Gtmhub favicon

Gtmhub

Industry: OKR Software
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
0
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
70
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about Gtmhub without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
0
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Gtmhub from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
70/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.68
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.68
Top associations for Gtmhub
steep learning curve 5 complex setup and management 3 limited reporting flexibility 3 rebranded as Quantive 3 goal setting platform 2 part of Quantive 2 structured OKR management 2 dashboards and integrations 2 expensive for smaller teams 2 strategy execution platform 2 cross-team alignment 2 OKR software 2 supports performance management 1 OKR software platform 1 goal tracking and alignment 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
goal cascading 2 performance reporting 2 regular check-ins 1 objective and key results 1 performance visibility 1 status updates and check-ins 1 progress dashboards 1 align team goals 1 track goal progress 1 set Objectives and Key Results 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Gtmhub is firmly in the model's "okr software" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Gtmhub known for?
Gtmhub is known for OKR software—helping companies set, track, and align goals and key results across teams. It later rebranded as Quantive.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Gtmhub known for?
Gtmhub is known for its OKR (Objectives and Key Results) software platform, used by companies to track goals, align teams, and manage strategic execution and performance.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best OKR software tools for startups? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software works well for small teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR tools for remote teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software is good for enterprise companies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR platforms for HR teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software is best for product teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR tools for sales teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software helps align departments? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR software options for managers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR tools are easiest to adopt? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR software tools for tracking quarterly goals? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software is best for performance reviews? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR tools for cross-functional teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software is good for agile teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR platforms for scaling companies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which OKR software is best for tracking team progress? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR tools for leadership teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software is best for annual planning? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best OKR software tools with dashboards? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What OKR software is best for goal alignment across teams? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to an all-in-one OKR platform? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to an enterprise OKR suite? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which OKR software alternatives are better for small businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a goal management platform? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a performance and OKR system? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which OKR tools are better alternatives for team alignment? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a cloud-based OKR tool? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What OKR software alternatives are best for remote companies? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a simple goal tracking app? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a workforce goals platform? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I set company goals and track progress across teams? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I align team goals with company objectives? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I track OKRs in one place? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I make sure employees actually update their goals? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I improve accountability for team goals? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I run quarterly OKR reviews more effectively? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I monitor progress on business objectives? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I connect team OKRs to department goals? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I visualize goal progress for executives? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I stop goals from getting lost in spreadsheets? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does OKR software cost per user? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Is there free OKR software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest OKR software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do OKR tools offer free trials? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What OKR software has pricing plans? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the best value OKR software for small teams? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there affordable OKR platforms for startups? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What OKR software has a free tier? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do enterprise OKR platforms cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What OKR software is worth paying for? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
0/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best OKR software tools for teams? 170 0/5
Which OKR software is most recommended? 0 0/5
What are the top OKR software platforms? 20 0/5
What is the best OKR software for companies? 0 0/5
Which OKR software options are most popular? 0 0/5
What are the leading OKR software tools? 0 0/5
What OKR software do most teams use? 0 0/5
What are the best OKR software solutions for businesses? 0 0/5
Can you recommend good OKR software? 0 0/5
What are the most popular OKR platforms? 0 0/5
Which OKR software is best for tracking goals? 0 0/5
What are the top-rated OKR tools? 0 0/5
What OKR software options should I consider? 0 0/5
What is the best OKR tool for organizations? 10 0/5
What are the best OKR software platforms for enterprises? 10 0/5
Sample recall responses

What to do next Recommendations for Gtmhub

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 8:18 PM

All 210 AI responses for Gtmhub

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Gtmhub" in the okr software category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I’m aware Gtmhub was an OKR platform and that it later rebranded to Quantive, but I don’t have deep, current product-level knowledge or pricing details." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Gtmhub well as an OKR platform and am aware it was widely positioned around enterprise goal alignment and performance management, though I’m less certain on current pricing and the latest product details." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Gtmhub as an OKR/strategy execution platform and am aware of its rebrand to Quantive, but I don’t have deep, current detail on its pricing or full feature set." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":7,"justification":"I know Gtmhub as an OKR/performance management platform and am aware of its core positioning, though I’m not confident on current feature details or pricing."}
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Gtmhub as an OKR platform and am aware it rebranded to Quantive, but I’m not confident on detailed current pricing or feature-level specifics." }
What is Gtmhub known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub is known for OKR software—helping companies set, track, and align goals and key results across teams. It later rebranded as Quantive.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub is known for its OKR (Objectives and Key Results) software platform, used by companies to track goals, align teams, and manage strategic execution and performance.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub is known for OKR software—helping companies set, track, and align goals and key results. It later rebranded as Quantive.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub is known for OKR (Objectives and Key Results) software—helping companies set goals, track progress, align teams, and manage performance. It’s now part of Quantive.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub is known for OKR software and strategy execution tools that help companies set, track, and align goals across teams. It later rebranded as Quantive.
What are Gtmhub's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub’s main strengths are its strong OKR and performance-management capabilities, good visibility into goal alignment across teams, flexible integrations with common business tools, and solid reporting/dashboarding for tracking progress. It’s especially good for larger organizations that want a structured way to run company-wide objectives. Main weaknesses: it can feel complex to set up and manage, especially for smaller teams or OKR beginners; pricing is often considered on the higher side; and some users find the interface and admin workflows less intuitive than simpler competitors. It’s powerful, but that also makes it heavier to adopt.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub’s main strengths are its strong OKR and strategy-execution capabilities, good analytics/reporting, flexible integrations, and ability to connect goals to day-to-day work across teams. It’s often praised for being powerful and scalable for mid-market to enterprise use. Its main weaknesses are that it can feel complex to set up and administer, the learning curve can be steep for new users, and pricing is often seen as high. Some users also find the interface and workflows less intuitive than simpler OKR tools. Note: Gtmhub rebranded to Quantive.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub’s main strengths are its strong OKR and strategy-execution focus, flexible goal-setting workflows, good integrations with common business tools, and solid reporting/dashboarding for aligning teams. It’s often praised for helping organizations create visibility and accountability across departments. Main weaknesses are that it can feel complex to set up and manage, especially for smaller teams or companies new to OKRs. Some users also find it expensive relative to simpler alternatives, and the platform can be heavier than needed if you only want basic goal tracking.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub’s main strengths were its OKR management depth, strong enterprise features, flexible goal alignment/reporting, and solid integrations for connecting strategy to execution. It was especially well-regarded for helping larger organizations track performance and accountability in a structured way. Main weaknesses: it could feel complex to implement and manage, with a learning curve for teams new to OKRs; setup and adoption often required strong internal discipline. Some users also found it more expensive than simpler alternatives and less suited to small teams that just want a lightweight OKR tool.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub’s main strengths are its strong OKR/strategy execution focus, flexible goal cascading and alignment, good dashboards/reporting, and solid integrations for connecting objectives to day-to-day work. It’s especially useful for organizations that want more structure and visibility around execution. Main weaknesses: it can feel complex to set up and administer, may be heavier than simpler OKR tools for smaller teams, and some users may find the UX/learning curve challenging. It’s also more suited to companies committed to the OKR methodology than to teams just looking for lightweight task tracking.
Who should use Gtmhub? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now part of Quantive) is best for teams that want structured OKR and strategy execution management—typically mid-size to large companies, especially operations, leadership, and department teams that need visibility, alignment, and frequent progress tracking. Who should use it: - Companies serious about OKRs or other goal frameworks - Organizations needing cross-team alignment and reporting - Leadership teams that want dashboards, check-ins, and accountability - Larger teams that can benefit from integrations and centralized planning Who should avoid it: - Very small teams or startups that just need a simple to-do or goals list - Organizations not ready to adopt a formal goal-setting process - Teams looking for a lightweight, low-maintenance tool - Users who prefer minimal process overhead over structured execution In short: use it if you want enterprise-style goal management; avoid it if you want something simple and informal.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now part of Quantive) is best for mid-sized to large organizations that want a structured OKR program, cross-team alignment, and reporting on goals/metrics. It’s a good fit for companies with many teams, multiple stakeholders, and a need for integrations and visibility into progress. Who should use it: - Companies rolling out OKRs at scale - Leadership teams that want visibility into execution - Organizations with data from multiple tools that want automated goal tracking - Teams that need dashboards, alignment, and accountability Who should avoid it: - Very small teams or startups with simple goal-setting needs - Groups that want a lightweight, informal tool - Organizations that aren’t ready to commit to a real OKR process - Users looking for a simple to-do/project tracker rather than a strategy execution platform
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now part of Quantive) is best for organizations that want structured OKR/strategy execution, especially mid-sized to large companies with multiple teams, managers, and data sources. It fits well if you need enterprise-grade goal tracking, dashboards, integrations, and regular performance reviews. Who should use it: - Companies already using OKRs or planning to adopt them - Teams that need company-wide alignment and visibility - Larger orgs with cross-functional execution and reporting needs - Leaders who want a formal system for tracking goals and outcomes Who should avoid it: - Very small teams that just need simple task tracking - Groups not committed to OKRs or goal management discipline - Teams wanting a lightweight to-do app rather than a strategy platform - Organizations without time to maintain regular goal updates and reviews
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now known as Quantive) is best for mid-market to enterprise teams that want structured OKR management, alignment across departments, and performance visibility. It fits organizations with multiple teams, distributed leadership, and a need for reporting, dashboards, and integration with tools like Jira, Slack, Microsoft Teams, or HR/project systems. Who should use it: - Companies serious about OKRs and cross-functional alignment - Larger teams or fast-growing orgs with many stakeholders - Leadership, strategy, PMO, and people ops teams that need tracking and accountability - Businesses wanting a dedicated platform rather than spreadsheets or docs Who should avoid it: - Very small teams or early-stage startups that don’t need formal OKR software yet - Teams that want a simple task tracker instead of a strategy/execution platform - Organizations unwilling to commit to regular goal-setting and measurement - Users looking for a lightweight, low-cost, minimal-process tool In short: use it if you need enterprise-grade OKR execution; avoid it if you just need basic goal tracking.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now part of Quantive) is best for leadership teams, strategy/ops, and mid-to-large organizations that want to manage OKRs, align teams, and track execution with dashboards and integrations. Use it if you: - Need company-wide OKR planning and reporting - Want visibility across multiple teams or departments - Care about alignment, accountability, and analytics - Have the time and discipline to run a structured performance process Avoid it if you: - Are a very small team that doesn’t need formal OKR software - Want a simple task/project tool instead of strategy execution software - Don’t have clear goals or a process to maintain them - Prefer lightweight, low-cost tools with minimal setup
How does Gtmhub compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now Quantive) is generally seen as a strong OKR platform for mid-market and enterprise teams, with good integrations, automation, and reporting. Compared with main competitors: - WorkBoard: similar enterprise focus; WorkBoard is often stronger in large-scale enterprise operating cadence, while Gtmhub/Quantive is often praised for flexibility and integrations. - Betterworks: also enterprise-oriented; Betterworks is often positioned more around performance + OKRs, while Gtmhub/Quantive tends to emphasize OKR management and data automation. - Perdoo / Weekdone / Profit.co: these are usually simpler and cheaper, better for SMBs; Gtmhub is typically more robust but more complex. - Ally.io (now part of Microsoft Viva Goals): stronger if a company is heavily invested in Microsoft; Gtmhub/Quantive is usually more vendor-neutral and integration-rich. Overall: Gtmhub is usually a good choice if you want a powerful, highly integrated OKR platform and can handle enterprise-level setup. It is less appealing if you want a lightweight, low-cost, easy-to-adopt tool.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now part of Quantive) is generally positioned as an enterprise OKR and strategy execution platform. Compared with its main competitors: - Workboard: Similar enterprise focus, but Workboard is often seen as strong on executive alignment and business reviews, while Gtmhub is usually praised for deeper integrations, automation, and data-driven OKR tracking. - Betterworks: Betterworks is strong for large organizations and performance/goal management. Gtmhub tends to be more flexible for OKRs and cross-functional metrics, but Betterworks may feel more mature in performance-adjacent use cases. - Ally.io: Ally.io is simpler and easier to adopt, with strong Microsoft ecosystem ties. Gtmhub is typically more powerful for complex orgs and advanced reporting, but can be heavier to implement. - 15Five: 15Five is broader in employee performance, engagement, and reviews. Gtmhub is much more specialized in OKRs and strategy execution. - Monday.com / Asana / Jira: These are more general work-management tools. Gtmhub is better if the goal is true OKR governance, alignment, and KPI measurement rather than task tracking. In short: Gtmhub is strongest for large, data-driven companies that want robust OKR automation and integrations. Its tradeoff is that it can be more complex and less lightweight than simpler OKR tools.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now part of Quantive) is generally positioned as a strong enterprise OKR/strategy execution platform. Compared with its main competitors: - Workboard: often seen as a similar high-end enterprise rival. Workboard is very strong for large organizations and executive reviews; Gtmhub has typically been praised for flexibility, integrations, and reporting. - Ally.io: more straightforward and user-friendly for OKR adoption, especially for teams that want a simpler rollout. Gtmhub has usually been considered more powerful and configurable, but also a bit more complex. - Betterworks: strong in performance + OKR management and people/process workflows. Gtmhub tends to lean more toward strategy execution and analytics; Betterworks is often better for HR/performance-focused use cases. - Cascade: easier to use and popular with mid-market teams; Gtmhub is usually more enterprise-grade with deeper automation and data integration. - Profit.co: broad feature set and often more affordable, but Gtmhub is typically viewed as stronger in enterprise reporting and integrations. Overall: Gtmhub is best when you need a robust, data-driven, enterprise OKR platform with lots of integrations and customization. Competitors may beat it on simplicity, onboarding speed, or price.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub is generally seen as a strong, enterprise-grade OKR and strategy execution platform. Compared with its main competitors: - Workboard: Gtmhub is usually considered more flexible and better for integrations/data-driven workflows, while Workboard is often praised for executive alignment and simpler strategy execution. - Ally.io (Microsoft Viva Goals): Gtmhub tends to be stronger for advanced OKR management, reporting, and governance; Ally/Viva Goals has the advantage of Microsoft ecosystem fit and easier adoption for M365 customers. - Betterworks: Betterworks is often viewed as more performance-management oriented, while Gtmhub is more focused on OKRs, cross-functional alignment, and automation. - Perdoo: Gtmhub is typically the more robust enterprise choice, while Perdoo is often simpler and better for smaller teams or companies wanting a lighter-weight OKR tool. - Lattice / 15Five: these are broader people-performance platforms, so they can be better if you want reviews, engagement, and feedback in one place; Gtmhub is stronger if OKRs and strategy tracking are the priority. Overall, Gtmhub stands out for depth, scalability, and integrations, but it can feel more complex and expensive than lighter OKR tools.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Gtmhub (now Quantive) is generally seen as a strong OKR/strategy execution platform, especially for larger organizations that want deep integrations, reporting, and enterprise-grade workflow support. Compared with main competitors: - Workboard: Often stronger on enterprise execution and executive visibility; Gtmhub is usually praised for flexibility and integrations. - Ally.io (Microsoft Viva Goals): Easier to adopt for Microsoft-centric teams; Gtmhub tends to be more configurable and robust for complex orgs. - Perdoo: Simpler and more affordable; Gtmhub is more powerful but can feel heavier. - Weekdone: Better for small teams and basic OKRs; Gtmhub is more enterprise-oriented. - Profit.co: Broad feature set and competitive pricing; Gtmhub is typically viewed as stronger in data/integration depth. Overall: Gtmhub is best if you need a sophisticated, scalable OKR platform. If you want simplicity or a lower learning curve, some competitors may be a better fit.
What do people typically complain about with Gtmhub?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Gtmhub’s steep learning curve, a sometimes clunky or unintuitive interface, and the time it takes to set up and maintain OKR structures. Some also mention limited flexibility in reporting/customization, occasional bugs or performance issues, and that it can feel expensive for smaller teams.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Common complaints about Gtmhub/Quantive usually focus on a steep learning curve, a sometimes clunky UI, and setup that can take significant time and admin effort. Some users also mention limited flexibility in certain reporting/dashboard areas, sync/integration quirks, and that it can feel expensive for smaller teams.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Gtmhub can be complex to set up and manage, with a steep learning curve and a UI that feels a bit cluttered. Other common complaints are limited flexibility in reporting/customization, occasional integration or sync issues, and pricing that can feel high for smaller teams.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Gtmhub can feel complex and time-consuming to set up, with a steep learning curve for OKRs and dashboards. Common gripes also include a clunky or unintuitive UI, occasional performance issues, and integrations/reporting that don’t always feel as flexible as users want.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Gtmhub can feel complex to set up and manage, has a steep learning curve, and can be cumbersome for teams that want a simpler OKR tool. Other common complaints are about occasional integration/sync issues, limited flexibility in some reporting or customization areas, and pricing being high for smaller teams.
