What Are the Two Parts of an OKR?

An OKR has two parts: the Objective and the Key Results. The Objective is what you want to achieve. The Key Results are how you measure whether you achieved it. Together, they create a complete goal that is both inspiring and measurable.

Two Parts

This guide breaks down each part with clear examples so you can understand the structure and start writing your own OKRs with confidence.

Part 1: The Objective

The Objective is the first part of an OKR. It describes what you want to achieve in clear, motivating language.

What Makes a Good Objective

Qualitative, not quantitative. The Objective should be expressed in words, not numbers. Save the metrics for Key Results.

Inspiring. A good Objective makes people want to achieve it. It should feel meaningful and worth pursuing.

Ambitious. The Objective should stretch the team beyond comfortable limits. It should describe a destination worth reaching.

Clear. Anyone reading the Objective should understand what success looks like. Avoid vague language or corporate jargon.

Memorable. The team should be able to recall the Objective without checking a document. If it is too long or complex, simplify it.

The Objective Answers One Question

“Where do we want to go?”

Think of the Objective as a destination on a map. It tells everyone which direction to head. It does not specify the exact route or how long the journey will take. Those details come from the Key Results.

Examples of Strong Objectives

  • “Become the most trusted brand in our category”
  • “Build a world-class customer success organization”
  • “Launch a product that customers love and recommend”
  • “Create a workplace where top talent thrives”
  • “Establish our company as the thought leader in operational excellence”

Strong Objectives paint a picture of success. Weak Objectives are either too vague to provide direction or too specific to inspire.

Part 2: Key Results

Key Results are the second part of an OKR. They define how you will measure success in achieving your Objective.

What Makes Good Key Results

Quantitative. Every Key Result should include specific numbers. “Increase satisfaction” is not a Key Result. “Increase NPS from 32 to 50” is.

Specific. Key Results should be precise enough that anyone can determine whether they were achieved. There should be no debate about the outcome.

Outcome-focused. Key Results measure results, not activities. “Send 100 emails” is an activity. “Achieve 30% email response rate” is an outcome.

Time-bound. Key Results have a deadline, usually implied by the OKR cycle (typically quarterly).

Challenging but possible. Good Key Results stretch the team without being impossible. Aim for about 70% confidence you can achieve them.

Key Results Answer One Question

“How will we know we got there?”

If the Objective is the destination, Key Results are the signposts that tell you whether you have arrived. They remove ambiguity by defining success in measurable terms.

The Key Result Formula

Use this structure for every Key Result:

[Metric] from [baseline] to [target]

Examples:

  • “Increase customer retention from 80% to 92%”
  • “Reduce response time from 24 hours to 4 hours”
  • “Grow monthly active users from 10,000 to 25,000”

Including the baseline (where you start) makes the target meaningful. “Achieve 92% retention” means little without knowing you currently have 80%.

Examples of Strong Key Results

  • “Increase NPS score from 32 to 50”
  • “Reduce customer churn from 5% to 2%”
  • “Grow revenue from $100K to $150K monthly”
  • “Improve conversion rate from 2.1% to 3.5%”
  • “Decrease average support ticket resolution time from 48 hours to 12 hours”

Strong Key Results are specific and measurable. Weak Key Results are vague or describe activities instead of outcomes.

How the Two Parts Work Together

The Objective and Key Results form a complete unit. Neither part works well alone.

An Objective without Key Results is just a wish. It provides direction but no way to measure progress or know when you have succeeded.

Key Results without an Objective are just metrics. They provide measurement but no context for why those metrics matter or what larger goal they serve.

The OKR Formula

The relationship between the two parts follows this formula:

“I will [OBJECTIVE] as measured by [KEY RESULTS]”

Example:

“I will build a world-class customer success organization as measured by:

  • Increasing customer retention from 85% to 95%
  • Improving NPS from 32 to 50
  • Reducing time-to-value from 30 days to 14 days”

The Objective provides the inspiring direction. The Key Results provide the measurable proof of achievement.

The Alignment Test

Before finalizing any OKR, ask this question:

“If I achieve all my Key Results, will I have achieved my Objective?”

If the answer is yes, your OKR is well-structured. If the answer is no, your Key Results do not fully capture what success looks like. Add or revise Key Results until they align with the Objective.

Complete OKR Examples

Here are five complete OKRs with annotations explaining each part.

