OKR vs KPI: What is the Difference and When to Use Each?
OKRs and KPIs are both performance management tools — but they serve very different purposes. Here is the practical distinction and the decision framework for choosing the right tool for your context.
Yasser Ghonimy
Managing Director, Real Hands-On
The OKR vs KPI debate has become one of the most common questions we receive in our training programmes. The short answer: they are complementary, not competing. The longer answer requires understanding what each tool is actually designed to do.
Key Takeaways
- ✓KPIs measure ongoing business health — OKRs drive short-term ambitious change
- ✓KPIs are owned indefinitely — OKRs are set quarterly and retired
- ✓KPIs have fixed targets — OKRs have aspirational targets (60–70% achievement is a success)
- ✓Use KPIs for your Balanced Scorecard — use OKRs for sprint initiatives and transformation
- ✓Large organisations typically need both, used at different levels
What KPIs Are Designed to Do
A KPI (Key Performance Indicator) measures the ongoing health of a strategic objective. It tells you whether your organisation is performing at the level it needs to sustain and grow. KPIs are persistent — once designed, they remain in your scorecard as long as the related objective is relevant. They are the vital signs of your strategy.
What OKRs Are Designed to Do
An OKR (Objective and Key Result) is a goal-setting tool for driving ambitious, time-bound change. The Objective is qualitative and inspiring. The Key Results are quantitative measures of whether you achieved it. OKRs are typically quarterly — they are set, pursued, graded, and retired. They are not vital signs; they are improvement sprints.
The Practical Decision Framework
Use KPIs when: the metric should be tracked continuously, it measures ongoing strategic performance, it feeds a formal scorecard or review process. Use OKRs when: you need to drive a specific behaviour change, you have a time-bound transformation goal, you want to create team-level focus and accountability for a quarter.
Real Hands-On offers the Certified OKR Professional programme alongside our KPI and BSC certifications. Many organisations use both frameworks at different levels of the organisation.
Conclusion
The OKR vs KPI question is a false choice for most mature organisations. Use KPIs to run the business. Use OKRs to change the business. Use the Balanced Scorecard to hold both together in a coherent management system.
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