What is a typical okr software known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Typical OKR software is known for helping teams set, align, and track Objectives and Key Results. It usually provides goal visibility, progress tracking, check-ins, dashboards, and reporting so everyone can see how work connects to company priorities.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Typical OKR software is known for helping teams set, track, and align Objectives and Key Results. It usually includes goal-setting, progress tracking, check-ins, dashboards, alignment maps, and performance reporting.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
OKR software is typically known for helping teams set, track, and align Objectives and Key Results. It usually offers goal cascading, progress dashboards, status updates, check-ins, and performance visibility so everyone can see how work connects to company goals.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Typical OKR software is known for helping teams set, track, and align Objectives and Key Results. It usually includes goal cascading, progress tracking, check-ins, dashboards, visibility across teams, and performance reporting.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
OKR software is typically known for helping teams set, track, and align Objectives and Key Results, with features like goal cascading, progress tracking, check-ins, dashboards, and visibility across the organization.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best OKR software tools for startups? discovery 50/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For startups, the best OKR tools are the ones that are simple, lightweight, and easy to adopt fast. ### Top picks 1. **Weekdone** Best for: small teams that want simple OKRs plus weekly check-ins. Why: very startup-friendly, easy onboarding, good visibility without too much setup. 2. **Perdoo** Best for: startups that want OKRs and KPI tracking in one place. Why: clean UI, solid strategy maps, good balance of structure and usability. 3. **Lattice Goals** Best for: startups already using Lattice for performance management. Why: strong if you want OKRs tied to reviews, feedback, and employee management. 4. **Betterworks** Best for: scaling startups with more formal goal management. Why: powerful, but better for teams that are already past the very early stage. 5. **Quantive Results** Best for: data-driven startups that want enterprise-grade OKRs. Why: very robust, but may be more than a small startup needs. 6. **Mooncamp** Best for: modern startups that want a polished, easy OKR experience. Why: simple setup, good collaboration, nice design. ### Best overall for most startups - **Weekdone** if you want the simplest rollout - **Perdoo** if you want the best all-around value - **Mooncamp** if you care about UX and ease of use ### Avoid if you’re very early-stage - Heavy enterprise tools unless you already have a clear OKR process If you want, I can also give you a **best OKR tool by startup size**: 1–10, 10–50, or 50–200 employees.
retrieval Not mentioned
For startups, I’d shortlist these: 1. **Tability** — best overall for startups that want fast setup, a clean UI, and lightweight weekly check-ins. It’s priced for small teams and offers a free trial plus low-cost plans. ([tability.io](https://www.tability.io/pricing?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Perdoo** — best free/low-cost option. It has a **free plan for up to 5 users** and paid plans starting at **€8/user/month**. Good if you want OKRs + KPI tracking without much setup overhead. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Weekdone** — best if you want OKR coaching/help with adoption. Weekdone explicitly positions itself as startup-friendly and includes onboarding/OKR assistance. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Profit.co** — best if you want a more complete execution suite (OKRs plus performance/process tools). It’s more “all-in-one” than lightweight. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Quantive** — best for teams that expect to scale quickly and may need stronger reporting/integrations; Quantive’s Scale plan is listed at **$9/user/month** in its help center. ([help.quantive.com](https://help.quantive.com/en/articles/4631232-choose-your-quantive-results-plan?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Teamflect** — best if your startup lives in **Microsoft Teams** and you want goals/OKRs alongside feedback and reviews. ([teamflect.com](https://teamflect.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Best overall:** Tability ([tability.io](https://www.tability.io/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best free start:** Perdoo ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for Teams-heavy startups:** Teamflect ([teamflect.com](https://teamflect.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 3 by budget** or **top 3 by team size**.
What OKR software works well for small teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For small teams, the best OKR tools are usually simple, lightweight, and don’t feel like “enterprise software.” Good options: - **Profit.co** — very solid if you want full OKR tracking without being too heavy. Good dashboards, alignment, and reminders. - **Weekdone** — one of the easiest for small teams to adopt. Clean UI, weekly check-ins, good for startups. - **Perdoo** — strong if you want a mix of OKRs and broader performance tracking. A bit more structured. - **Mooncamp** — modern and easy to use, good for smaller companies that want a polished interface. - **ClickUp Goals** — best if you already use ClickUp for project management and want OKRs in the same place. - **Lattice OKRs** — good if you also want performance management and feedback tools, not just OKRs. My short recommendation: - **Simplest:** Weekdone - **Best balance:** Profit.co - **Best if already on ClickUp:** ClickUp Goals If you want, I can also give you a **“best OKR software by budget”** list.
retrieval Not mentioned
For small teams, I’d shortlist these: - **Perdoo** — best if you want a **free tier** and simple OKR/KPI tracking; the free plan supports up to **5 users**. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone** — best if you want the **easiest adoption** and weekly check-ins; it’s **free for up to 3 users**, with a **14-day trial** for 4+ users. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices?utm_source=openai)) - **Mooncamp** — best if you want a polished, lightweight tool; its **Essential** plan is **€7/user/month** and is described as for **smaller teams and businesses getting started with OKRs**. ([mooncamp.com](https://mooncamp.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Tiny team / lowest cost:** Weekdone or Perdoo. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices?utm_source=openai)) - **Best balance for a growing small team:** Mooncamp. ([mooncamp.com](https://mooncamp.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best 3 based on your budget, team size, and whether you use Slack/Jira/Teams**.
What are the best OKR tools for remote teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR tools for remote teams: - **Profit.co** — Strong all-in-one OKR platform with check-ins, task tracking, and integrations. Good for distributed teams that want structure. - **Weekdone** — Very remote-team friendly, with weekly check-ins and simple OKR tracking. Best for smaller teams. - **Betterworks** — Enterprise-grade OKRs with performance management and alignment. Best for larger remote organizations. - **Ally.io** (Microsoft Viva Goals legacy ecosystem) — Great if you’re in Microsoft 365 and want tight workflow integration. - **Perdoo** — Clean OKR software with good strategy maps and progress tracking. Nice for teams that want clarity and visibility. - **ClickUp** — Not a pure OKR tool, but useful if your team already lives in it. Good for combining OKRs, tasks, and docs. - **Lattice** — Best if you want OKRs tied to performance reviews and employee management. **Best overall for remote teams:** **Profit.co** or **Perdoo** **Best simple option:** **Weekdone** **Best enterprise option:** **Betterworks** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free/cheap OKR tools**, or 2. a **comparison table by team size and budget**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **remote teams**, the best OKR tools are the ones that make goals **visible, easy to update, and tied to daily work**. My top picks: - **WorkBoard** — best for large, distributed orgs that need strong alignment and cross-team dependency tracking. Its OKR product emphasizes AI-assisted OKR drafting, dependency mapping, and action plans. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/products/cos-okr-creation-alignment?utm_source=openai)) - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus performance management in one place. It supports real-time goal tracking, alignment, and integrations with Slack/Jira/Teams. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — best for enterprise teams that want structured OKRs with continuous performance workflows and AI goal suggestions. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone** — best for SMBs/remote teams that want simple OKRs with weekly check-ins, dashboards, and built-in alignment. It’s explicitly aimed at 10–1000 employees and supports remote collaboration/newsfeed-style updates. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Quantive Results** — best for teams that want strong hierarchy/alignment views and AI help creating OKRs. It offers whiteboard collaboration and visibility into multi-level OKR relationships. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/products/results%26urlhash%3DGu4r?utm_source=openai)) - **monday.com** — best if you want an easier all-in-one work hub that can also handle OKRs. It’s strong for remote coordination, integrations, and sharing progress in one workspace. ([monday.com](https://monday.com/use-cases/remote-work?utm_source=openai)) - **Asana** — best if your team already runs work in Asana and wants goals to live alongside project execution. It’s built for remote coordination and integrates well with Slack, Zoom, and Google Workspace. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/uses/manage-remote-teams/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for remote enterprise:** WorkBoard or Lattice. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/products/cos-okr-creation-alignment?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for startups/SMBs:** Weekdone. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you want OKRs inside a broader work platform:** monday.com or Asana. ([monday.com](https://monday.com/use-cases/remote-work?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked by team size** or **compare pricing/features**.
What OKR software is good for enterprise companies? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For enterprise companies, the best OKR software usually includes strong permissions, hierarchy alignment, integrations, analytics, and admin controls. Good options: - **WorkBoard** — strong enterprise OKR management, business reviews, alignment, and reporting. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — very flexible, good for large organizations and integrations. - **Betterworks** — solid for performance + OKRs, widely used in larger enterprises. - **Profit.co** — good enterprise feature set and often a more budget-friendly option. - **Weekdone** — simpler, but can work well for enterprise teams that want lightweight execution. If you want the safest enterprise picks: 1. **WorkBoard** 2. **Quantive Results** 3. **Betterworks** If you tell me your company size, whether you need performance reviews too, and what tools you use (Slack, Jira, Microsoft, Salesforce), I can narrow it down.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **enterprise OKR software**, the strongest names I’d look at are: - **WorkBoardAI** — best if you want a true **strategy-execution** platform with enterprise controls, OKR heatmaps, shared ownership, and broad rollout support. WorkBoard says it’s used by large enterprises and supports deep linking, custom permissions, and unlimited view-only users. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/resources/articles/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — best if OKRs need to tie closely to **performance management**, reviews, feedback, and HR workflows. Betterworks positions itself as enterprise-grade and integrates with tools like Workday, Salesforce, Jira, and Slack. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Quantive StrategyAI** — best if you want **AI-driven strategy execution** with enterprise dashboards, predictive insights, and cross-department alignment. Quantive also says it offers enterprise solutions and white-glove support when you’re ready to scale. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/home?utm_source=openai)) - **Perdoo** — best if you want a more **dedicated OKR platform** that also covers KPIs and strategy mapping, with support for larger org rollouts. Perdoo emphasizes fast setup and enterprise-scale implementation support. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest shortlist: **WorkBoardAI** for large-scale execution, **Betterworks** for HR/performance-heavy enterprises, and **Quantive** for strategy + AI. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/resources/articles/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **comparison table** by features, pricing model, and best fit.
What are the best OKR platforms for HR teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR platforms for HR teams: 1. **WorkBoard** Best for: enterprise HR and people ops Strong at: company-wide OKR cascades, employee alignment, analytics, integrations with Slack, Teams, and HR systems. 2. **Quantive Results** Best for: larger organizations that want deep strategy execution Strong at: OKR tracking, dashboards, cross-functional alignment, and reporting for leadership/HR. 3. **Profit.co** Best for: HR teams that want OKRs plus performance management Strong at: goal setting, reviews, check-ins, 1:1s, and employee engagement features. 4. **Lattice** Best for: HR teams focused on performance and development Strong at: performance reviews, feedback, growth plans, and OKRs as part of a broader people platform. 5. **Leapsome** Best for: combining OKRs, reviews, and employee engagement Strong at: flexible workflows, pulse surveys, learning, and people analytics. 6. **Weekdone** Best for: small to mid-sized teams Strong at: simple OKR setup, weekly check-ins, and easy adoption. 7. **Perdoo** Best for: straightforward OKR management Strong at: clean UI, goal tracking, and alignment across teams. **Best overall for HR teams:** - **Lattice** or **Leapsome** if you want OKRs tied to performance and employee development. - **WorkBoard** or **Quantive** if you need enterprise-grade OKR strategy execution. If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for startups vs enterprise**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For HR teams, the best OKR platforms right now are usually the ones that combine **goals + performance + reviews** instead of being OKR-only. My short list: 1. **Lattice** — best all-around for HR teams that want OKRs tied into 1:1s, feedback, and performance reviews. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Leapsome** — great if you want OKRs plus reviews, feedback, surveys, and development goals in one system. ([help.leapsome.com](https://help.leapsome.com/hc/en-us/articles/30192934732061-Understanding-Leapsome-AI-and-controlling-AI-settings?utm_source=openai)) 3. **15Five** — strong for continuous performance management and manager effectiveness, with OKRs/goals built in. ([15five.com](https://www.15five.com/products/hr-outcomes-dashboard/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Betterworks** — best for larger orgs that want more serious OKR execution and performance management depth. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/liveperson-unlocks-talent-with-ai-powered-performance/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **WorkBoard** — best for enterprise strategy execution / OKR scaling, especially if you already use Workday. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/resources/product-updates/march-2026-improvements?utm_source=openai)) **Also worth a look:** - **Culture Amp** if HR cares more about engagement + performance insights than deep OKR workflow. ([peoplebox.ai](https://www.peoplebox.ai/blog/best-performance-management-tools/?utm_source=openai)) - **Peoplebox.ai** if you want a full talent-management suite with OKRs, reviews, 360 feedback, and compensation planning. ([peoplebox.ai](https://www.peoplebox.ai/blog/profit-co-review-alternatives/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 3 by company size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise) or a **feature-by-feature comparison table**.
What OKR software is best for product teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For product teams, the **best all-around OKR software** is usually **Weekdone** or **Lattice**, depending on how you work: - **Weekdone** — best if you want **simple, product-team-friendly OKRs** with weekly check-ins and lightweight progress tracking. - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs tied to **performance, reviews, and people management** too. - **Perdoo** — best if you want a more **structured OKR system** with clear alignment across teams. - **Profit.co** — best if you want **more features and customization** at a lower price point. - **15Five** — good if your product team already uses it for **engagement and manager check-ins**. ### My quick pick - **Small/fast product teams:** **Weekdone** - **Growing product orgs:** **Perdoo** - **If HR/performance matters too:** **Lattice** ### What product teams usually need Look for: - objective/initiative linking - weekly progress updates - team alignment and dependency tracking - integrations with Jira, Asana, Slack, or Linear - simple dashboards, not heavy enterprise complexity If you want, I can give you a **top 5 comparison table** by price, ease of use, and Jira/Linear integration.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **one best choice for product teams**, I’d pick **Aha! Roadmaps**. It’s the strongest fit when you want OKRs tied directly to product strategy, roadmap work, and team-level rollups. Aha! says you can define objectives at company, group, and product/team levels, link work items to those objectives, and track progress in the roadmap itself. ([aha.io](https://www.aha.io/roadmaps/okrs?utm_source=openai)) **Best picks by use case:** - **Aha! Roadmaps** — best overall for product orgs that want strategy + roadmap + OKRs in one place. ([aha.io](https://www.aha.io/roadmaps/okrs?utm_source=openai)) - **airfocus** — best if you want a more modular product platform and especially strong OKR-to-roadmap/workflow linking. airfocus says its Objectives app connects OKRs with roadmaps and product workflows. ([airfocus.com](https://airfocus.com/product/objectives-okrs/?utm_source=openai)) - **ProdPad** — best if your team wants product-management-native OKRs inside a product platform; ProdPad says its OKRs are built for product managers and can connect to roadmap initiatives. ([prodpad.com](https://www.prodpad.com/blog/best-okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) If you want **OKRs for people/performance management** more than product planning, **Lattice** is a better fit than the tools above because its OKR software is centered on employee goals, analytics, and performance workflows. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you already use Jira/Linear/Asana, I can narrow it to the single best option.
What are the best OKR tools for sales teams? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR tools for sales teams: 1. **Workboard** Best for larger sales orgs that want strong execution tracking, manager visibility, and KPI dashboards. 2. **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** Great for sales teams that want deep integrations with Salesforce, HubSpot, and BI tools. 3. **Profit.co** Good value for mid-market teams; combines OKRs, performance management, and task tracking. 4. **Betterworks** Strong for enterprise sales organizations with structured goal-setting and manager check-ins. 5. **Weekdone** Simple and easy to adopt for smaller sales teams; good for weekly progress tracking. 6. **Lattice** Best if you want OKRs tied to performance reviews, feedback, and employee engagement. 7. **15Five** Useful for sales teams that want goals, check-ins, and coaching in one platform. **Best pick by use case:** - **Enterprise sales:** Workboard, Betterworks, Quantive - **Mid-market:** Profit.co, Quantive - **Small teams:** Weekdone, Profit.co - **OKRs + performance reviews:** Lattice, 15Five If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR tool for Salesforce users specifically** or a **top 3 based on price**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For sales teams, the best OKR tools are usually the ones that connect cleanly to your CRM and make pipeline/revenue metrics easy to track automatically. **Top picks:** 1. **Quantive Results** — best if you want strong Salesforce + Microsoft Teams workflows and automated KR updates from sales data. ([help.quantive.com](https://help.quantive.com/en/articles/899390-salesforce-com?utm_source=openai)) 2. **WorkBoard** — best for larger teams that need enterprise-grade OKR management plus connectors for Salesforce, Jira, PowerBI, and more. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/developer/authentication-oauth.php?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Profit.co** — best if you want a flexible OKR platform with explicit Salesforce-based sales OKR tracking and automated check-ins. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/blog/okr-university/okr-software-integrated-with-salesforce-turning-crm-activity-into-real-business-outcomes/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Lattice** — best if you want goals/OKRs tied to performance management, with Salesforce integrations and good team alignment features. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Goals.com** — best for small sales teams that want a simple sales-performance system with goals, pipeline, commissions, and team visibility in one place. ([goals.com](https://www.goals.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Salesforce-heavy team:** Quantive or Profit.co. ([help.quantive.com](https://help.quantive.com/en/articles/899390-salesforce-com?utm_source=openai)) - **Enterprise / multi-system ops:** WorkBoard. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/developer/authentication-oauth.php?utm_source=openai)) - **People + performance + OKRs together:** Lattice. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **Small team / simple setup:** Goals.com. ([goals.com](https://www.goals.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best by company size”** shortlist or a **comparison table with pricing/use cases**.