Example 1: Executive Team

Objective: Achieve product-market fit in the enterprise segment

This Objective is clear and ambitious. It describes a specific achievement (product-market fit) in a specific context (enterprise segment).

Key Results:

  • KR1: Close 15 enterprise deals (up from 3 last quarter)
  • KR2: Achieve $500K ARR from enterprise customers
  • KR3: Attain 90% retention rate in enterprise cohort
  • KR4: Reach NPS of 50+ from enterprise customers

Each Key Result is measurable with clear baselines and targets. Together, they define what product-market fit looks like in practice.

Example 2: Sales Team

Objective: Build a repeatable sales engine that consistently exceeds targets

This Objective paints a picture of a healthy, predictable sales organization. It is inspiring without being metric-specific.

Key Results:

  • KR1: Achieve 110% of quarterly quota ($1.5M total)
  • KR2: Increase win rate from 20% to 30%
  • KR3: Shorten average sales cycle from 60 days to 40 days

These Key Results measure the outcomes that indicate a strong sales engine: hitting targets, winning more often, and closing faster.

Example 3: Marketing Team

Objective: Establish our brand as the go-to resource for operations leaders

This Objective describes a positioning goal. It is qualitative and inspiring.

Key Results:

  • KR1: Grow organic website traffic from 10,000 to 30,000 monthly visitors
  • KR2: Increase email subscribers from 2,000 to 8,000

Each Key Result measures an outcome that would indicate the brand is becoming a trusted resource.

Example 4: Product Team

Objective: Deliver a product experience that customers love

Simple, clear, and focused on customer value. This Objective gives the team a north star.

Key Results:

  • KR1: Increase product NPS from 28 to 45
  • KR2: Reduce customer-reported bugs from 40 to 10 per month
  • KR3: Achieve 50% adoption of new features within 30 days of launch

These Key Results measure customer satisfaction, product quality, and engagement with new capabilities.

Example 5: Individual Contributor

Objective: Become the team expert on customer onboarding

This Objective is personal and career-focused. It describes a clear professional achievement.

Key Results:

  • KR1: Reduce average onboarding time from 14 days to 7 days
  • KR2: Achieve 95% satisfaction score from onboarded customers
  • KR3: Create 3 reusable onboarding templates adopted by the team

Each Key Result measures a concrete outcome that would demonstrate expertise in onboarding.

Objectives vs. Key Results: Comparison Table

Aspect Objective Key Results
Type Qualitative Quantitative
Question answered “What do we want to achieve?” “How will we measure success?”
Format Words and language Numbers and metrics
Quantity per OKR 1 3 to 5
Tone Inspiring and ambitious Specific and measurable
Examples “Become market leader” “Increase market share from 15% to 30%”
Purpose Provides direction Provides measurement

The Structure Checklist

Use this checklist to verify your OKR is properly structured:

For your Objective:

  • [ ] Is it qualitative (no numbers)?
  • [ ] Is it inspiring and motivating?
  • [ ] Is it clear and easy to understand?
  • [ ] Can the team remember it?

For your Key Results:

  • [ ] Does each one include a specific number?
  • [ ] Is there a baseline (where you are now)?
  • [ ] Is there a target (where you want to be)?
  • [ ] Does each one measure an outcome, not an activity?
  • [ ] Do you have 3 to 5 Key Results?

For the complete OKR:

  • [ ] If you achieve all Key Results, will you achieve the Objective?
  • [ ] Is the overall OKR ambitious but achievable?

Start Building Your OKRs

Now you understand the two parts of an OKR. The Objective provides direction. The Key Results provide measurement. Together, they create goals that are both inspiring and accountable.

Try writing one OKR now. Start with an Objective that describes where you want to go. Add three Key Results that define how you will know you got there. Run it through the checklist. Then refine until it feels right.

The framework is simple. The power comes from applying it consistently.

Scaling a business is hard, and you don’t have to figure it out alone. ScaleUpExec has helped dozens of companies implement OKRs and overcome their most difficult operational challenges. Whether you have specific questions or just want to explore your options, we’re here to help. Let’s connect.

Picture of Ashish Gupta

Ashish Gupta

Ashish Gupta is a two-time exited founder (including to a Fortune 500) and former Apple ops leader. As CEO of ScaleUpExec, he has helped turn around and scale 20+ SMBs through practical, hands-on operational leadership.
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