By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | May 28, 2026
A new wave of strategy-execution research published in early 2026 puts a sharp number on the discipline most enterprises claim to practise: 71% of organisations using Objectives and Key Results say their organisation has yet to master the framework, according to benchmark data compiled by Mooncamp from more than 800 OKR users. The finding lands as the global OKR software market is set to expand from US$1.51 billion in 2025 to US$1.73 billion in 2026, on its way to a projected US$5.15 billion by 2034.
The figures expose a familiar tension. Adoption keeps climbing — 70% of companies now run quarterly OKR cycles, and 87% report the framework has met or exceeded expectations — yet execution lags behind ambition. Gartner research finds that 80% of organisations are actively trying to modernise their goal-setting frameworks to better connect day-to-day work with corporate strategy.
The execution gap is real, and it is measurable
The most-cited number in strategy literature still holds. Roughly two-thirds of strategies fail at the implementation stage. Recent analysis published by gwork.io places that figure at 67%, citing weak alignment between operating units and the board-level plan. McKinsey research has found that organisations with strong strategic alignment are 1.4 times more likely to report successful execution outcomes, and as much as 70% more likely to achieve the goals they set.
Where alignment fails, OKRs cannot rescue strategy on their own. A 2026 benchmark from OKR-Tool found that 65% of teams admit their OKRs are not tied to company goals — a structural disconnect that no quarterly ritual can correct.
Cadence, not complexity, separates leaders from laggards
The 2026 data draws a clear line between OKR-mature and OKR-immature organisations: review cadence. Teams that review their OKRs weekly achieve 43% higher goal-completion rates than those that only check in once a quarter, OKR-Tool's benchmark reports. More than 60% of companies surveyed by Mooncamp now run check-ins at least bi-weekly.
Cadence works because it forces a conversation about lagging signals before the period ends. Quarterly reviews surface failure. Weekly reviews surface friction.
Key statistic: 46% of organisations rate themselves as performing below average at executing their OKRs.
Source: Mooncamp 2026 OKR Benchmark
KPIs and OKRs are not interchangeable
A persistent confusion across teams is the conflation of KPIs and OKRs. KPIs measure the health of business-as-usual: pipeline velocity, retention, gross margin. OKRs describe the strategic change an organisation is trying to engineer over a defined cycle. When teams replace one with the other, they either measure motion without ambition, or set ambition without measurement.
The most effective enterprises run both. A stable scoreboard of KPIs governs the existing operating model, while a rotating, time-bound set of OKRs articulates where the business is trying to move next.
Why the discipline still pays off
Despite the difficulty, the case for structured goal-setting remains strong. Companies that implement OKRs are 39% more likely to achieve their goals than those that do not, OKR-Tool reported in its 2026 benchmark. OKR users also rate their strategy implementation as more successful (58%) than non-users (39%), according to Mooncamp's research.
The takeaway for leaders is not to abandon OKRs in favour of the next framework, but to invest in the rituals that make them work: clear cascading, weekly cadence, and rigorous separation of KPIs from objectives.
Watch: Dan Pink on the science of motivation
Dan Pink's TED talk on autonomy, mastery, and purpose remains essential viewing for any leader designing an OKR cycle — because the framework only works when key results are tied to outcomes people genuinely care about.
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