What OKR software helps align departments? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If your main goal is **department alignment**, these OKR tools are strong picks: - **WorkBoard** — Best for enterprise-wide alignment; good for cascading OKRs across departments. - **Betterworks** — Strong for goal alignment, manager check-ins, and connecting team OKRs to company strategy. - **Perdoo** — Very good for visual alignment maps and tracking how department goals roll up to company goals. - **Weekdone** — Simple and effective for team-level alignment, especially in smaller orgs. - **Lattice OKRs** — Best if you already use Lattice for performance management and want goals tied to reviews. - **Profit.co** — Flexible and feature-rich; good for linking OKRs, KPIs, and departmental initiatives. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best overall for alignment:** WorkBoard - **Best for ease of use:** Perdoo - **Best if you want performance + OKRs:** Lattice If you tell me your company size and whether you want enterprise or SMB software, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.
retrieval Not mentioned
A few good OKR tools for **department alignment** are: - **Workpath** — strong for cross-functional alignment and visualizing dependencies across the org. ([workpath.com](https://www.workpath.com/en/magazine/workpaths-drafting-module?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** — supports top-down and bottom-up alignment, including department-level OKRs and aligned KRs. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/help-center/okr-end-user-guide/planning/how-do-i-align-with-other-okrs/?utm_source=openai)) - **Lattice** — emphasizes directional alignment, letting department objectives connect to company key results while keeping flexibility. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/library/okr-101?utm_source=openai)) - **PeopleGoal** — explicitly supports cascading goals into department/team OKRs and visualizing alignment across the org chart. ([peoplegoal.com](https://www.peoplegoal.com/product/okrs-software?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **best fit for a larger org with lots of inter-department dependencies**, I’d start with **Workpath** or **Profit.co**. ([workpath.com](https://www.workpath.com/en/magazine/workpaths-drafting-module?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down by **company size, budget, or whether you want OKRs only vs. full performance management**.
What are the best OKR software options for managers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software options for managers, depending on team size and how structured you want the process: ### Top picks - **Quantive Results** — Best for larger teams that want strong OKR planning, tracking, and reporting. - **WorkBoard** — Great for enterprise OKR management and leadership visibility. - **Weekdone** — Simple, manager-friendly, and good for smaller teams. - **Betterworks** — Strong for performance management plus OKRs. - **Profit.co** — Good balance of features and ease of use for mid-sized companies. - **Mooncamp** — Clean UI and solid for modern teams. - **Perdoo** — Good if you want OKRs tied to strategy and company-level goals. - **Leapsome** — Best if you want OKRs plus reviews, feedback, and engagement tools. ### Best by use case - **Best overall for managers:** **Profit.co** - **Best for enterprise:** **WorkBoard** or **Quantive Results** - **Best simple option:** **Weekdone** - **Best all-in-one people management:** **Leapsome** or **Betterworks** - **Best for strategy alignment:** **Perdoo** ### What managers should look for - Clear goal cascade from company to team - Easy check-ins and progress updates - Dashboards for visibility - Task/project integration - Reviews and feedback features if needed If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 ranked list**, or 2. a **comparison table with pricing and features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are strong OKR software picks for managers, depending on what you need: - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus manager-friendly performance workflows. It supports cascading alignment, visual progress tracking, and integrations like Slack, Teams, and Jira. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — best for larger teams that want serious goal management and rollout support. It offers OKR templates, best-practice guidance, and implementation/customer-success help. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **15Five** — best for manager enablement. Its OKR playbook and objectives features are built around coaching, manager feedback, and goal visibility across hierarchies. ([15five.com](https://www.15five.com/hubfs/Content/E-Books/15Five_OKR%20Playbook.pdf?hsLang=en&utm_source=openai)) - **WorkBoardAI** — best for enterprise strategy execution. It emphasizes AI-assisted OKR drafting, dependency mapping, and manager development in large organizations. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/products/cos-okr-creation-alignment?utm_source=openai)) - **Quantive Results** — best if you want flexible OKR management with strong alignment and reporting. It includes alignment views, whiteboards, AI assistance, check-ins, and KPI dashboards. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/products/results%26urlhash%3DGu4r?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** — best budget-friendly all-in-one option for managers. It highlights real-time OKR dashboards, heatmaps, tasks, and performance-management features. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/strategic-performance-management-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone** — best if you want a simpler OKR tool. It focuses on hierarchy, weekly progress updates, dashboards, and easy onboarding. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Most managers:** Lattice - **Best enterprise:** WorkBoardAI or Betterworks - **Best coaching/manager development:** 15Five - **Best simpler OKR-only tool:** Weekdone If you want, I can narrow this to **best for small teams**, **best for enterprise**, or **best value**.
What OKR tools are easiest to adopt? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
The easiest OKR tools to adopt are usually the ones that are **lightweight, guided, and don’t force heavy process change**. ### Easiest to adopt - **Tability** — very simple UI, built for fast OKR rollout, low setup friction. - **Perdoo** — straightforward OKR tracking with good templates and onboarding. - **Weekdone** — easy for small teams; combines OKRs with weekly check-ins. - **Profit.co** — more feature-rich, but still fairly approachable with good guided setup. - **Lattice** — easier if you already use it for performance management; OKRs fit naturally. - **15Five** — good for teams already using it for goals/check-ins. ### Best for larger orgs, but a bit heavier - **WorkBoard** - **Betterworks** - **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** ### If you want the simplest path - **Small team/startup:** Tability or Weekdone - **Mid-size company:** Perdoo or Profit.co - **Already using HR/performance software:** Lattice or 15Five If you want, I can also give you a **“best OKR tool by company size”** shortlist.
retrieval Not mentioned
If your goal is **fastest adoption**, I’d shortlist these: 1. **Tability** — best for teams that want a lightweight tool with **no setup fees**, **no required user minimums**, and **easy self-onboarding**; Slack is included on the Basic plan. ([tability.io](https://www.tability.io/pricing?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Perdoo** — best if you want **guided setup** and a very quick start; Perdoo says most teams set first OKRs **within hours**, and the free plan is available for up to 5 users. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Mooncamp** — good if your team lives in **Slack or Microsoft Teams**; it supports check-ins and updates in those tools, and positions itself around **fast onboarding** and ease of use. ([mooncamp.com](https://mooncamp.com/integrations?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Weekdone** — good for startups/new OKR teams because it offers **built-in examples**, a **guided OKR writing tool**, and onboarding/OKR assistance. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Easiest overall:** **Tability** - **Best “get started today” option:** **Perdoo** - **Best if you want Slack/Teams-first adoption:** **Mooncamp** ([tability.io](https://www.tability.io/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **3-way comparison by price, integrations, and setup effort**.
What are the best OKR software tools for tracking quarterly goals? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software tools for tracking quarterly goals: 1. **Profit.co** Best all-around for OKR tracking, check-ins, and dashboards. Good for teams that want a dedicated OKR platform. 2. **WorkBoard** Strong for enterprise OKRs and leadership visibility. Great if you need strategy alignment across a larger org. 3. **Weekdone** Simple, lightweight OKR tool for startups and smaller teams. Easy to set up for quarterly planning. 4. **Perdoo** Good balance of OKRs, KPIs, and strategy maps. Nice if you want clearer linking between goals and metrics. 5. **Betterworks** Solid for performance management plus OKRs. Best for companies that want goals tied to employee reviews and development. 6. **Lattice** Popular if you want OKRs alongside performance, feedback, and 1:1s. Best for people-first orgs. 7. **Asana** Not a pure OKR tool, but works well for quarterly goal tracking if your team already uses it for project management. 8. **ClickUp** Flexible and affordable. Good if you want OKRs, tasks, docs, and dashboards in one place. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Profit.co - **Best for enterprise:** WorkBoard - **Best for small teams:** Weekdone - **Best if you also want performance management:** Lattice or Betterworks If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by price**, **best for startups**, or **best for enterprise**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are strong OKR tools for **quarterly goal tracking**: - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs tied to people/performance management, with quarterly OKR templates and cascading alignment. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) - **WorkBoardAI** — best for enterprise strategy execution; it aligns quarterly OKRs with longer-term strategy and supports business-review workflows. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/news/first-full-strategy-execution-stack?utm_source=openai)) - **Quantive** — best for OKR tracking/analytics; it emphasizes dashboards, weekly or monthly check-ins, and OKR cadence management. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/resources/articles/okr-tracking?utm_source=openai)) - **Perdoo** — best for strategy + OKRs + KPIs in one system; it supports company annual OKRs and team quarterly OKRs with weekly check-ins. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone** — best for smaller teams/startups; it’s built around quarterly OKRs plus weekly check-ins and simple goal hierarchy. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — best if you want OKRs embedded in continuous performance management, with weekly goal updates rather than waiting for quarterly reviews. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Small team: **Weekdone** or **Perdoo**. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - Mid-market HR/performance focus: **Lattice** or **Betterworks**. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) - Enterprise strategy execution: **WorkBoardAI** or **Quantive**. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/news/first-full-strategy-execution-stack?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **price, ease of use, or best for startups vs enterprise**.
What OKR software is best for performance reviews? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If your main goal is **performance reviews tied to OKRs**, the best overall pick is **Lattice**. **Top picks:** - **Lattice** — best all-around for **performance reviews + goals/OKRs + feedback** - **Leapsome** — great for **reviews, OKRs, and employee development** in one tool - **Betterworks** — best if you want a more **enterprise-grade OKR platform** - **15Five** — strong for **continuous performance management** and manager check-ins - **Culture Amp** — excellent for **review workflows and engagement**, with goal tracking **My short recommendation:** - **Best overall:** **Lattice** - **Best for SMBs:** **Leapsome** - **Best for enterprise OKR rigor:** **Betterworks** If you want, I can also give you a **“best by company size”** shortlist or compare **Lattice vs Leapsome vs Betterworks**.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best overall: Lattice.** It’s the strongest “OKRs + performance reviews” combo for most teams because it has dedicated goals/OKRs plus review-cycle tooling, and Lattice explicitly supports pulling goals into review cycles. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) **If you’re enterprise-heavy:** **Betterworks** is a great pick. Its product page says goals are designed to be the foundation for performance reviews and to bring goal data into reviews. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) **If you want review-first with OKRs built in:** **15Five** is very solid. It ties OKRs to its Best-Self Review cycles and stores progress in one place for reviews. ([15five.com](https://www.15five.com/products/performance/okrs-and-goals/?utm_source=openai)) **If your org is very strategy-execution oriented:** **WorkBoard** is strongest when you want OKRs, work tracking, and fact-based performance conversations tied together. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/products/coach-performance-analysis?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **top 3 by company size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise).
What are the best OKR tools for cross-functional teams? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR tools for cross-functional teams: 1. **WorkBoard** - Best for: Large, multi-team orgs - Why: Strong alignment, enterprise reporting, executive dashboards, integrations with Slack, Jira, Microsoft Teams. 2. **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** - Best for: Data-driven teams - Why: Great automation, KPI syncing, flexible OKR tracking, strong analytics across functions. 3. **Betterworks** - Best for: Enterprise performance + OKRs - Why: Good for linking goals, feedback, and performance management; useful when OKRs are part of broader people processes. 4. **Weekdone** - Best for: Small to mid-sized teams - Why: Simple, easy to adopt, good weekly check-ins and progress visibility. 5. **Perdoo** - Best for: Teams wanting a clean OKR + strategy map setup - Why: Easy goal hierarchy, KPI tracking, and strategy alignment. 6. **Profit.co** - Best for: Teams that want lots of features at a lower price - Why: OKRs, tasks, performance reviews, and dashboards in one tool. 7. **Leapsome** - Best for: Teams combining OKRs with reviews and engagement - Why: Strong people ops suite with goal-setting, feedback, and surveys. **Top picks by use case** - **Best overall for cross-functional enterprises:** WorkBoard - **Best automation/metrics:** Quantive Results - **Best simple rollout:** Weekdone - **Best all-in-one HR + OKR:** Betterworks or Leapsome If you want, I can also give you: - a **comparison table** - the **best free/low-cost options** - or **recommendations based on your team size and stack**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best OKR tools for cross-functional teams: - **WorkBoardAI** — best for large enterprises and complex cross-team coordination. It supports shared ownership, multi-level OKRs, real-time insights, and links OKRs to tasks/projects. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/resources/articles/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Quantive Results** — strong for ad-hoc cross-functional teams because it has **Shared OKRs** built specifically to reduce silos, map dependencies, and support shared accountability. ([help.quantive.com](https://help.quantive.com/en/articles/5537617-shared-okrs?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — good for organizations that want OKRs plus broader goal alignment; it supports strategic OKRs, team goals, individual goals, and cross-functional initiatives. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Asana** — best if your team already runs work in a project-management tool and wants goals tied directly to tasks/projects. It emphasizes cross-team collaboration, Goals, and 200+ integrations. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/teams/company-wide?utm_source=openai)) - **Perdoo** — a solid strategy-execution option for companies that want team OKRs that support company goals and encourage cross-functional collaboration. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/resources/online-guides/okr-examples-guide?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** — good for visibility and alignment across teams, with public/team/access-list visibility plus Slack integration. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/blog/product/how-does-profit-enable-okr-visibility-across-teams/?utm_source=openai)) - **Peoplebox** — worth considering if you need shared OKRs with multiple owners and clear cross-functional accountability. ([help.peoplebox.ai](https://help.peoplebox.ai/hc/peoplebox-help-center/articles/1721729901-shared-ok_rs-projects-_-multiple-teams-owners?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Enterprise / lots of dependencies:** WorkBoardAI or Quantive. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/resources/articles/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **All-in-one work management + goals:** Asana. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/teams/company-wide?utm_source=openai)) - **Simple, structured OKR rollout:** Perdoo or Profit.co. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 5 ranked list by company size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise).
What OKR software is good for agile teams? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Good OKR software for agile teams: - **Jira Align** — best if you already run agile in Jira; strong for linking OKRs to epics, sprints, and portfolios. - **Profit.co** — very agile-friendly; good check-ins, KR tracking, and workflow integration. - **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** — strong automation and integrations; good for fast-moving product teams. - **Perdoo** — simple, easy-to-use OKRs with clear team alignment and progress tracking. - **WorkBoard** — good for larger agile orgs that want strong execution and reporting. - **Betterworks** — solid for enterprise teams, with OKRs plus performance management. - **Weekdone** — lightweight and easy for small agile teams. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best for Jira users:** Jira Align - **Best overall for agile teams:** Profit.co - **Best for automation/integrations:** Quantive If you tell me your team size and whether you use Jira, I can narrow it to 2–3 best fits.
retrieval Not mentioned
For agile teams, I’d shortlist these: - **Jira Align** — best if you’re already deep in Atlassian and need portfolio-to-team OKRs tied to agile delivery. Atlassian positions it around organizational agility and OKRs, with support for teams/programs and work-tree style alignment. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/jira-align/kb/jira-align-team-column-meaning-in-okr-hub/?utm_source=openai)) - **Perdoo** — good for agile tech teams that want a lighter OKR tool with Jira integration and weekly check-ins. Perdoo explicitly says its Jira Cloud integration helps agile tech teams keep OKRs updated from Jira issues/epics. ([support.perdoo.com](https://support.perdoo.com/en/articles/4532681-jira-integration?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** — solid mid-market pick if you want OKRs mapped to Jira, Asana, Slack, or Teams. Profit.co documents Jira/JQL and Asana integrations that auto-update key results from execution data. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/blog/okr-university/beyond-the-sprint-how-okrs-supercharge-agile-in-it-services/?utm_source=openai)) - **WorkBoardAI** — strong enterprise choice for weekly check-ins and automated KR updates from Jira. WorkBoard says you can update key results automatically from Jira and keep progress visible without leaving Jira. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/resources/videos/calibrate-on-results-every-week?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — good if you want OKRs plus broader goal/performance workflows, with Jira and Slack integrations and real-time updates for agile orgs. Betterworks says it’s suitable for agile organizations and integrates with Jira, Slack, Workday, and Salesforce. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Small/lean agile team:** Perdoo or Profit.co. ([support.perdoo.com](https://support.perdoo.com/en/articles/4532681-jira-integration?utm_source=openai)) - **Jira-first engineering org:** Jira Align or the Atlassian Marketplace OKR apps. ([marketplace.atlassian.com](https://marketplace.atlassian.com/apps/1226195/okr-align-goals-track-results-for-jira?utm_source=openai)) - **Enterprise with lots of cross-functional reporting:** WorkBoardAI or Betterworks. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/products/coach-performance-analysis?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your stack (Jira vs Asana vs no PM tool) and team size, I can narrow it to 2–3 best fits.
What are the best OKR platforms for scaling companies? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For scaling companies, the best OKR platforms are usually the ones that combine **simple OKR tracking, manager visibility, integrations, and lightweight performance workflows**. ### Top picks 1. **Quantive Results** - Best for: fast-growing companies that want serious OKR management + analytics - Strengths: strong dashboards, alignment, progress tracking, integrations 2. **WorkBoard** - Best for: mid-market and enterprise scaling teams - Strengths: enterprise-grade OKR execution, reviews, leadership visibility, strategy alignment 3. **Perdoo** - Best for: companies that want a clean, easy-to-use OKR tool - Strengths: intuitive UI, goals + KPIs, good for cross-functional alignment 4. **Profit.co** - Best for: companies that want OKRs plus performance management in one place - Strengths: OKRs, feedback, reviews, tasks, strong feature depth for the price 5. **Betterworks** - Best for: larger scaling orgs focused on continuous performance and goals - Strengths: goal management, check-ins, performance workflows, enterprise integrations 6. **Lattice Goals** - Best for: companies already using Lattice for performance management - Strengths: strong if you want OKRs tied to reviews, 1:1s, and engagement ### Best overall by use case - **Best overall for scaling:** **Quantive Results** - **Best enterprise choice:** **WorkBoard** - **Best ease of use:** **Perdoo** - **Best all-in-one people + OKRs:** **Profit.co** - **Best if you already use performance software:** **Lattice Goals** or **Betterworks** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 shortlist by company size** (e.g. 50–200, 200–1000, 1000+) or a **comparison table by price/features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For scaling companies, the strongest OKR platforms are usually: 1. **WorkBoard** — best for large, complex orgs that want strategy execution, OKRs, dashboards, and enterprise reporting in one place. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Betterworks** — best if you want enterprise-grade OKRs tightly connected to performance management and feedback. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Perdoo** — best for companies that want a dedicated OKR + strategy execution system with strong alignment, reporting, and integrations. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Profit.co** — best for teams that want a broad OKR suite with performance management, task management, and lots of integrations. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Lattice** — best if OKRs should live inside a broader people/performance platform, especially for orgs already using it for reviews and feedback. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Weekdone** — best for smaller scaling teams that want an easier rollout and weekly check-ins. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation:** - **Enterprise scale:** WorkBoard or Betterworks. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mid-market growth:** Perdoo or Profit.co. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **People + performance first:** Lattice. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 3 pick based on your company size, stack, and budget**.
