specific - Clear and unambiguous
Achievable - Challenging but realistic
Verifiable - Can be objectively scored
Example Key Results:
"Achieve 10,000 active users by end of Q2"
"Increase NPS score from 45 to 65"
"Reduce customer churn to under 5%"
"Close $500K in new revenue"
OKR Best Practices
Keep it to 3-5 objectives per quarter
Each objective should have 3-5 key results
Review progress weekly
Update scores regularly
Aim for 70% achievement (stretch goals)
Celebrate wins and learn from misses
Link tasks to OKRs for execution
Using OKRs in Elevale
In Elevale, you can:
Create objectives and key results
Assign owners and collaborators
Track progress with scores
Link tasks to key results
View progress on dashboards
Add check-ins and updates
Archive completed OKRs
Start using OKRs today to drive focus and results! 🎯
Linking OKRs to execution
Link tasks to key results from the Tasks area for traceable delivery.
Use OKR planning sessions on the OKRs page to align quarterly objectives.
See Task Management for subtasks, assignees, and status workflows.