What is OKR? The Complete Guide for 2026 | SugarOKR

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Complete OKR Guide . 2026

What is OKR? The Complete Guide for 2026

OKR stands for Objectives and Key Results – a goal-setting framework used by 10,000+ teams to set ambitious goals and track measurable progress. Free to get started with SugarOKR.

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What Does OKR Stand For?

OKR stands for Objectives and Key Results. It is a goal-setting framework that helps teams define what they want to achieve and measure how they will get there.

The framework has two parts:

O – Objective

What you want to achieve

Qualitative, ambitious, and motivating. It answers the question: where are we going?

Example: “Become the most-trusted HR tool for US tech companies”

KR – Key Results

How you’ll measure progress

Quantitative, specific, and time-bound. They answer: how will we know we got there?

Example: “Reach NPS of 50+ by Q4”

Quick rule: If your Objective answers “where are we going?” – your Key Results answer “how will we know we got there?”

Where Did OKRs Come From?

OKRs were invented by Andy Grove at Intel in the 1970s, adapted from Peter Drucker’s Management by Objectives. In 1999, venture capitalist John Doerr brought OKRs to a small startup called Google – and the rest is history.

Today OKRs are used by Spotify, LinkedIn, Twitter, Airbnb, Amazon, and tens of thousands of companies globally – from two-person startups to 100,000-person enterprises. John Doerr’s book Measure What Matters is the definitive read on the subject.

OKR vs KPI: What’s the Difference?

This is one of the most common questions teams ask when getting started. The short answer: OKRs and KPIs are not opposites – they serve different purposes and work best together.

OKR KPI
Purpose Set ambitious direction Monitor ongoing performance
Timeframe Quarterly or annual Ongoing
Scope Company-wide alignment Department or function
Best for Growth and change Stability and maintenance

OKRs tell you where you’re going. KPIs tell you if the engine is running. The best teams use both.

OKR Examples by Function

Here are real OKR examples for the most common team functions. Each follows the same structure: one ambitious Objective with 3 measurable Key Results.

Company OKR

O: Build the most-loved performance management platform for US HR teams

KR1: Reach 1,000 paying customers by Q4

KR2: Achieve NPS of 45+

KR3: Reduce monthly churn to below 3%

HR Team OKR

O: Build a high-performance hiring engine

KR1: Reduce time-to-hire from 45 to 28 days

KR2: Achieve 90% offer acceptance rate

KR3: Hit 4.5/5 candidate experience score

Sales Team OKR

O: Dominate the US mid-market HR software segment

KR1: Close $500K in new ARR this quarter

KR2: Grow pipeline to $2M by end of Q3

KR3: Increase win rate from 18% to 28%

Engineering OKR

O: Deliver a reliable and fast product experience

KR1: Reduce page load time to under 2 seconds

KR2: Achieve 99.9% uptime this quarter

KR3: Ship 3 major features by end of Q3

See full OKR examples for all 8 functions including Marketing, Product, and Customer Success ->

5 Rules for Writing Good OKRs

Most teams set OKRs that fail because of a handful of avoidable mistakes. Here are the five rules that separate effective OKRs from well-intentioned ones that get ignored.

1

Objectives should be inspiring

If your Objective doesn’t excite anyone on the team, rewrite it. “Improve customer satisfaction” is weak. “Make every customer feel like we’re working for them personally” is motivating.

2

Key Results must be measurable

If you can’t put a number on it, it’s not a Key Result – it’s a task. “Improve NPS” is a task. “Improve NPS from 32 to 50 by December 31” is a Key Result.

3

Set 3-5 Key Results per Objective

Not more, not less. More than 5 and the focus disappears. Fewer than 3 and you likely haven’t thought hard enough about what success actually looks like.

4

OKRs should stretch – 70% is success

Google’s rule: if you’re consistently hitting 100% of your OKRs, they’re not ambitious enough. The goal is stretch, not perfection. 70% completion of a bold goal beats 100% completion of a safe one.

5

Review OKRs every quarter

OKRs that are set and never reviewed are just wishes. The check-in rhythm – weekly or bi-weekly – is what keeps goals alive and actionable. No review cadence means no accountability.

See the 10 most common OKR mistakes teams make ->

OKRs and Performance Reviews: The Missing Link

Most teams set OKRs and run performance reviews in two completely separate tools. The result: managers write reviews from memory, and employees feel their OKR progress is invisible at evaluation time.

This is what we call performance theater – reviews that happen, but nobody trusts the outcome because they’re based on memory, not evidence.

“The most uncomfortable thing I’ve heard a CHRO say about talent reviews is that they mostly reflect who speaks well in meetings.”

The fix is not a better template. It’s giving the room something real to look at.

Happy5 fixes this by connecting OKRs directly to performance reviews – so when review season arrives, everything an employee worked toward is already surfaced automatically. No manual data gathering. No memory-based ratings.

Want to connect your OKRs to performance reviews?

Happy5 automatically surfaces what your team delivered inside every review – goals hit, projects completed, milestones delivered. $8/user/month, full platform included.

See Happy5 Demo ->

How to Get Started With OKRs Today

There are three paths depending on where your team is right now:

Start Free

Use SugarOKR to set up your team’s OKRs in 30 minutes. No credit card, no time limit.

Start Free ->

Use a Template

Download free OKR templates for every function – Excel and Google Sheets formats.

Get Templates ->

Full Platform

Connect OKRs to performance reviews with Happy5. $8/user/month, full platform.

See Happy5 ->

Frequently Asked Questions About OKRs

What does OKR stand for?

OKR stands for Objectives and Key Results. It is a goal-setting framework that helps teams define ambitious goals (Objectives) and measure progress toward them with specific, quantifiable metrics (Key Results).

What is the difference between OKR and KPI?

OKRs set ambitious direction for a specific time period. KPIs monitor ongoing operational performance. OKRs ask “where are we going?” while KPIs ask “how is the engine running?” The two work best together, not as alternatives to each other.

How many OKRs should a company have?

At the company level, 3-5 Objectives per quarter is the recommended range. Each Objective should have 3-5 Key Results. More than this and focus breaks down. Less and you may not have been specific enough about what success looks like.

What is a good OKR completion rate?

Google’s original guidance: 70% is the target completion rate. If your team is consistently hitting 100%, your OKRs aren’t ambitious enough. 70% completion of a stretch goal produces better outcomes than 100% completion of a safe one.

How often should OKRs be reviewed?

Weekly or bi-weekly check-ins are recommended during the OKR period, with a full retrospective at the end of each quarter. OKRs that are set and never reviewed are not OKRs – they are aspirations.

What is the best free OKR tool?

SugarOKR is the most widely used free OKR tool – used by 10,000+ teams worldwide with no credit card required and no time limit. It is now part of Happy5, which adds performance reviews, calibration, and project management for teams that need the full layer.

Ready to start tracking OKRs for free?

SugarOKR is free forever – get your team’s goals running in 30 minutes. No credit card. Now part of Happy5.

Create Your Free Account ->

SugarOKR is part of Happy5 – the AI-powered performance management platform.

OKR Examples
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