Which OKR software is best for tracking team progress? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want the **best OKR software for tracking team progress**, my top pick is **Quantive Results**. ### Best overall: **Quantive Results** - Strong OKR tracking and progress dashboards - Good for team-level visibility and alignment - Flexible enough for growing companies ### Also great: - **Betterworks** — best for larger teams and enterprise OKR management - **Weekdone** — simple and easy to use for small teams - **Perdoo** — good balance of OKRs, KPIs, and roadmap tracking - **Lattice OKRs** — best if you already use Lattice for performance management ### Quick recommendation: - **Small team:** Weekdone - **Growing startup:** Perdoo or Quantive Results - **Enterprise:** Betterworks - **Already using Lattice:** Lattice OKRs If you tell me your team size and budget, I can narrow it to the best 1–2 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best overall for tracking team progress:** **Lattice**. It’s built for OKRs with **real-time progress tracking, visual dashboards, cascading alignment, and Slack/Teams/Jira integrations**, which makes it strong for keeping teams updated without a lot of manual reporting. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) **Good alternatives:** - **Betterworks** — strong if you want **goal visibility at every level** plus alerts when OKRs drift. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **WorkBoard** — best for larger orgs that want **progress dashboards, goal-to-work linkage, and cross-team alignment**. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/workboard-community/goals-and-metrics-app.php?utm_source=openai)) - **Asana** — best if your team already lives in Asana; it can **auto-update goal progress from project work** and visualize progress in dashboards. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/ko/apps/rhythms?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **best pick by team size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise) or a **top 5 comparison**.
What are the best OKR tools for leadership teams? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best OKR tools for leadership teams: 1. **Betterworks** — Best for enterprise leadership teams Strong for cascading goals, exec visibility, and performance linkage. Great if you want OKRs tied closely to managers and reviews. 2. **WorkBoard** — Best for executive strategy execution Excellent dashboards, cross-functional alignment, and board-ready reporting. Often used by large leadership teams. 3. **Weekdone** — Best for simpler, team-friendly OKRs Easy to adopt, good weekly check-ins, and lightweight reporting. Best if you want less process overhead. 4. **Lattice** — Best if you want OKRs + performance management Combines goals, reviews, 1:1s, and engagement in one platform. Good for leadership teams that want a broader people stack. 5. **Perdoo** — Best value for structured OKRs Clear goal hierarchy, good strategy maps, and solid execution tracking. Popular with mid-sized companies. 6. **Profit.co** — Best all-in-one OKR platform Includes OKRs, tasks, reviews, and more. Flexible and feature-rich, though a bit busier than simpler tools. 7. **Synergita** — Best for performance + OKRs on a budget Good for leadership teams wanting goal management without enterprise pricing. **If I had to pick:** - **Best overall for leadership:** WorkBoard - **Best enterprise:** Betterworks - **Best all-in-one:** Profit.co - **Best simpler option:** Weekdone - **Best with performance management:** Lattice If you want, I can also give you a shortlist by company size: startup, mid-market, or enterprise.
retrieval Mentioned
For leadership teams, the best OKR tools are usually the ones that make strategy visible, keep check-ins lightweight, and give executives a live roll-up of progress. My short list: **WorkBoardAI, Betterworks, Quantive StrategyAI, Perdoo, and Asana**. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/manager-time/?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall for leadership/executive operating rhythm:** **WorkBoardAI** — strong on strategy execution, leadership visibility, scorecards, and meeting rhythm automation. It’s aimed at connecting company, team, and individual objectives and at helping leaders run faster operating cadences. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/manager-time/?utm_source=openai)) **Best enterprise OKR + performance management:** **Betterworks** — good if you want OKRs tied closely to reviews, alignment, and manager workflows, with integrations like Slack, Jira, Salesforce, and Workday. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) **Best for analytics-heavy strategy execution:** **Quantive StrategyAI** — a strong fit when leadership wants robust reporting, cross-functional visibility, and a more data-driven OKR program. It’s also well reviewed on Capterra. ([capterra.com](https://www.capterra.com/p/156365/Gtmhub/reviews/?utm_source=openai)) **Best mid-market dedicated OKR platform:** **Perdoo** — best if you want a purpose-built OKR system with company/team alignment, KPI monitoring, weekly check-ins, and leadership dashboards. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) **Best if you already live in work-management tooling:** **Asana** — solid if leadership wants goals connected to projects/portfolios rather than a standalone OKR system. Asana supports goals at org, team, and individual levels. ([investors.asana.com](https://investors.asana.com/static-files/360979ed-fa0b-45c8-a4f7-c9449f75d509?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 3 by company size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise) or a **comparison table**.
What OKR software is best for annual planning? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **annual planning**, the best OKR software is usually **WorkBoard** or **Quantive**. ### Best overall: **WorkBoard** - Strong for enterprise annual planning, cascading goals, and strategy execution - Good for leadership reviews, planning cycles, and aligning teams across the company - Best if you want a full operating system for OKRs, not just tracking ### Best for flexible planning: **Quantive** - Very good for setting annual objectives, updating quarterly, and linking OKRs to execution - Clean dashboards and solid reporting - Best if you want something powerful but a bit easier to use than heavier enterprise tools ### Also worth considering: - **Betterworks** — strong for large organizations and performance + OKR alignment - **Lattice OKRs** — best if you already use Lattice for performance management and want simpler annual goal planning ### Quick pick - **Large enterprise / complex planning:** WorkBoard - **Strong planning + easier adoption:** Quantive - **Already on Lattice:** Lattice OKRs If you want, I can also give you a **best OKR tool by company size** or a **feature-by-feature comparison**.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best overall for annual planning: _WorkBoardAI_** if you need organization-wide strategy execution. It supports multi-level OKR alignment, collaborative goal creation, action plans, check-ins, dashboards, and AI-assisted OKR drafting from past outcomes and leadership priorities. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/lp/quantive-strategyai-offer?utm_source=openai)) **Best if your annual plan is product/roadmap-heavy: _Aha! Roadmaps_**. Aha! explicitly supports annual OKRs and says its portfolio roadmap template is especially helpful during annual planning, when teams align on strategic initiatives and timing. ([aha.io](https://www.aha.io/roadmapping/guide/templates/create/okr?utm_source=openai)) **If you’re a smaller org or want HR/performance + OKRs together: _Lattice_** is solid, but its own guidance emphasizes quarterly OKR planning and updates, so it’s better for continuous execution than for pure annual planning. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/articles/okr-template?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **best-by-company-size shortlist** (startup, mid-market, enterprise).
What are the best OKR software tools with dashboards? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR tools with strong dashboards: 1. **WorkBoard** — Best for enterprise OKR visibility - Very strong executive dashboards, rollups, and progress tracking - Good for large teams with complex goals 2. **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** — Best analytics-heavy OKR platform - Powerful dashboarding and automated metric integration - Great if you want real-time data tied to OKRs 3. **Betterworks** — Best for performance + OKRs - Clean dashboards for managers and leadership - Good for linking goals, feedback, and reviews 4. **Lattice** — Best for people-first teams - Simple OKR dashboards alongside performance management - Easy to use and visually polished 5. **Profit.co** — Best value for feature-rich OKRs - Strong dashboarding, check-ins, and reporting - Good for mid-sized businesses 6. **Perdoo** — Best for straightforward OKR tracking - Clear dashboards and strategy maps - Good balance of simplicity and structure 7. **Mooncamp** — Best modern UI - Nice dashboards, integrations, and team alignment views - Good for startups and growing teams 8. **Weekdone** — Best for smaller teams - Simple weekly OKR dashboards and updates - Easy to adopt quickly ### Quick picks - **Best overall enterprise:** WorkBoard - **Best analytics:** Quantive - **Best for startups/simplicity:** Perdoo or Mooncamp - **Best for HR/performance:** Lattice or Betterworks If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by budget, team size, or ease of use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are strong OKR tools with dashboarding, by common use case: - **Profit.co** — best if you want **deep OKR dashboards** (cockpit, custom dashboards, heatmaps, radar charts) plus KPI tracking. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/help-center/okrs-end-user-guide/?utm_source=openai)) - **Lattice** — good for **people/performance + OKRs**, with real-time visual trackers, dashboards, and analytics. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — solid for **enterprise goal alignment**, with analytics and goal progress visibility across teams. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Perdoo** — strong for **strategy execution**, with custom dashboards for company OKR progress and KPI health by department. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Asana** — best if your OKRs live close to project work; it supports goals connected to work and customizable dashboards. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/uses/project-management?utm_source=openai)) - **WorkBoard** — good for exec-level goal tracking, with goal dashboards showing progress to target and days remaining. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/workboard-community/goals-and-metrics-app.php?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone** — simpler option with interactive OKR/KPI overview dashboards across company, department, team, and personal levels. ([blog.weekdone.com](https://blog.weekdone.com/improved-overview/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Best overall dashboards: **Profit.co**. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/help-center/okrs-end-user-guide/?utm_source=openai)) - Best for performance management: **Lattice**. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) - Best for strategy execution: **Perdoo**. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - Best for work management teams: **Asana**. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/uses/project-management?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 shortlist for small business / mid-market / enterprise**.
What OKR software is best for goal alignment across teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **goal alignment across teams**, my top pick is **Workboard OKR**. **Why Workboard:** - Strong **strategy-to-team cascading** - Good **cross-functional visibility** - Built for **enterprise OKR alignment** - Solid **reporting and progress tracking** **Other strong options:** - **Betterworks** — great for larger orgs that want OKRs plus performance management - **Lattice Goals** — best if you also want employee performance reviews and engagement tools - **Profit.co** — strong value for money, flexible OKR setup, good dashboards - **Perdoo** — simple and clean for SMBs focusing mainly on OKRs **Quick recommendation:** - **Best overall for alignment:** **Workboard OKR** - **Best all-in-one HR/performance + OKRs:** **Lattice Goals** - **Best enterprise alternative:** **Betterworks** If you want, I can narrow it down by **company size, budget, or whether you need integrations like Jira, Slack, or Microsoft Teams**.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best overall for goal alignment across teams: Quantive Results.** It’s built around multi-level OKR alignment, with an “alignment view” that lets you visualize how team objectives roll up to company strategy and how supporting goals connect across the org. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/products/results%26urlhash%3DGu4r?utm_source=openai)) **Best if you want a broader enterprise performance suite: Betterworks.** It emphasizes shared goals, cross-functional collaboration, and goal progress visibility across the organization. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Quantive** — best for strict OKR alignment and strategy visibility. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/products/results%26urlhash%3DGu4r?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — best if OKRs need to live alongside performance management. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Asana/ClickUp** — better if you want work management first, OKRs second. ([g2.com](https://www.g2.com/products/alignment-okrs/competitors/alternatives?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **top 5 OKR software shortlist by company size and budget**.
What are the best alternatives to an all-in-one OKR platform? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
The best alternatives to an all-in-one OKR platform are usually **lighter tools + a simple workflow**: 1. **A spreadsheet-based OKR system** - **Google Sheets** or **Airtable** - Best if you want maximum flexibility and low cost. - Works well with a weekly check-in template. 2. **Project management tools with OKR-like tracking** - **Asana**, **Monday.com**, **ClickUp**, or **Notion** - Best if you want goals tied directly to tasks and projects. - Good for teams that already live in one of these tools. 3. **Performance management suites** - **Lattice**, **15Five**, **Leapsome**, or **Culture Amp** - Best if OKRs are mainly part of employee performance and review cycles. - Strong for manager check-ins and feedback. 4. **Dashboards + business intelligence** - **Power BI**, **Tableau**, or **Looker Studio** - Best if you want measurable outcomes from operational data, not just status updates. - Great for exec-level visibility. 5. **Goal-tracking standalone tools** - **Perdoo**, **Weekdone**, or **Profit.co** - These are closer to OKR software, but often simpler/cheaper than full suites. ### Best picks by use case - **Small team / low budget:** Google Sheets + Notion - **Cross-functional execution:** Asana or ClickUp - **People management + OKRs:** Lattice or Leapsome - **Data-heavy org:** Power BI or Tableau - **Simple OKR discipline without bloat:** Perdoo or Weekdone If you want, I can also give you the **best alternative for startups, SMBs, or enterprise teams** specifically.
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If you want to avoid a full OKR suite, the best alternatives are usually: - **Asana** — best if you already run work in a project-management tool; its Goals feature lets you set objectives, key results, and link them to projects so progress updates automatically. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/product/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **ClickUp** — best for a cheaper, highly customizable all-workspace setup; ClickUp supports Goals made of measurable Targets and includes docs, dashboards, and views for tracking. ([help.clickup.com](https://help.clickup.com/hc/en-us/articles/6325733579671-Create-a-Goal?utm_source=openai)) - **Lattice** — best if goals are tied to people/performance; Lattice connects OKRs with 1:1s, reviews, and company dashboards. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **Atlassian (Jira + Confluence)** — best for engineering/product teams; Atlassian supports goal status, links goals to Jira issues, and has OKR templates in Confluence. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/platform-experiences/docs/use-goal-status-to-track-objectives-and-key-results/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for a lightweight, customizable tracker; Notion offers OKR templates and lets teams track objectives, key results, timelines, and owners in one workspace. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/he/use-case/okr?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Sheets / Excel** — best if you want maximum flexibility and minimum cost; you can build a simple tracker with spreadsheets and templates/add-ons. ([workspace.google.com](https://workspace.google.com/marketplace/app/goals_tracker/460649096943?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Lean startup:** Notion or ClickUp. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/he/use-case/okr?utm_source=openai)) - **Ops-heavy team:** Asana or Jira/Confluence. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/product/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **People/performance-focused:** Lattice. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **Lowest cost:** Sheets/Excel. ([workspace.google.com](https://workspace.google.com/marketplace/app/goals_tracker/460649096943?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 based on team size, budget, and whether you need performance reviews too**.
What are the best alternatives to an enterprise OKR suite? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives to an enterprise OKR suite depend on what you need most: **simple OKR tracking, team execution, or performance reviews**. ### Best alternatives - **Monday.com** — best if you want OKRs tied to projects and workflows. - **Asana** — great for team execution with light OKR tracking. - **ClickUp** — strong all-in-one option for goals, tasks, and dashboards. - **Lattice** — best if OKRs are part of performance management. - **WorkBoard** — closest “enterprise OKR” feel without going full suite. - **Quantive Results** — strong for larger orgs that want strategy-to-execution. - **Profit.co** — one of the best value OKR platforms for mid-market teams. - **Perdoo** — good for simple, clean OKR management. - **Aha! Goals** — best for product-led organizations. - **Microsoft Viva Goals** — good if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365. ### If you want the simplest cheap setup - **Google Sheets + Notion** - **Airtable** - **Trello + dashboard tool** ### My quick picks - **Best overall:** ClickUp - **Best for enterprise-lite:** WorkBoard - **Best for performance + OKRs:** Lattice - **Best budget option:** Profit.co - **Best for Microsoft shops:** Viva Goals If you tell me your company size and whether you want OKRs tied to performance reviews, I can narrow it to the top 3.
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If you want an **enterprise OKR-suite alternative** in 2026, these are the strongest options by use case: - **WorkBoard** — best for large enterprises that want **strategy execution + OKRs + business reviews** in one platform. It’s positioned around objectives, key results, workstreams, and automated business reviews. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/products/cos-okr-creation-alignment?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — best if you want **OKRs plus performance management** together, with enterprise scalability and goal cascades. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Jira Align** — best for **product/engineering-heavy orgs** that want OKRs tied to portfolio planning and delivery in an Atlassian stack. Atlassian frames it as enterprise strategy/planning that aligns work to strategy. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/align?utm_source=openai)) - **Asana Goals** — best for teams that want a lighter-weight alternative where **goals connect directly to projects and portfolios**. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/product/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **Mooncamp** — best for teams that want a **modern, simpler OKR tool** with templates and less enterprise heaviness. ([mooncamp.com](https://mooncamp.com/templates?utm_source=openai)) - **Cascade** — best if you’re heavy on **Microsoft 365/Teams** and want strategy/OKRs embedded in that workflow. ([cascade.app](https://www.cascade.app/solutions/microsoft?utm_source=openai)) If you’re replacing **Microsoft Viva Goals**, Microsoft says it will be retired on **December 31, 2025**, so a migration plan is warranted. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/viva/goals/goals-retirement?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **best enterprise-only picks**, 2. **best Microsoft-friendly picks**, or 3. **best budget-friendly alternatives**.
