Goal Setting Frameworks: Complete Guide to SMART, OKRs, MBOs, BHAGs & WOOP
Goal setting frameworks: SMART, OKRs, BHAGs, MBOs, KPIs. Learn when to use each framework, implementation best practices, and how to drive accountability.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Goal Setting Frameworks?
Goal setting frameworks: SMART, OKRs, BHAGs, MBOs, KPIs. Learn when to use each framework, implementation best practices, and how to drive accountability. Clear goal setting is the foundation of high performance -- employees who have clearly defined goals are 3.6x more likely to be engaged than employees who don't, according to Gallup research.
How do you set SMART goals?
SMART goals are Specific (clearly defined), Measurable (trackable with a number or clear outcome), Achievable (realistic given resources), Relevant (tied to team or company priorities), and Time-bound (with a clear deadline). Example: 'Increase blog organic traffic by 30% by Q3, measured by Google Analytics monthly sessions.'
What is the difference between goals, OKRs, and KPIs?
Goals are broad desired outcomes. OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) are a specific goal-setting framework with ambitious objectives and measurable key results, typically set quarterly. KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) are ongoing operational metrics tracked continuously. OKRs drive change; KPIs monitor health.
How do you track employee goal progress?
Track goal progress through: dedicated goal-tracking software (integrated into your performance platform), regular manager check-ins (monthly or bi-weekly), quarterly goal reviews, and end-of-period goal completion assessments. Goals should be visible to employees and their managers and updated regularly as circumstances change.
What happens when goals are not met?
When goals are not met, managers should first understand why through a direct conversation: was the goal unrealistic, did circumstances change, or was there a capability or motivation issue? Response should be proportional. Missed goals in a changing environment require different responses than consistent underperformance against reasonable expectations.
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