How Many OKRs Should You REALLY Have?

All OKRs experts agree that Key Results must be measurable and time bound. Nonetheless, certain elements of OKRs are not so clear. Let's look at one of the hottest debates: the optimal number of OKRs.

How many OKRs should you really have?
OKRs experts including Christina Wodtke claim companies should manage just one Objective and its Key Results. John Doerr and the folks at Google recommend that each team has at most 5 Objectives with 4 Key Results per Objective. Jeff Walker, the Oracle CFO who helped take Oracle from $20M to over $1B in the late 80s, claims that each team should have 5-6 Objectives with 15-20 Key Results per Objective!

So, what's the right answer? As a self-proclaimed OKRs expert, I'm here to tell you.

First of all, One OKR DOES NOT Fit All
Although it's great to prioritize, one OKR is just not sufficient. I'm yet to see an organization that can function with just one OKR. I'm not saying it's completely impossible. I still see potential for one OKR, it has an emotional appeal, and if you're lucky enough to get Christina to help you with OKRs, I highly recommend you take advantage of that opportunity. However, in helping dozens of organizations deploy OKRs, I've only seen one organization try to stick with just one OKR, and they ended up creating a fairly generic OKR that looked something like this:

Objective: Grow the business
 1 Key Result: Establish a Marketing Department including a new VP by end of Q
 2 Key Result: Achieve 10% Q over Q revenue growth for all Quarters in 2016
 3 Key Result: 10 teams document a contribution to growth each Q

My client created the third Key Result to ensure that each team could feel connected to the top-level OKR. The only way to accomplish this with a single top-level Objective was by creating a Key Result to capture "everything we want to measure and execute on in the company." It was so broad that it became devoid of meaning.

I'm not saying this isn't an elegant solution. In fact, this company may wind up creating OKRs for each of the 10 teams with each team documenting a contribution to growth in 2016. Maybe it will all work out. However, the Objective and its third Key Result lack concreteness, and great OKRs tend to be concrete.

If you really want just one OKR, I advise setting up a set of OKRs and then picking one as the primary OKR.

Explicitly prioritizing OKRs is probably a good thing. Sadly, many approaches to OKRs completely ignore the concept of prioritization. For example, Google advises scoring objectives based on an average of its Key Results. Well OK, but what if one Key Result is way more important than the others? When I ask this question, I usually get the answer,

"Well, actually the scoring doesn't really matter. It's about what you learn."

OK, but I just hope you don't wind up learning that you nailed all your Key Results except that one that mattered most!

"Maximum 5 Objectives with 4 Key Results"
-John Doerr's deck as presented by Rick Klau of Google Ventures as included below:

I think the limitation of 5 Objectives with 4 Key Results is probably a fit for most of us. However, John Doerr just spoke at Goal Summit 2015 and suggested "5-7 Objectives with 4-5 Key Results" so the trend seems to be on the rise. Either way, limiting each Objective to 5 Key Results leaves out an important detail: how to deal with Milestone Key Results. For more on the types of Key Results, please see Types of Key Results. This brings me to the third and seemingly radical option of lots and lots of OKRs...

"You Need 5-6 Objectives with 15-20 Key Results Per Objective"
-Jeff Walker, former Oracle CFO
Yikes! This many OKRs at first seems to reflect a complete lack of focus. Isn't focus one of the main reasons we do OKRs in the first place? Jeff once told me You can Do Anything if you Focus! As it turns out, Jeff's thinking behind 15-20 Key Results per Objective is spot on.

One OKRs vendor (Hint: I used to work there) elegantly solved this problem by enabling users to create what I call "Milestone Key Results."  Milestone Key Results have underlying milestones that define completion of the Key Result. Milestone Key Results are really, really important.

In fact, most departments other than sales and marketing tend to use Milestone Key Results more than Metric Key Results. Milestones are either done or not done. They are binary. When you complete a milestone, you get to check a box and get that sense of satisfaction. Also, specifying the milestones lets everyone know how you're going to measure progress.

If you think of each milestone as its own Key Result, it's perfectly reasonable to claim that a given Objective should have 15-20 Key Results. No one that I've met would argue that a given Objective should have 15-20 Metric Key Results. However, with 15-20 Key Results per a given Objective it's unlikely you'll go more than a couple weeks without completing a Key Result. More Key Results increases the odds of making consistent progress. Making consistent progress is very important and is a key predictor for success with an OKRs project.

If a Goal Owner goes a couple weeks without making measurable progress on an Objective or completing any Key Results, that Goal Owner will not make progress. Given that OKRs should be reviewed and updated frequently, it's key to make consistent progress each week.

Conclusion and The Answer: 
The right approach combines Doerr and Walker. In this hybrid solution, the best number of Key Results per Objective depends on whether they are Metric Key Results or Milestone Key Results and whether you want to count each underlying milestone in a Milestone Key Result as its own Key Result or as a sub-Key Result. To make this easy and actionable for all my prospects and clients, let's conclude that your great set of OKRs for a given team leader will include 2-6 Objectives. An Objective will have 1-20 Key Results.
Bottom line: Regardless of how you count Key Results, you will often end up with a dozen or so binary milestones. These milestones will be measurable and time bound, so why not classify them all as Key Results? In the end, I side with Walker here. Checking a box and making progress throughout the quarter will be one of the most rewarding and important parts of your OKRs journey.

I will expand on this blog with examples along in my next OKRs paper. In the meantime, I'm here to help you draft your OKRs and nail down a bunch of detailed, binary Milestone Key Results so you can optimize your use of OKRs and make measurable progress on your most important goals.

Request your OKRs Coaching Session now!