Which OKR software alternatives are better for small businesses? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For small businesses, the best OKR tools are usually the ones that are **simple, affordable, and easy to adopt**—not the most enterprise-heavy. Good alternatives to consider: - **Tability** — very small-business friendly; simple OKR tracking with low setup overhead. - **Perdoo** — solid if you want OKRs plus KPI tracking and a more structured approach. - **Profit.co** — feature-rich, but still usable for smaller teams if you want growth beyond basic OKRs. - **Weekdone** — lightweight and easy for small teams that want weekly check-ins and OKRs. - **Betterworks** — strong product, but usually better for mid-market than very small teams. - **Mooncamp** — clean interface, good for startups and small teams. - **ClickUp** — if you already use it for project management, it can handle OKRs without adding another tool. If you want the **best picks for small businesses**, I’d narrow it to: 1. **Tability** for simplicity 2. **Perdoo** for balance of OKRs + KPIs 3. **Weekdone** for lightweight team adoption If you tell me your team size and budget, I can recommend the best 2–3 options.
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Yes—if you’re a small business, I’d usually look at these before enterprise-heavy tools: - **Perdoo**: best all-around small-business pick. It has a **free plan for up to 5 users**, and paid plans start at **$9/user/month**. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone**: best for very small teams. It’s **free for up to 3 users**, then offers a **14-day free trial** for larger teams; it also includes weekly planning/check-ins and CFR features. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices?utm_source=openai)) - **Mooncamp**: good if you want a clean, modern OKR tool with room to grow. Its **Essential** plan starts at **€7/user/month** with a **5-user minimum**. ([mooncamp.com](https://mooncamp.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co**: good if you want a broader all-in-one platform. It offers a **free startup plan** and a **Growth plan at $7/user/month annually**. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/helpcenter/okr-super-user-guide/tv-and-devices/?utm_source=openai)) **If I had to rank them for most small businesses:** **Perdoo → Weekdone → Mooncamp → Profit.co**. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) I’d generally skip **Lattice** or **WorkBoard** unless you want a bigger HR/strategy suite, since Lattice doesn’t publish pricing and targets growth-stage companies, while WorkBoard pricing is usage-based/custom. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/articles/hr-software-pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for under 10 employees** or **under $100/month**.
What are the best alternatives to a goal management platform? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean alternatives to a dedicated goal management platform, the best options are usually: - **Notion** — best all-in-one customizable workspace for goals, tasks, docs, and dashboards. - **ClickUp** — best for combining goals with project and task management. - **Asana** — best for team goals tied to execution and timelines. - **Monday.com** — best for visual goal tracking and simple workflows. - **Airtable** — best if you want a flexible, spreadsheet-style goal system. - **Trello** — best lightweight option for simple goal tracking. - **Microsoft Planner / Loop** — best if you already use Microsoft 365. - **Google Sheets** — best free, simple, and fully customizable option. If you want the closest “serious” replacements: 1. **ClickUp** 2. **Asana** 3. **Notion** If you want, I can also give you the **best alternatives by use case**: personal goals, team OKRs, startup planning, or enterprise performance management.
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If you mean **software alternatives to a goal management platform**, the best picks are usually: - **Asana** — best if you want goals tied to projects/work execution. Asana has dedicated Goals tracking connected to projects and reporting. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/product/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **ClickUp** — best all-in-one option if you want tasks + goals in one place. ClickUp has a Goals feature for grouping tasks into targets. ([clickup.com](https://clickup.com/features/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **monday.com** — good if you want goal tracking inside a broader work-management system. monday.com supports OKR/goal management through its boards and templates. ([support.monday.com](https://support.monday.com/hc/en-us/articles/4402057681298-OKR-management-using-monday-com?utm_source=openai)) - **Lattice** — best for people/performance management with goals built in. Lattice offers goal-setting, progress tracking, and Slack/Teams integrations. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/?utm_source=openai)) - **WorkBoard** — best for enterprise strategy execution and OKRs. WorkBoard focuses on goals, priorities, actions, reports, and feedback aligned in one system. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/free-leadership-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** — strong if you want a dedicated OKR platform with performance management. Profit.co describes itself as combining goal-setting and performance management. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/?utm_source=openai)) If you’re replacing **Microsoft Viva Goals**, note that Microsoft says it will be retired on **December 31, 2025**. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/viva/goals/goals-retirement?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Small team / simple setup:** ClickUp or monday.com. ([clickup.com](https://clickup.com/features/goals?utm_source=openai)) - **Company OKRs:** WorkBoard or Profit.co. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/free-leadership-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Goals + performance reviews:** Lattice. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to **free**, **enterprise**, or **best for Microsoft Teams**.
What are the best alternatives to a performance and OKR system? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want to replace a traditional **performance + OKR system**, the best alternatives are usually: 1. **Continuous feedback + check-ins** - Better than annual reviews/OKRs for many teams. - Tools: **Lattice**, **15Five**, **Leapsome** 2. **Quarterly priorities / top goals** - Use 3–5 team priorities instead of formal OKRs. - Tools: **Asana**, **Monday.com**, **Notion**, **ClickUp** 3. **Project-based management** - Focus on shipped work and outcomes per project, not goal tracking. - Tools: **Jira**, **Linear**, **Asana** 4. **Competency-based performance reviews** - Evaluate people on skills, behaviors, and role expectations. - Tools: **Culture Amp**, **Leapsome**, **Lattice** 5. **Team scorecards / KPIs** - Best when the business is metric-driven and needs simple execution tracking. - Tools: **Databox**, **Geckoboard**, **Workboard** 6. **Management by weekly priorities** - Lightweight and effective for smaller teams: “What are your top 3 priorities this week?” - Tools: **Notion**, **Slack**, **Trello** **Best overall replacements by use case:** - **People/culture focus:** **Lattice** or **15Five** - **Structured performance reviews:** **Culture Amp** - **Simple execution tracking:** **Asana** or **ClickUp** - **Engineering/product teams:** **Linear** or **Jira** If you tell me your team size and type (startup, sales, engineering, etc.), I can recommend the best setup.
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If you want alternatives to a combined **performance + OKR system**, the best picks depend on what you’re optimizing for: - **Best all-around:** **Lattice** — strong if you want performance reviews, 1:1s, feedback, engagement surveys, and OKRs in one easier-to-adopt platform. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/magazine/best-performance-management-software/)) - **Best performance-first:** **Betterworks** — strongest for enterprise-grade continuous performance management, calibration, and OKR alignment. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/magazine/best-performance-management-software/)) - **Best OKR/strategy-execution-first:** **WorkBoardAI** — built for large, complex orgs that care more about strategy execution, scorecards, and operational rhythm than lightweight HR workflows. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/blog/top-viva-goals-alternatives.php)) - **Best modular value:** **Profit.co** — good if you want OKRs plus optional performance/engagement modules without buying a huge suite up front. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/product/okr-management/)) - **Best for feedback/engagement-heavy teams:** **Leapsome** or **Culture Amp** — both connect performance with engagement; Leapsome is more modular, while Culture Amp is stronger on employee-experience research and surveys. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/magazine/best-performance-management-software/)) - **Best for coaching and weekly check-ins:** **15Five** — lightweight, continuous, and manager-friendly. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/magazine/best-performance-management-software/)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for small teams, mid-market, or enterprise**.
Which OKR tools are better alternatives for team alignment? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Good OKR tools for **team alignment** are: - **WorkBoard** — strong for enterprise alignment, strategy mapping, and executive visibility. - **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** — great if you want deep integrations and automated progress tracking. - **Ally.io** — very good for cross-team alignment inside Microsoft 365/Teams-heavy orgs. - **Tability** — simpler, lightweight, and good for keeping teams aligned without too much admin. - **Perdoo** — strong for OKRs + strategy maps + team-level visibility. - **Weekdone** — easy to adopt for smaller teams that want weekly check-ins and OKRs. - **Profit.co** — broad OKR platform with good alignment and performance management features. - **Lattice** — better if you want OKRs tied to performance reviews and people management. If your main goal is **team alignment**, the best picks are usually: 1. **WorkBoard** for large orgs 2. **Perdoo** for strategy-to-team alignment 3. **Tability** for simplicity 4. **Ally.io** if you live in Microsoft tools If you want, I can narrow it down by **company size, budget, or whether you use Slack/Teams/Jira**.
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If your main goal is **team alignment**, the strongest OKR-tool alternatives are: - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs tied to performance, 1:1s, and company-wide transparency. It supports cascading alignment from company to individual goals. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/okrs)) - **Betterworks** — strong for enterprise-style OKRs and top-down alignment across teams; it emphasizes clarity, accountability, and alignment around priorities. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/okrs/)) - **Perdoo** — good if you want explicit goal-to-goal alignment maps; it lets OKRs align to strategic pillars, other OKRs, or KPIs. ([support.perdoo.com](https://support.perdoo.com/en/articles/5391069-aligning-okrs)) - **Weekdone** — best for smaller teams that want simple quarterly OKRs plus weekly check-ins and progress reporting to keep everyone synced. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/team-alignment)) - **Teamflect** — a good fit if your team lives in Microsoft Teams/Outlook and you want cascading goals plus automated check-ins. ([teamflect.com](https://teamflect.com/okr-software)) **Quick pick:** - **Enterprise alignment:** Betterworks, Lattice - **Clear goal mapping:** Perdoo - **Simple team cadence:** Weekdone - **Microsoft 365 workflow:** Teamflect ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/goals/okrs)) If you want, I can rank these for **startup**, **mid-market**, or **enterprise** teams.
What are the best alternatives to a cloud-based OKR tool? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Best alternatives depend on what you want instead of a cloud OKR app: - **Spreadsheet-based OKRs** — best if you want cheap, flexible, and fully manual - **Microsoft Excel** - **Google Sheets** - Use with an OKR template - **Self-hosted / private deployment OKR software** — best if you want control and data privacy - **Perdoo** - **Mooncamp** - **Quantive** - **Weekdone** - **All-in-one performance management tools with OKRs** — best for larger teams - **Lattice** - **15Five** - **Betterworks** - **Leapsome** - **Project management tools adapted for OKRs** — best if your team already lives there - **Jira** - **Asana** - **ClickUp** - **monday.com** - **Notion/Confluence-style wiki setup** — best for lightweight tracking and documentation - **Notion** - **Confluence** If you want the closest true alternative to a cloud OKR tool, I’d shortlist **Mooncamp**, **Perdoo**, and **Quantive**. If you want the simplest non-cloud option, use **Excel or Google Sheets** with a good OKR template. If you want, I can also give you the **best option by team size** or **best self-hosted OKR tools only**.
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Best non-cloud alternatives depend on how “lightweight” vs “systematic” you want to be: - **Spreadsheet + template (best simple option):** use Excel/Google Sheets/LibreOffice and track Objectives, Key Results, owners, and progress manually. It’s the lowest-friction option, and Excel is commonly used for KPI/tracking templates. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/track-and-analyze-business-data-6ac0bf17-b773-4e10-b1a5-e3468ae54a0c?utm_source=openai)) - **Focalboard (best self-hosted team board):** open-source, self-hosted, and built for organizing/tracking work; it has a desktop app plus a multi-user server. ([github.com](https://github.com/mattermost-community/focalboard)) - **Baserow (best structured self-hosted database):** open-source, self-hosted, spreadsheet-like database with dashboards and automations, which works well for custom OKR tracking. ([github.com](https://github.com/baserow/baserow)) - **OKR API / custom build (best if you need integrations):** an open-source, self-hosted OKR API on Strapi for building your own OKR workflow into existing tools. ([github.com](https://github.com/seanrioux/strapi-okr-api)) If you want my blunt ranking: 1. **Spreadsheet** for <20 people 2. **Baserow** for a DIY but cleaner system 3. **Focalboard** for team visibility 4. **Custom OKR API** for engineering-heavy orgs ([github.com](https://github.com/mattermost-community/focalboard)) If you tell me your team size and whether you need self-hosting, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 picks.
What OKR software alternatives are best for remote companies? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For remote companies, the best OKR alternatives usually are the ones with strong async updates, integrations, and easy visibility across teams. Top picks: 1. **Lattice** - Best for: companies that want OKRs + performance management in one place - Why it works remotely: great check-ins, manager visibility, Slack integration, clean dashboards 2. **Workboard** - Best for: larger remote teams that want structured OKR execution - Why it works remotely: strong alignment, weekly updates, and enterprise reporting 3. **Perdoo** - Best for: small to mid-sized remote companies - Why it works remotely: simple OKR tracking, clean UI, good for distributed teams 4. **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) - Best for: data-driven remote orgs - Why it works remotely: powerful integrations and automated metric tracking 5. **Profit.co** - Best for: teams that want affordability plus lots of features - Why it works remotely: OKRs, tasks, reviews, and integrations in one platform 6. **15Five** - Best for: remote-first teams focused on engagement and manager check-ins - Why it works remotely: great for weekly updates, goals, and feedback loops If you want the simplest shortlist: - **Best overall:** Lattice - **Best for scale/enterprise:** Workboard - **Best budget option:** Profit.co - **Best for analytics/integrations:** Quantive Results If you tell me your team size and budget, I can narrow it to the top 2.
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For remote companies, the best OKR alternatives are usually the ones that make alignment, check-ins, and visibility easy across time zones. My top picks: 1. **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus performance management and weekly check-ins in one place. It supports cascading alignment and a centralized view of company-wide objectives and key results. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) 2. **15Five** — best for distributed teams that want OKRs tied closely to feedback, 1:1s, and manager check-ins. 15Five says it was built for distributed teams and its OKR module supports real-time tracking and collaborative goals. ([15five.com](https://www.15five.com/solutions/remote-teams?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Betterworks** — best for mid-market/enterprise teams that need strong goal alignment and structured rollups. Betterworks emphasizes weekly goal updates, cascading alignment, and automatic progress visibility. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/product/okr-software/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **WorkBoard** — best for larger, strategy-driven orgs that need advanced OKR ops and cross-team alignment. WorkBoard emphasizes company/team/individual alignment, automation, and distributed-team strategy execution. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Asana** — best if your team already runs work in a project-management tool and wants goals embedded in day-to-day execution. Asana’s Goals connects objectives to projects/tasks and updates progress automatically. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/product/goals?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Profit.co** — best for teams wanting a dedicated OKR platform with broad integrations and visibility controls. Profit.co highlights automated tracking, dashboards, and cross-team visibility. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for remote teams:** Lattice. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/platform/goals/okrs?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for people ops + goals:** 15Five. ([15five.com](https://www.15five.com/products/perform/okrs-and-goals?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for enterprise OKR rigor:** WorkBoard. ([workboard.com](https://www.workboard.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you want OKRs inside project work:** Asana. ([asana.com](https://asana.com/product/goals?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **small team / mid-market / enterprise** and **budget-friendly vs premium**.
What are the best alternatives to a simple goal tracking app? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want something better than a basic goal tracker, the best alternatives are usually: - **Habit trackers** — for daily consistency - **Streaks** (iPhone) - **Habitica** (gamified) - **Loop Habit Tracker** (Android) - **Task managers** — for action-based goals - **Todoist** - **Things 3** (Apple) - **TickTick** - **OKR / goal systems** — for bigger quarterly or team goals - **Perdoo** - **Weekdone** - **Profit.co** - **Project planners** — if your goals have multiple steps - **Asana** - **ClickUp** - **Notion** - **Journal / reflection apps** — for goals tied to self-improvement - **Day One** - **Journey** - **Reflectly** - **Spreadsheets / dashboards** — best for full control - **Google Sheets** - **Airtable** If you want, I can recommend the best option based on your goal type: **fitness, work, study, or personal habits**.
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If you want something better than a bare-bones goal tracker, the best alternatives are usually: - **Todoist** — best if your goals are really **next actions and projects**. It supports projects, templates, and goal-oriented setups, including guidance for breaking goals into tasks. ([todoist.com](https://www.todoist.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Strides** — best if you want a true **goal + habit tracker** with multiple tracker types like habits, targets, averages, and projects. ([stridesapp.com](https://www.stridesapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want a **custom goal dashboard / OKR system** with templates for OKRs, goal tracking, and habit tracking. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/OKR-Template-f31f3046c9fd45898f04d4ca402b5c02?utm_source=openai)) - **A spreadsheet / paper planner** — best if you want something **simple, flexible, and distraction-free**; you can track weekly progress, milestones, and streaks without another app changing your workflow. (This is a practical recommendation, not a product claim.) Quick pick: - **Personal habits:** Strides - **Tasks + goals:** Todoist - **Custom life dashboard / OKRs:** Notion - **Ultra-simple:** spreadsheet If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best 3 apps for your exact use case** (fitness, business, studying, habits, or life goals).
What are the best alternatives to a workforce goals platform? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean a **workforce goals / OKR / performance management platform**, the best alternatives are usually: - **Lattice** — best all-around for goals, reviews, 1:1s, and engagement - **15Five** — strong for continuous feedback and manager check-ins - **Leapsome** — great for goals + performance + learning in one - **Betterworks** — solid for enterprise OKRs and goal alignment - **Weekdone** — simpler OKR tracking for smaller teams - **Profit.co** — good value if you want OKRs plus task/project tracking - **Culture Amp** — best if goals are tied to engagement and performance - **BambooHR** — better if you want a broader HR suite with lighter goals features **Best picks by use case:** - **Small teams:** 15Five, Weekdone - **Mid-market:** Lattice, Leapsome - **Enterprise:** Betterworks, Culture Amp - **Best budget/value:** Profit.co If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your company size, budget, and HR stack**.
