Many business leaders in Malaysia ask the same question when improving performance management:
“Should we use OKRs or KPIs?”
The short answer is: most organizations need both.
KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) help you monitor business performance, while OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) help you drive strategic change and growth.
Understanding the difference is important because many companies fail to implement OKRs successfully when they simply rename existing KPIs as OKRs.
In this guide, we’ll explain how OKRs and KPIs differ, when to use each one, and how Malaysian companies can combine both frameworks effectively.
What Is a KPI?
A Key Performance Indicator (KPI) is a metric used to measure ongoing business performance.
KPIs help organizations answer questions such as:
- Are we meeting our sales targets?
- Is customer satisfaction improving?
- Is production efficiency on track?
- Are we controlling costs effectively?
Examples of KPIs:
|
Department |
Example KPI |
|---|---|
|
Sales |
Monthly revenue |
|
Customer Service |
Customer satisfaction score |
|
HR |
Employee turnover rate |
|
Operations |
Production efficiency |
|
Finance |
Profit margin |
What Is an OKR?
An OKR (Objectives and Key Results) is a goal-setting framework that helps organizations focus on strategic priorities and measurable outcomes.
An OKR consists of:
- Objective: What you want to achieve.
- Key Results: How you will measure success.
Example:
Objective: Become the preferred software provider for SMEs in Malaysia.
Key Results
- Increase qualified leads from 500 to 1,000 per quarter.
- Improve customer retention from 80% to 90%.
- Achieve a Net Promoter Score (NPS) of 60.
The Key Difference Between OKRs and KPIs
| Feature | KPI | OKR |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Monitor performance | Drive strategic change |
| Focus | Business-as-usual | Future priorities |
| Time Horizon | Continuous | Usually quarterly |
| Nature | Maintain performance | Improve or transform performance |
| Question Answered | “Are we performing well?” | “What important outcome are we trying to achieve?” |
A Simple Example
KPI Example
Customer Support KPI
Average response time: < 2 hours
Customer satisfaction score: > 85%
OKR Example
Customer Experience OKR
Objective
Deliver a world-class customer support experience.
Key Results
- Increase customer satisfaction from 85% to 92%.
- Reduce average resolution time from 24 hours to 8 hours.
- Increase repeat purchase rate by 15%.
Notice how the OKR focuses on improvement and transformation, while the KPI focuses on monitoring ongoing performance.
Why Many OKR Implementations Fail
One of the most common mistakes is turning KPIs into OKRs.
For example:
Weak OKR
Objective: Achieve RM1 million sales
Key Result: Revenue = RM1 million
This is essentially a KPI, not a strategic OKR.
A stronger OKR would be:
Objective
Expand our market presence among SMEs.
Key Results
- Acquire 100 new SME customers.
- Increase qualified leads by 40%.
- Launch 3 new SME-focused campaigns.
Continue Reading: Why Malaysian Companies Fail at OKR Implementation (And How to Avoid It)
Should Malaysian Companies Use OKRs or KPIs?
For most organizations, the answer is both.
Use KPIs for
- Operational performance
- Financial monitoring
- Service quality
- Compliance
- Efficiency tracking
Use OKRs for
- Strategic initiatives
- Business growth
- Innovation
- Market expansion
- Cross-functional alignment
How Growth Mindset Global Approaches OKRs and KPIs
At Growth Mindset Global, we believe successful organizations should integrate OKRs with performance management rather than replace KPIs entirely.
Our implementation approach helps companies:
- Distinguish between operational KPIs and strategic OKRs.
- Align company objectives across departments.
- Create measurable outcome-based key results.
- Build a sustainable OKR review process.
- Develop internal OKR champions.
If you’re exploring a structured rollout, learn more about our OKR implementation services in Malaysia.
Final Thoughts
OKRs and KPIs are not competing frameworks.
KPIs tell you how your business is performing today.
OKRs help you achieve the future you want to create.
Organizations that understand this difference are far more likely to implement OKRs successfully and avoid the common mistake of treating OKRs as another reporting system.
For companies in Malaysia, the most effective approach is usually to maintain critical KPIs while using OKRs to drive strategic priorities, growth, and transformation.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Can OKRs replace KPIs?
No. OKRs and KPIs serve different purposes. KPIs monitor ongoing performance, while OKRs drive strategic improvement and change.
Which is better: OKR or KPI?
Neither is universally better. Most successful companies use KPIs for operations and OKRs for strategic initiatives.
What is the biggest mistake when implementing OKRs?
The biggest mistake is treating existing KPIs as OKRs without creating clear strategic objectives and outcome-based key results.
Do SMEs in Malaysia need OKRs?
Yes. SMEs can benefit from OKRs by improving focus, prioritization, and alignment, especially during growth phases.
How do I start implementing OKRs?
Start by identifying your organization’s top strategic priorities, then create a small number of measurable objectives and key results for the next quarter.
Need Help Implementing OKRs?
If your organization is evaluating OKRs and KPIs or planning an OKR rollout, Growth Mindset Global can help you design a practical implementation approach tailored to your business.