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If you mean **software for goal setting / OKRs / performance management**, the best alternatives are: - **Lattice** — best for teams that want goals + continuous feedback + performance reviews in one place. ([gartner.com](https://www.gartner.com/reviews/market/okr-software/vendor/lattice/product/lattice/likes-dislikes?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — strong for enterprise goal alignment and continuous performance management. ([gartner.com](https://www.gartner.com/reviews/market/okr-software/vendor/betterworks/product/betterworks/likes-dislikes?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** — good if you want a more OKR-focused platform with task and performance tracking. ([gartner.com](https://www.gartner.com/reviews/market/employee-performance-management-systems/vendor/profit-co/product/profit-co/likes-dislikes?utm_source=openai)) - **Workday** — better if you want a broader HCM suite with talent, performance, and workforce planning. ([gartner.com](https://www.gartner.com/reviews/market/internal-talent-marketplaces?utm_source=openai)) - **SAP SuccessFactors** — a solid enterprise option for performance goals inside a larger HR suite. ([gartner.com](https://www.gartner.com/reviews/market/employee-performance-management-systems?utm_source=openai)) - **UKG Pro** — best if you want goals/performance as part of a wider workforce management system. ([gartner.com](https://www.gartner.com/reviews/market/employee-performance-management-systems?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Lattice - **Best enterprise:** Betterworks or Workday - **Best OKR-first:** Profit.co If you want, I can narrow these down by **company size, budget, or whether you want OKRs vs performance reviews**.
How do I set company goals and track progress across teams? problem
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Use a simple **OKR + dashboard + cadence** system. ### 1) Set 3–5 company goals Make them: - **Specific**: “Grow enterprise revenue” - **Measurable**: “by 25%” - **Time-bound**: “this year” Example: - Increase annual recurring revenue by 25% - Improve customer retention from 88% to 92% - Launch 2 new products ### 2) Break them into team OKRs For each company goal, assign: - **Objective**: what success looks like - **3–4 Key Results**: measurable outcomes Example: - **Objective:** Improve retention - KR1: Reduce churn from 12% to 8% - KR2: Increase NPS from 41 to 55 - KR3: Cut support response time to under 2 hours ### 3) Assign ownership Every goal needs: - one **owner** - a **cross-functional team** - clear dependencies This avoids “everyone owns it, so no one owns it.” ### 4) Track in one system Best tools: - **Workboard** — strong for OKRs and executive tracking - **Betterworks** — good for goal alignment across teams - **Asana** — great for execution and task visibility - **Jira** — best if product/engineering-heavy - **monday.com** — easy for cross-team dashboards ### 5) Use one weekly scorecard Track each key result with: - current value - target - status: green / yellow / red - blocker - owner Keep it short and visible to everyone. ### 6) Run a weekly and monthly cadence - **Weekly team check-ins**: update progress and blockers - **Monthly leadership review**: adjust priorities, reallocate resources - **Quarterly reset**: refresh goals and OKRs ### 7) Make progress visible Create a shared dashboard in: - **Power BI** - **Tableau** - **Looker Studio** - or directly in **Asana / monday.com / Workboard** ### Simple rule If a goal can’t be measured weekly or monthly, it’s probably too vague. If you want, I can give you a **sample company OKR template** or a **dashboard structure for 5–10 teams**.
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A simple way: 1. **Set 3–5 company goals** - Make them outcome-based, not activity-based. - Example: “Increase annual recurring revenue by 20%” vs. “Launch 10 campaigns.” 2. **Turn them into team objectives** - Each team gets 1–3 goals that directly support the company goals. - Keep a clear line of sight: company → department → team → individual. 3. **Use measurable key results** - For each goal, define 2–4 metrics. - Good KRs are specific, time-bound, and easy to verify. 4. **Assign owners** - Every goal needs one responsible owner. - Shared support is fine, but one person should be accountable. 5. **Track in one system** - Use a shared dashboard or OKR tool. - Popular options: **Asana**, **Monday.com**, **Jira**, **Notion**, or **Airtable**. 6. **Review regularly** - Weekly: team check-ins - Monthly: leadership review - Quarterly: reset goals if needed 7. **Use a simple status format** - Green = on track - Yellow = at risk - Red = off track - Add one sentence on blockers and next steps. 8. **Keep goals visible** - Publish them in a shared doc or dashboard so every team can see progress. If you want, I can give you: - a **company OKR template** - a **team progress dashboard format** - or a **sample quarterly goal plan**.
How do I align team goals with company objectives? problem
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Use a simple cascade: 1. **Start with company objectives** - Clarify the top 3–5 business goals for the quarter/year. - Ask: *What outcome does the company need most?* 2. **Translate them into team outcomes** - Convert each company objective into a team-level result. - Example: - Company: increase revenue - Team: improve conversion rate by 10% 3. **Set measurable OKRs** - **Objective** = clear direction - **Key Results** = numbers that prove progress - Keep them few and trackable. 4. **Make goals mutually visible** - Share company goals with all teams. - Show how each team goal supports a company goal. 5. **Review regularly** - Do weekly or biweekly check-ins. - Adjust if priorities change. 6. **Tie work to metrics and ownership** - Every goal should have: - an owner - a metric - a deadline **Good tools for this:** - **WorkBoard** for OKR management - **Lattice** for performance and goal alignment - **15Five** for weekly check-ins and goals - **Asana** or **Jira Align** for linking team work to company priorities If you want, I can give you a **1-page OKR template** or an example for your team type.
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Use a simple chain: **Company objectives → team goals → individual work** Practical steps: 1. **Translate the company objective** into 1–3 measurable team outcomes. 2. **Make goals specific**: what, by when, and how success is measured. 3. **Tie every project to an objective**: if it doesn’t support one, question it. 4. **Set shared metrics**: e.g., revenue, retention, speed, quality, or customer satisfaction. 5. **Review regularly**: weekly/monthly check-ins to adjust priorities. 6. **Communicate the “why”** so the team understands impact, not just tasks. 7. **Cascade goals**: each person should know how their work supports the team goal. A useful test: - “If we achieve this team goal, which company objective moves?” - “If we don’t, does it matter?” If you want, I can give you a **goal alignment template** or an **OKR example**.
How do I track OKRs in one place? problem
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Use a single OKR system that handles **goals, key results, check-ins, and dashboards** in one place. Good options by type: - **Best dedicated OKR tools:** **WorkBoard**, **Quantive Results**, **Betterworks**, **Profit.co** - **Best if you already use Microsoft 365:** **Microsoft Viva Goals** - **Best lightweight option for small teams:** **Weekdone** or **Perdoo** - **Best if you want something flexible/simple:** **Notion** or **Airtable** with an OKR template What to look for: - one dashboard for company/team/individual OKRs - weekly check-ins - progress scoring - ownership and due dates - alignment across teams - integrations with Slack, Jira, Asana, or Teams If you want, I can recommend the **best one for your team size and budget**.
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Use a **single OKR hub** with this structure: - **Company OKRs** - **Team OKRs** - **Individual OKRs** - **Weekly updates** - **Progress metric** for each key result - **Owner** + **due date** Good places to track them in one place: - **Notion** — best all-around for docs + databases - **Airtable** — best if you want structured tracking and dashboards - **Asana / ClickUp / Jira** — best if OKRs should connect to execution work - **Google Sheets** — simplest, lightweight option - **Perdoo / Betterworks / Weekdone** — dedicated OKR tools A simple setup: 1. Create one database/table for all OKRs. 2. Add fields: `Objective`, `Key Result`, `Owner`, `Team`, `Quarter`, `Status`, `Metric`, `Target`, `Current`, `Confidence`, `Last updated`. 3. Link weekly tasks or projects to each KR. 4. Review weekly, score monthly/quarterly. If you want, I can give you: - a **Notion OKR template** - a **Google Sheets layout** - or the **best tool for your team size**.
How do I make sure employees actually update their goals? problem
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Make it part of the system, not a reminder habit. - **Set a fixed cadence**: monthly or quarterly goal updates, tied to a recurring meeting. - **Make it required**: no 1:1/quarterly review is “done” until goals are updated. - **Keep goals visible**: use a tool employees already open, like **Lattice**, **15Five**, **Betterworks**, or **Leapsome**. - **Use simple prompts**: “What changed? What progress? What’s blocked? What’s next?” - **Tie goals to manager check-ins**: managers should review and comment, not just ask. - **Link to performance and development**: people update what matters to their reviews and growth. - **Automate nudges**: calendar reminders + Slack/Teams reminders from the platform. - **Keep it short**: if updating goals takes more than 5 minutes, they won’t do it. If you want, I can give you a simple goal-update process you can roll out in one week.
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Make it part of the workflow, not a “nice-to-have.” **What works:** - **Set a cadence**: quarterly updates, with a monthly reminder. - **Tie it to management 1:1s**: “Show me your goal update” should be a standing agenda item. - **Make goals visible**: use a shared system like Lattice, 15Five, Workday, Asana, or even a simple spreadsheet. - **Require a quick update format**: status, progress, blockers, next step. - **Link it to reviews/bonus eligibility**: no update, no credit. - **Train managers first**: employees follow what managers actually inspect. - **Keep it short**: if it takes 5 minutes, compliance goes up. - **Use nudges**: automated reminders before deadlines and after missed updates. - **Audit publicly**: track completion rates by team. **Simple policy:** “Each employee updates goals by the 5th business day of the month. Managers review during 1:1s. Missing updates affect performance review readiness.” If you want, I can give you: 1. a **sample goal-update policy**, 2. a **manager checklist**, or 3. a **Slack reminder template**.
How do I improve accountability for team goals? problem
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To improve accountability for team goals: 1. **Make goals visible** - Put team goals in a shared place like **Asana**, **Monday.com**, or **Notion**. - Use clear owners, deadlines, and status updates. 2. **Break goals into weekly actions** - Big goals fail when they’re too vague. - Turn each goal into 2–5 measurable tasks with one owner each. 3. **Set a regular check-in rhythm** - Use a short weekly review: - What was done? - What’s blocked? - What’s next? - Tools like **Slack**, **Microsoft Teams**, or **ClickUp** help keep this consistent. 4. **Assign one accountable person per goal** - A goal can have many contributors, but only one person should be clearly responsible for the result. 5. **Track progress with simple metrics** - Use a dashboard in **Airtable**, **Smartsheet**, or **Google Sheets**. - Focus on 3–5 key metrics, not too many. 6. **Make follow-through part of culture** - Recognize people who meet commitments. - Address missed deadlines quickly and calmly. 7. **Use public commitments** - Have team members post their weekly commitments in **Slack** or during a standup. - Public commitments often improve follow-through. If you want, I can give you: - a **team accountability template** - a **weekly check-in agenda** - or a **recommended tool stack** for small vs. large teams.
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Make goals **visible, owned, measured, and reviewed**. - **Assign one owner per goal**: one person is clearly responsible. - **Define success clearly**: use measurable outcomes, not vague tasks. - **Break goals into milestones**: weekly or biweekly checkpoints. - **Track in a shared place**: dashboard, doc, or project board. - **Review regularly**: short recurring check-ins focused on progress, blockers, next steps. - **Tie work to consequences**: recognition for progress, escalation for misses. - **Make commitments public**: people are more likely to follow through. - **Ask “what’s the blocker?” not “why failed?”**: keeps it accountable without blame. - **Model it as a leader**: admit misses, update plans, follow through. A simple format: **Goal → Owner → Metric → Deadline → Weekly status** If you want, I can give you a **team accountability template** you can use right away.
How do I run quarterly OKR reviews more effectively? problem
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Run quarterly OKR reviews effectively by making them **short, data-driven, and decision-oriented**: 1. **Prep 1 week ahead** - Each owner updates status, confidence, and key evidence. - Collect metrics in one place. - Pre-read only; no meeting-time slide building. 2. **Use a fixed review agenda** - **10 min:** Review company/department outcomes - **20 min:** Discuss each key OKR: what moved, what didn’t, why - **15 min:** Decide: keep, adjust, or kill - **10 min:** Capture learnings and next-quarter priorities 3. **Score with discipline** - Use a simple 0.0–1.0 scale. - Don’t treat “missed” as failure; look for signal. - Ask: were the goals too ambitious, unclear, or blocked? 4. **Focus on outcomes, not activity** - Replace “what did we do?” with: - What changed? - What evidence proves it? - What did we learn? 5. **End with decisions** - Every review should produce: - 3–5 lessons learned - next-quarter draft OKRs - clear owners and deadlines 6. **Keep the system visible** - Track OKRs in a shared tool, not slides. - Good options: **Weekdone**, **Perdoo**, **Quantive**, or **Profit.co**. 7. **Make it routine** - Same meeting cadence every quarter - Same template - Same scoring rules If you want, I can also give you a **one-page quarterly OKR review agenda template**.
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A good quarterly OKR review should do 3 things: **measure**, **learn**, and **reset**. ### A simple structure 1. **Prep first** - Ask each owner to update status 2–3 days ahead. - Require: - current score - evidence/data - what helped - what blocked - what changed in the business 2. **Review objectively** - Focus on outcomes, not effort. - Use a consistent scale: - **0.0–0.3** = missed - **0.4–0.6** = partial - **0.7–1.0** = strong - Don’t turn the meeting into a debate about one metric. 3. **Run a short retro** For each OKR, ask: - What worked? - What didn’t? - What surprised us? - What should we stop, start, continue? 4. **Decide next-quarter actions** - Keep, drop, or rewrite each objective. - Limit carryover OKRs. - Convert lessons into concrete actions/owners. ### Make it more effective - **Keep it data-driven**: one source of truth for each KR. - **Limit the meeting to decisions**: discussion before the meeting, not during. - **Review only a few OKRs**: too many kills focus. - **Separate performance from learning**: if people feel judged, they’ll sandbag. - **Use a facilitator**: ideally someone not owning the OKRs. - **End with commitments**: owners, dates, and success criteria. ### Good agenda for 60–90 minutes - 10 min: recap of company priorities - 30–45 min: OKR review by team - 15–20 min: lessons learned - 15 min: next-quarter decisions and ownership ### Common mistakes - Reviewing too many metrics - Treating OKRs like a status report - Using the review to assign blame - Setting new OKRs without learning from old ones If you want, I can also give you a **quarterly OKR review template** or a **meeting agenda you can copy-paste**.
How do I monitor progress on business objectives? problem
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Use a simple **goal → metric → review** system. ### 1) Define the objective clearly Example: “Increase recurring revenue” or “Improve customer retention.” ### 2) Tie it to 2–5 KPIs Pick measurable indicators, like: - Revenue growth - Gross margin - CAC / LTV - Churn rate - NPS / CSAT - Conversion rate ### 3) Set targets and deadlines Example: - Q2: reduce churn from 8% to 6% - Month-end: grow qualified leads by 20% ### 4) Track in one dashboard Good tools: - **Microsoft Power BI** — great for executive dashboards - **Tableau** — strong visual analytics - **Looker** — good if you use Google Cloud / BigQuery - **Databox** — easy KPI tracking for smaller teams - **Airtable** — simple objective tracking with status updates ### 5) Review regularly - **Weekly:** leading indicators and blockers - **Monthly:** KPI progress - **Quarterly:** objective completion and reset goals ### 6) Use a framework Consider **OKRs**: - Objective = what you want - Key Results = how you’ll measure success If you want, I can give you a **sample business objective tracker template** or recommend the **best tool based on your company size**.
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Use a simple cadence and a few metrics: 1. **Define the objective clearly** - Example: “Increase revenue from SMB customers.” 2. **Attach 2–5 key results / KPIs** - Leading: demos booked, pipeline created - Lagging: revenue, retention, margin 3. **Set a baseline and target** - Where are you now? - What does success look like by when? 4. **Track weekly** - Use a dashboard or scorecard - Show actual vs target, trend, and owner 5. **Review in a regular meeting** - What moved? - What’s blocked? - What action is needed? 6. **Use red/yellow/green status** - Green: on track - Yellow: at risk - Red: off track 7. **Tie actions to owners and deadlines** - Every issue should have a next step A good format: - Objective - KPI - Target - Actual - Status - Owner - Next action If you want, I can give you a **template dashboard** or a **sample OKR tracker**.
How do I connect team OKRs to department goals? problem
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A simple way: 1. **Start with company OKRs** - Example: “Increase retention by 10%.” 2. **Translate into department goals** - Each department asks: “What must we do to move that company OKR?” - Marketing: improve activation. - Product: reduce churn drivers. - Support: improve issue resolution. 3. **Make department goals measurable** - Use 1–3 goals per department, each tied to a clear metric. - Example: “Improve first-week activation from 35% to 45%.” 4. **Cascade into team OKRs** - Team OKRs should support the department goal, not copy it. - Example team OKR: - Objective: “Make onboarding frictionless” - Key Results: - Cut signup drop-off from 20% to 10% - Increase tutorial completion from 50% to 70% 5. **Check alignment** - Every team OKR should answer: “Which department goal does this support?” - If you can’t trace it upward, it’s probably not aligned. 6. **Avoid over-cascading** - Don’t force perfect one-to-one mapping. - Let teams own the “how,” while leadership owns the “what.” **Quick template:** - Company OKR → Department goal → Team OKR → Weekly initiatives If you want, I can give you a sample OKR tree for a SaaS company.
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Use a **top-down alignment chain**: **Company OKRs → Department goals → Team OKRs → Individual priorities** A simple way to connect them: 1. **Start with the department goal** - Ask: *What part of the company strategy does this department own?* 2. **Translate it into measurable outcomes** - Department goals should describe the result, not the activity. - Example: “Improve customer retention” instead of “Launch 3 campaigns.” 3. **Map each team OKR to one department goal** - Each team OKR should clearly support a department outcome. - If a team OKR doesn’t support a department goal, question whether it belongs there. 4. **Use a linkage statement** - Format: **Team Objective:** … **Supports Department Goal:** … **Expected impact:** … - This makes the connection explicit. 5. **Limit dependencies** - A team should ideally own the “how” for its part of the goal. - If the team can’t influence the result, it should not own the OKR. ### Example **Department goal:** Increase self-serve customer retention by 10% **Team OKR:** Improve onboarding completion from 55% to 75% **Why it connects:** Better onboarding should reduce early churn and support retention ### Quick test For every team OKR, ask: - Does it directly support a department goal? - Is it outcome-based? - Can the team influence it? - Can success be measured? If you want, I can also give you a **template** for linking company goals, department goals, and team OKRs in one table.
How do I visualize goal progress for executives? problem
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For executives, keep goal progress **simple, directional, and decision-focused**. ### Best visuals - **KPI scorecards**: show **Goal, Actual, % to target, variance, trend** - **Bullet charts**: best for comparing **actual vs target** without clutter - **Traffic-light status**: Red / Yellow / Green for quick scan - **Trend lines**: show whether progress is improving or slipping - **Progress bars**: good for initiative completion or OKRs - **Waterfall charts**: useful when showing how results moved from target to current ### Executive dashboard layout 1. **Top row:** 3–6 headline metrics 2. **Middle:** progress vs target by business unit / region 3. **Bottom:** trends and exceptions only 4. Add a short **“What changed this month?”** summary ### Design rules - Use **one screen** - Show **targets, not just totals** - Prefer **exceptions over everything** - Avoid too many charts, colors, and labels - Include **timeframe** and **comparison period** - Make it clear: **on track / at risk / off track** ### Good tools - **Microsoft Power BI** — great for executive dashboards - **Tableau** — strong for polished visual storytelling - **Looker** — good for governed metric reporting - **Qlik Sense** — useful for interactive exec views ### Example Instead of: - “Revenue = $12.4M” Use: - **Revenue:** $12.4M / $15M target - **% to goal:** 83% - **Trend:** +6% vs last quarter - **Status:** Yellow If you want, I can mock up a **1-page executive dashboard layout** for OKRs, sales, or operations.
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For executives, use **simple, status-first visuals**: - **KPI scorecard**: 3–7 top goals with **target, actual, variance, trend** - **Progress bars / bullet charts**: best for showing **% complete vs target** - **Traffic-light status**: green / yellow / red for **at-a-glance health** - **Trend lines**: show whether progress is **accelerating or slipping** - **RAG dashboard**: one page with goals, owners, due dates, blockers Best practices: - **One slide, one message** - Show **current vs goal**, not raw data - Use **quarterly/monthly trend** for context - Add **expected finish date** and **confidence level** - Highlight **exceptions**, not everything A strong executive layout: 1. **Top row:** overall goal health 2. **Middle:** 3–5 key goals with bullet charts 3. **Bottom:** risks, blockers, next actions If you want, I can sketch a **PowerPoint-style executive dashboard** or a **Tableau/Power BI layout**.
How do I stop goals from getting lost in spreadsheets? problem
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Stop tracking goals in a big spreadsheet and move to a system with: 1. **One goal dashboard** - Try **Notion**, **Airtable**, or **Trello** for a simple goal hub. - If you want something more “goal-native,” use **ClickUp Goals** or **Asana Goals**. 2. **Weekly review cadence** - Put a recurring 15-minute review on your calendar in **Google Calendar** or **Outlook**. - Update only 3 things: progress, next action, blocker. 3. **Break goals into tasks** - Don’t track “lose 20 lbs” or “grow revenue” as one row. - Track the next action: workouts, outreach, writing, calls, etc. - Tools like **Todoist**, **TickTick**, or **Things 3** work well. 4. **Use a visible scorecard** - Keep 3–5 key metrics only. - Example: “1) workouts/week, 2) sales calls, 3) pages written.” - **Notion** or **Airtable** works best for this. 5. **Automate reminders** - Use **Zapier** or **Make** to send nudges when goals stall. - Example: “If no update in 7 days, ping me.” If you want the simplest setup: **Notion + Google Calendar + Todoist**. If you want, I can give you a ready-made goal system template for Notion or Airtable.
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Use a **goal system**, not a spreadsheet. Quick fix: - Keep **1 place** for goals: notes app, task app, or a simple goal tracker. - Limit to **3–5 active goals**. - Break each goal into: - **Outcome**: what you want - **Next action**: the very next step - **Deadline** - **Weekly check-in** - Review them **once a week**. - Put goals where work happens: calendar, task list, or dashboard. Best approach: - **Spreadsheet** = archive / reporting - **Task app** = execution - **Calendar** = deadlines - **Weekly review** = keeps goals alive If you want, I can give you: 1. a **simple goal template**, or 2. a **Notion/Todoist/Google Sheets setup** that actually works.
How much does OKR software cost per user? transactional
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OKR software typically costs **about $5–$30 per user/month**. Examples: - **Perdoo**: around **$7–$12/user/month** - **Weekdone**: around **$8–$10/user/month** - **Profit.co**: around **$7–$15/user/month** - **Quantive (Gtmhub)**: usually **custom pricing**, often higher - **Betterworks**: **custom/enterprise pricing** - **Lattice**: OKRs are usually part of a broader HR/performance suite, so pricing is **custom** If you want, I can give you a **side-by-side pricing comparison** of the best OKR tools for small teams vs enterprise.
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OKR software usually costs **about $6–$12 per user/month** for mainstream per-seat plans. Examples: **Tability** is $7/user/month billed monthly or $6/user/month billed yearly; **Perdoo** is $9–$11/user/month; and **Mooncamp** lists €7–€10/user. ([tability.io](https://www.tability.io/pricing)) For larger orgs, pricing often shifts to **custom enterprise quotes** or minimum-user plans. Some vendors also offer **free tiers** for small teams (for example, Perdoo is free up to 5 users, and Tability has read-only seats at no charge). ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software)) If you want, I can compare **3–5 OKR tools by price and features** for your team size.
Is there free OKR software? transactional 110/mo
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Yes — there are free OKR tools. Good options: - **Weekdone** — free plan for small teams - **Profit.co** — has a free starter option - **Perdoo** — free tier available - **Tability** — free trial and sometimes free for small teams/startups - **SimpleKPI / OKR Board** — budget-friendly, with free or low-cost plans depending on team size If you want **fully free and self-hosted**, look at: - **OpenProject** - **Ally.io alternatives on GitHub/open-source OKR boards** (quality varies) If you tell me your team size and whether you want **free forever** or just a **free trial**, I can recommend the best one.
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Yes — a few OKR tools have free plans or free tiers. Perdoo says it’s free for up to 5 users, Weekdone says it’s free for 3 users, and Profit.co has a “Start Free” option on its site. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest starting point, I’d look at: - **Perdoo** for a small team. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone** if you want a tiny free team tier. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/index?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** if you want a broader platform with OKRs plus performance/project features. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare the free plans and tell you which one fits a team of your size.
What is the cheapest OKR software? transactional
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If you mean **lowest-cost OKR tool overall**, start with: 1. **Weekdone** — often one of the cheapest dedicated OKR tools 2. **Perdoo** — usually very budget-friendly, with a free/starter option 3. **ClickUp** — cheapest if you’re okay with OKRs inside a broader work tool **Best answer:** - **Cheapest dedicated OKR software:** **Weekdone** or **Perdoo** - **Cheapest all-in-one with OKR support:** **ClickUp** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 cheapest OKR tools with current pricing**.
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If you mean **lowest-cost OKR software overall**, the cheapest options I found are **free plans**. Two standout official pricing pages say they’re free forever: **SugarOKR** (“100% free”) and **StrategyWorks** (“Free OKRs, unlimited users” / “Free forever”). ([sugarokr.com](https://sugarokr.com/pricing/)) **My pick:** **SugarOKR** if you want the simplest “free forever” answer. It explicitly says the FREE plan is unlimited users and “100% free.” ([sugarokr.com](https://sugarokr.com/pricing/)) If you want, I can also give you the **cheapest paid OKR tools** (not free) and rank them by team size.
Do OKR tools offer free trials? transactional
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Yes—many OKR tools offer free trials, and some have free plans. Examples: - **Quantive Results** — free trial - **Perdoo** — free trial - **Profit.co** — free trial - **Weekdone** — free trial - **Ally.io** (Microsoft Viva Goals successor path varies) — typically demo-based, depending on plan If you want, I can list the best **free** OKR tools vs the best **trial**-only ones.
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Yes—many OKR tools offer either a **free trial** or a **free-forever plan**, but it varies by vendor. For example, **Weekdone** offers a **14-day free trial** for teams over 3 users, **Perdoo** has a **free plan** for up to 5 users, and **StrategyWorks** advertises a **30-day free trial** plus a free OKR tier. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare a few popular OKR tools and tell you which ones currently have the best free trial.
What OKR software has pricing plans? transactional 10/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some OKR software options that have pricing plans: - **Weekdone** — public pricing plans - **Perdoo** — public pricing tiers - **Profit.co** — plans available; pricing often on request depending on team size - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — enterprise pricing - **WorkBoard** — enterprise pricing - **Betterworks** — custom pricing - **8Objectives** — pricing plans - **Mooncamp** — public pricing plans - **Synergita** — pricing plans - **Leapsome** — pricing available, usually quote-based If you want, I can narrow this down to: 1. **cheapest OKR tools**, 2. **best for small teams**, or 3. **OKR software with transparent public pricing only**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — a few OKR tools with published pricing plans are: - **Perdoo**: Free plan (up to 5 users), then **Premium €8/user/month** and **Supreme €10/user/month**. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/pricing)) - **Weekdone**: **Free for up to 3 users**, plus a **14-day free trial** for 4+ users; paid pricing is per-user and scales with company size. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices)) - **Profit.co**: has pricing plans, but the page mainly points to **personalized quote / contact sales** rather than showing simple public per-user prices. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/pricing/)) If you want, I can also make you a **short comparison table** of the best OKR tools by price, free tier, and team size.
What is the best value OKR software for small teams? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
**Best value overall: _Profit.co_** It’s usually the sweet spot for small teams because it combines: - solid OKR tracking - tasks/projects - check-ins and dashboards - decent pricing for the feature set **Good alternatives:** - **Mooncamp** — best if you want a cleaner, simpler OKR-first tool - **Perdoo** — strong OKR setup and reporting, good for teams that want structure - **ClickUp Goals** — best value if you already use ClickUp for project management - **Weekdone** — budget-friendly and easy to start with, but less polished **My quick pick:** - **Best overall value:** Profit.co - **Best simple option:** Mooncamp - **Best if you already use project software:** ClickUp Goals If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by price** or **best for under 10 people**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **small teams**, my pick for the **best value** is **OKRs Tool**: it’s **free for 1–5 users** and then **$30/month flat for unlimited users**, so it’s hard to beat on cost if you want to grow without per-seat pricing. ([okrstool.com](https://www.okrstool.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want the best **polished per-user alternative**, **Tability** is strong at **$6/user/month billed yearly** with no user minimums, and **Mooncamp** starts at **€7/user/month** with a **5-user minimum**. ([tability.io](https://www.tability.io/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **Quick verdict:** - **Best overall value:** OKRs Tool. ([okrstool.com](https://www.okrstool.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you prefer per-user pricing and no minimums:** Tability. ([tability.io](https://www.tability.io/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you want a more established OKR suite:** Mooncamp. ([mooncamp.com](https://mooncamp.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your team size and whether you want **free**, **simple**, or **more advanced** features, I can narrow it to one choice.
Are there affordable OKR platforms for startups? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes—there are several affordable OKR platforms that work well for startups: - **Lattice** – popular for startups, but can get pricey as you grow - **Weekdone** – one of the more budget-friendly dedicated OKR tools - **Perdoo** – strong OKR + KPI tracking, good value for small teams - **Mooncamp** – clean UI, startup-friendly pricing - **ClickUp** – not a pure OKR tool, but you can manage OKRs cheaply if you already use it - **Aha! Goals** – solid for product-focused teams, but more expensive than the low-cost options If you want the cheapest practical options, I’d start with **Weekdone** or **Perdoo**. If you already use a project tool, **ClickUp** can be the best low-cost choice. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free OKR tools**, or 2. a **startup-specific shortlist by team size**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — a few solid, startup-friendly OKR platforms are genuinely affordable: - **Weekdone** — free for up to **3 users**; beyond that, it offers a 14-day trial and per-user pricing. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices?utm_source=openai)) - **Perdoo** — free for up to **5 users**; paid plans start at **$9/user/month**. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Quantive Essentials** — a **free-forever** OKR plan from Quantive. ([quantive.com](https://quantive.com/resources/blog/essentials-launch?utm_source=openai)) - **Profit.co** — has a **Start Free** option, but public pricing is less clear; it’s more of a broader strategy-execution suite than a bare-bones OKR tool. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the cheapest simple pick for a startup, I’d start with: 1. **Weekdone** if you’re under 3 people. 2. **Perdoo** if you want a free tier up to 5 users. 3. **Quantive Essentials** if you want free-forever and don’t mind a more enterprise-style product. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down by team size and whether you want **free**, **simple**, or **best for remote teams**.
What OKR software has a free tier? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Several OKR tools offer a free tier or free plan: - **Perdoo** — free plan for small teams - **Weekdone** — free trial / limited free options - **Quantive Results** — usually free trial, not always a permanent free tier - **Profit.co** — free trial; some free starter options may be available - **Mooncamp** — free trial, sometimes free for very small teams or startups via request - **Asana** — not pure OKR software, but you can run OKRs on the free plan - **ClickUp** — also not OKR-only, but usable for OKRs on the free plan - **Aha! Roadmaps** — no real free tier, mostly paid/trial If you want the best **dedicated OKR software with a free tier**, start with **Perdoo** and **Weekdone**. If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 free OKR tools comparison** by features.
retrieval Not mentioned
A few OKR tools that currently have a **free tier**: - **Perdoo** — free for up to **5 users**. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **SugarOKR** — **free plan** with **unlimited users**. ([sugarokr.com](https://sugarokr.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Planomic** — **free forever** plan for **1 team** with **unlimited users**. ([planomic.com](https://planomic.com/pricing)) - **StrategyWorks** — says it has a **free OKR tier** with **unlimited users** (for qualifying orgs). ([strategyworks.io](https://strategyworks.io/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **OKRs Tool** — free for teams up to **5 users**. ([okrstool.com](https://www.okrstool.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best free option for a solo user, startup, or team of 5+**.
How much do enterprise OKR platforms cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Enterprise OKR platforms usually cost **quote-based annual subscriptions**. Typical range: - **$10–$30/user/month** for simpler OKR tools - **$30–$70/user/month** for enterprise-grade platforms - **$20k–$250k+/year** for most companies, depending on headcount, modules, and services Common enterprise vendors: - **Betterworks** - **WorkBoard** - **Quantive** - **Lattice** - **Profit.co** - **Perdoo** (more mid-market, but used by larger teams too) What changes the price: - number of employees - OKR only vs. OKR + performance, engagement, analytics - implementation/support - SSO, HRIS integrations, permissions, APIs - annual contract length Rule of thumb: - **100–300 employees:** often **$15k–$60k/year** - **500–1,000 employees:** often **$50k–$150k/year** - **1,000+ employees:** often **$100k–$300k+/year** If you want, I can compare **Betterworks vs WorkBoard vs Quantive** on pricing and features.
retrieval Not mentioned
Enterprise OKR platforms usually cost **about $4–$15 per user/month** on a per-seat basis, but **true enterprise deals are often custom-quoted** and include volume discounts plus implementation/services. A practical budget is often **15–30% of first-year license fees** for rollout support. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/blog/okr-university/enterprise-okr-software-comparison-top-8-platforms-reviewed/?utm_source=openai)) Examples: - **Perdoo**: paid plans start at **$9/user/month** (Premium) and **$11/user/month** (Supreme); they also say they require a **minimum contract value of $10,000** for sales/procurement deals. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks**: enterprise pricing is **custom quote** only, with enterprise plans starting at **2,500 employees**. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/plans/?utm_source=openai)) So, in practice: - **Midmarket**: roughly **$5–$12/user/month** - **Enterprise**: often **custom**, and total first-year cost can land in the **tens of thousands to six figures** depending on headcount, modules, and services. ([profit.co](https://www.profit.co/blog/okr-university/enterprise-okr-software-comparison-top-8-platforms-reviewed/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **vendor-by-vendor pricing table** for 5–10 enterprise OKR platforms.
What OKR software is worth paying for? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Yes—if you want a paid OKR tool that’s actually worth it, these are the main ones I’d consider: - **Profit.co** — best value for most teams; strong OKRs + task/project linking + decent adoption features. - **Weekdone** — simple, clean, great for smaller teams that want lightweight OKRs without complexity. - **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** — best for larger orgs that want serious analytics, integrations, and automation. - **Betterworks** — strong enterprise option, especially if you want OKRs tied to performance management. - **Lattice** — worth it if you also want performance reviews, engagement, and manager workflows in one place. **My quick take:** - **Small team / startup:** **Weekdone** or **Profit.co** - **Growing company:** **Profit.co** or **Quantive Results** - **Enterprise / HR-driven org:** **Betterworks** or **Lattice** If you only want OKRs and nothing else, **Profit.co** is usually the best bang for the buck. If you tell me your team size and budget, I can narrow it to 2–3 best picks.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **OKR software that’s actually worth paying for**, my short list is: - **Perdoo** — best value for most teams. Free for up to 5 users; paid plans start at **$9/user/month**. Good if you want OKRs + KPIs without a heavy rollout. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Lattice** — best if you also want performance management. OKRs are included in its platform, and the Goals & OKRs product can be bought separately for **$8/month**; overall pricing starts at **$11/seat/month** for core bundles. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Betterworks** — best for enterprise performance + OKRs. Its Team Edition was listed at **$8/user/month billed annually** in the published pricing sheet, but Betterworks also positions itself as an enterprise performance platform with deeper features and custom pricing. ([betterworks.com](https://www.betterworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Betterworks_Team_Edition_2021.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Quantive Results** — best for larger orgs that want more strategy-execution depth. Quantive’s help center says the Scale plan price was reduced to **$9/user/month** and Enterprise adds features like AI-guided OKR creation and more customization. ([help.quantive.com](https://help.quantive.com/en/articles/4631232-choose-your-quantive-results-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Weekdone** — best cheap/simple option for small teams. It’s free for up to 3 users, with a 14-day trial for larger teams. ([weekdone.com](https://weekdone.com/prices?utm_source=openai)) **My take:** - **Small team / startup:** Perdoo or Weekdone. ([perdoo.com](https://www.perdoo.com/products/okr-software?utm_source=openai)) - **Need reviews + OKRs in one system:** Lattice or Betterworks. ([lattice.com](https://lattice.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Enterprise strategy execution:** Quantive. ([help.quantive.com](https://help.quantive.com/en/articles/4631232-choose-your-quantive-results-plan?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for startups**, **best for 50–200 employees**, or **best if you already use Slack/Jira/Workday**.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best OKR software tools for teams? 170/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software tools for teams: 1. **Profit.co** Best all-around OKR platform for growing teams. - Strong OKR setup, dashboards, check-ins, and alignment - Good for mid-size companies - Also includes performance management 2. **Weekdone** Great for smaller teams that want something simple. - Easy weekly check-ins - Clean OKR tracking - Lightweight and fast to adopt 3. **Perdoo** Strong choice for teams that want strategy + OKRs in one place. - Good goal alignment and roadmaps - Helpful reporting - Nice for leadership visibility 4. **Lattice** Best if you want OKRs plus performance reviews and people management. - Great for HR-focused teams - Integrates goals, feedback, and reviews - More than just OKRs 5. **WorkBoard** Better for larger organizations with complex alignment needs. - Enterprise-grade OKR management - Strong analytics and executive reporting - Good for cross-team coordination 6. **Quantive Results** Good for structured OKR execution at scale. - Detailed goal tracking - Enterprise features - Useful for strategy execution 7. **Asana** Best if your team already uses project management software and wants basic OKRs. - Flexible goal tracking - Easy task-to-goal connection - Not as OKR-specific as dedicated tools ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Profit.co - **Best simple option:** Weekdone - **Best for strategy alignment:** Perdoo - **Best for performance + OKRs:** Lattice - **Best for enterprise:** WorkBoard or Quantive Results If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR tools by team size** or **compare 3 tools side by side**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR tools for teams: 1. **Quantive Results** Best for: larger teams that want strong OKR tracking and strategy alignment. Why: powerful dashboards, progress tracking, and integrations. 2. **WorkBoard** Best for: enterprise teams running structured OKRs across departments. Why: solid reporting, alignment, and leadership visibility. 3. **Profit.co** Best for: teams wanting an affordable all-in-one OKR platform. Why: includes OKRs, task management, reviews, and analytics. 4. **Weekdone** Best for: small to mid-size teams that want simple OKR execution. Why: easy setup, weekly check-ins, and lightweight tracking. 5. **Perdoo** Best for: teams that want a clean, easy-to-use OKR system with strategy maps. Why: good for linking goals, KPIs, and initiatives. 6. **Lattice** Best for: teams already using performance management software. Why: combines OKRs with reviews, feedback, and employee engagement. 7. **Betterworks** Best for: enterprises needing OKRs plus performance management. Why: strong for goal alignment and continuous performance conversations. ### Best picks by team size - **Small teams:** Weekdone, Profit.co - **Mid-size teams:** Perdoo, Quantive Results - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard, Betterworks ### My top 3 overall - **Perdoo** for ease of use - **Quantive Results** for advanced OKR management - **Profit.co** for value If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR tools by budget**, or compare **2–3 tools side by side**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software tools for teams: 1. **Quantive Results** Best for: larger teams that want strong OKR alignment, reporting, and integrations. 2. **WorkBoard** Best for: enterprise teams needing visibility, dashboards, and executive-level tracking. 3. **Profit.co** Best for: teams that want OKRs plus performance management in one platform. 4. **Perdoo** Best for: mid-size teams looking for a clean, easy-to-use OKR system. 5. **Weekdone** Best for: smaller teams that want simple weekly OKR check-ins and progress tracking. 6. **Betterworks** Best for: organizations that want OKRs tied closely to employee performance and reviews. 7. **Objectives by Lattice** Best for: companies already using Lattice for performance management and people ops. 8. **Leapsome** Best for: teams wanting OKRs, reviews, surveys, and development tools together. **Best overall picks:** - **Quantive Results** for robust OKR management - **Perdoo** for ease of use - **Profit.co** for an all-in-one option If you want, I can also narrow this down by **team size**, **budget**, or **startup vs enterprise**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR tools for teams: 1. **Profit.co** Great all-around OKR platform with strong goal tracking, check-ins, dashboards, and integrations. Good for growing teams. 2. **WorkBoard** Best for larger organizations needing enterprise-grade OKR management, alignment, and analytics. 3. **Betterworks** Strong for performance + OKRs together, especially for companies that want manager coaching and continuous feedback. 4. **Weekdone** Simple, easy to adopt, and good for smaller teams that want lightweight OKR tracking and weekly updates. 5. **Perdoo** Very solid for companies that want strategy maps, objectives, KPIs, and OKRs in one place. 6. **Lattice** Best if you want OKRs plus performance management, 1:1s, reviews, and employee development. 7. **Quantive Results** Strong for strategy execution and OKR alignment, especially in mid-size to large teams. 8. **Peoplebox** Good for teams that want OKRs tightly connected to project work and performance management. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Profit.co - **Best enterprise:** WorkBoard - **Best for performance + OKRs:** Betterworks or Lattice - **Best simple option:** Weekdone - **Best for strategy mapping:** Perdoo If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by team size** or a **comparison table with pricing/features**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software tools for teams: 1. **Weekdone** Great for small to mid-sized teams. Simple OKR tracking, weekly check-ins, and team alignment. 2. **Perdoo** Strong for growing companies. Good dashboards, strategy maps, and easy-to-use OKR workflows. 3. **Profit.co** Very feature-rich. Includes OKRs, performance reviews, 1:1s, and task tracking in one platform. 4. **WorkBoard** Best for enterprise teams. Strong reporting, alignment, and executive-level visibility. 5. **Quantive Results** Good for larger organizations. Offers strategy execution, OKR tracking, and integrations. 6. **Betterworks** Popular in enterprise settings. Combines OKRs with continuous performance management. 7. **Lattice** Best if you want OKRs plus performance reviews, engagement, and feedback in one tool. 8. **ClickUp** A flexible option if your team already uses ClickUp for project management and wants lightweight OKRs. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall for most teams:** Perdoo - **Best for enterprise:** WorkBoard or Quantive Results - **Best all-in-one HR/performance:** Betterworks or Lattice - **Best budget-friendly/simple:** Weekdone If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by price, ease of use, or integrations**.
Which OKR software is most recommended?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If I had to pick **one** OKR tool, I’d recommend **Profit.co**. Why: - strong OKR-specific workflow - good for teams of different sizes - includes check-ins, reviews, and dashboards without being too complex Other top picks: - **Perdoo** — best for straightforward OKR tracking - **Lattice** — best if you also want performance management - **WorkBoard** — best for larger enterprise teams - **Weekdone** — simple and easy for smaller teams **Short answer:** - **Best overall:** **Profit.co** - **Best simple OKR tool:** **Perdoo** - **Best enterprise option:** **WorkBoard** If you tell me your team size and budget, I can narrow it to the best one for you.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **most widely recommended all-around OKR software**, I’d start with: **1. Profit.co** — best overall for most teams - Strong OKR workflow, check-ins, dashboards, and easy adoption - Good balance of features vs. price **Other top picks:** - **Weekdone** — best for simple, small-team OKRs - **Perdoo** — best for strategy + OKRs in growing orgs - **WorkBoard** — best for enterprise OKR programs - **Quantive Results** — best for larger companies needing deep analytics - **Betterworks** — best for performance + OKRs together **Quick recommendation:** - **Small team/startup:** Weekdone or Profit.co - **Mid-size company:** Profit.co or Perdoo - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard or Betterworks If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best OKR software for your company size and budget**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **most widely recommended OKR software overall**, I’d start with **WorkBoard** — it’s a strong choice for larger teams that want serious OKR tracking, alignment, and reporting. Other top picks by use case: - **WorkBoard** — best overall for enterprise OKRs - **Quantive Results** — great for strategy execution + OKRs - **Perdoo** — very good for mid-market teams, easier to roll out - **Profit.co** — strong all-in-one OKR + performance management - **Weekdone** — simpler and more affordable for smaller teams **My quick recommendation:** - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard - **Mid-sized company:** Perdoo or Quantive - **Budget-friendly/smaller team:** Weekdone If you tell me your company size and budget, I can narrow it to the best 1–2 options.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **one overall recommendation**, I’d pick **WorkBoard** — it’s the strongest all-around OKR platform for serious execution, alignment, and enterprise use. Other top picks: - **Perdoo** — best for small to mid-size teams; easy to use and affordable - **Profit.co** — very good value, broad performance + OKR features - **Weekdone** — simpler teams that want lightweight OKR tracking **Quick take:** - **Best overall:** WorkBoard - **Best for SMB:** Perdoo - **Best budget/value:** Profit.co If you tell me your **team size** and **budget**, I can recommend the best one for your situation.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **most recommended OKR software overall**, I’d start with **Quantive Results** — it’s one of the strongest all-around platforms for OKRs, strategy execution, and reporting. **Top OKR tools to consider:** 1. **Quantive Results** – best overall for mature OKR programs 2. **Profit.co** – great value, very feature-rich, good for SMB to mid-market 3. **Betterworks** – strong for larger enterprises 4. **Perdoo** – simple, clear OKR management, good for smaller teams 5. **Weekdone** – easy to adopt, good for startups and basic OKRs **My quick pick by use case:** - **Best overall:** Quantive Results - **Best budget/value:** Profit.co - **Best enterprise:** Betterworks - **Best simple/easy:** Perdoo or Weekdone If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR software for startups, SMBs, or enterprises**.
What are the top OKR software platforms? 20/mo
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the top OKR software platforms to look at: 1. **Quantive Results** Strong for enterprise OKR management, strategy alignment, and reporting. 2. **WorkBoard** Good for large orgs that want OKRs tied to execution, planning, and business reviews. 3. **Perdoo** Popular with mid-sized teams; simple OKR tracking plus KPI support. 4. **Profit.co** Very feature-rich for OKRs, tasks, and performance management at a lower price point. 5. **Weekdone** Easy to use for smaller teams; combines OKRs with weekly check-ins. 6. **Cascade** Strong for strategy execution and linking OKRs to business outcomes. 7. **Betterworks** Enterprise-grade platform with OKRs, performance, and engagement tools. 8. **Ally.io** Known for Microsoft integration and clean OKR workflows; now part of Microsoft Viva Goals heritage. 9. **Lattice** Better known for performance management, but also supports OKRs and goal tracking. 10. **Aha! Goals** Best if you want product roadmap + goals in one place. **Best picks by use case** - **Best enterprise:** WorkBoard, Quantive Results, Betterworks - **Best for SMBs:** Perdoo, Profit.co, Weekdone - **Best for strategy execution:** Cascade, WorkBoard - **Best for product teams:** Aha! Goals If you want, I can also give you a **comparison table by price, integrations, and best-fit company size**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top OKR software platforms: 1. **Workboard** — Strong for enterprise OKR management, strategy execution, and leadership reporting. 2. **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — Very robust analytics, integrations, and automation for larger teams. 3. **15Five** — Good for combining OKRs with performance management and employee engagement. 4. **Betterworks** — Popular with mid-market and enterprise teams; solid for alignment and continuous performance. 5. **Weekdone** — Simple, lightweight OKR tracking for smaller teams and startups. 6. **Perdoo** — Clear OKR + KPI management, good dashboards, and straightforward rollout. 7. **Profit.co** — Broad feature set, including OKRs, tasks, and performance tools; often good value. 8. **Lattice** — Best if you want OKRs tied closely to performance reviews and people management. 9. **Asana** / **Monday.com** — Not pure OKR tools, but useful if your team wants OKRs inside a broader work management platform. 10. **Ally.io** (Microsoft) — Strong for strategy execution, especially in Microsoft-centric organizations. **Best picks by use case:** - **Enterprise:** Workboard, Quantive Results, Betterworks - **Mid-market:** Profit.co, Perdoo, 15Five - **Simple/startup-friendly:** Weekdone - **People/performance combo:** Lattice, 15Five If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by budget**, **top 5 for startups**, or a **feature comparison table**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top OKR platforms by common use and reputation are: - **Betterworks** — strong for enterprise OKRs and performance management - **Workboard** — great for large orgs needing strategy execution - **Lattice** — popular for OKRs plus employee performance/engagement - **15Five** — good for SMBs and manager coaching - **Weekdone** — simpler, lightweight OKR tracking - **Profit.co** — feature-rich and budget-friendly - **Perdoo** — solid OKR-focused platform with good analytics - **Objectives by Culture Amp** — best if you already use Culture Amp If you want, I can recommend the **best 3 for startups, mid-market, or enterprise** by price and features.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top OKR software platforms: - **Profit.co** — strong all-in-one OKR + performance management; great for mid-market and enterprise - **Weekdone** — simple, easy-to-use OKR tracking; good for startups and small teams - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs tied to employee performance and reviews - **15Five** — strong for continuous performance management with OKRs - **Betterworks** — enterprise-grade OKR platform with robust alignment and analytics - **WorkBoard** — popular in larger organizations; good for strategy execution - **Perdoo** — solid OKR and KPI management with clear dashboards - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — advanced OKR platform with deep integrations and reporting - **Mooncamp** — modern, lightweight OKR tool for smaller teams and growing companies - **monday.com** — flexible if you already use it for project/work management If you want, I can also narrow these down by **best for startups, SMBs, or enterprise**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Top OKR software platforms to consider: 1. **Profit.co** — strong all-in-one OKR + performance management platform, good for mid-market and enterprises. 2. **Workboard** — very robust for enterprise OKRs, strategy execution, and leadership visibility. 3. **Betterworks** — popular with larger organizations; solid OKR, goals, and performance tools. 4. **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus performance reviews, engagement, and people ops in one place. 5. **Weekdone** — simpler, lightweight OKR platform for small teams and startups. 6. **Quantive Results** — enterprise-focused OKR and strategy execution software, formerly Gtmhub. 7. **Perdoo** — clean OKR + KPI tracking, good for growing teams. 8. **Synergita** — OKRs plus performance management, often used by SMBs and mid-market teams. 9. **JOP (Joy of Performing)** — strong OKR adoption features and strategy alignment. 10. **Culture Amp Goals / Lattice Goals** — best when OKRs are part of a broader people/performance stack. If you want, I can also give you: - the **best OKR tool by company size** - a **pricing comparison** - or a **shortlist of the top 3 for startups vs enterprises**.
What is the best OKR software for companies?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall:** **WorkBoard** It’s the strongest choice for larger companies that want enterprise-grade OKRs, exec dashboards, analytics, and strong alignment across teams. **Other top picks by use case:** - **Profit.co** — best value for mid-sized companies; solid OKR + performance management - **Quantive Results** — best for enterprises needing advanced strategy execution - **Weekdone** — best for small teams/startups; simple and easy to roll out - **Perdoo** — best for companies that want clean OKR tracking plus KPIs - **Leapsome** — best if you want OKRs combined with performance reviews, engagement, and HR tools **Quick recommendation:** - **Large enterprise:** WorkBoard or Quantive Results - **Mid-market:** Profit.co or Perdoo - **Startup/small business:** Weekdone If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR software for your company size, budget, and HR stack**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one single “best” OKR tool for every company, but these are the strongest options: - **Best overall for most companies: Betterworks** - Great for enterprise OKRs, alignment, and performance management - Strong reporting and execution focus - **Best for fast-growing teams / startups: Weekdone** - Simple, easy to roll out - Good OKR visibility without heavy admin - **Best for product-led companies: Quantive Results** - Strong OKR tracking, initiative management, and analytics - Good for companies that want serious execution discipline - **Best if you already use Asana: Asana Goals** - Convenient if your team lives in Asana - Easier adoption, but less powerful than dedicated OKR platforms - **Best lightweight option: Profit.co** - Good balance of OKRs, tasks, and dashboards - Often a solid mid-market choice If you want a single recommendation: **Betterworks** for larger companies, **Weekdone** for smaller teams, and **Quantive Results** for a robust dedicated OKR platform. If you tell me your company size and current tools (e.g., Jira, Asana, Microsoft Teams), I can narrow it down to the best fit.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall OKR software:** **Betterworks** Why it stands out: - Built specifically for **OKRs + performance management** - Strong **enterprise features**, alignment, and reporting - Good for companies that want OKRs tied to manager check-ins and reviews **Other top picks by use case:** - **WorkBoard** — best for large enterprises and strategy execution - **Quantive Results** — strong OKR tracking and analytics - **Profit.co** — best value for mid-market teams - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus performance reviews and people ops - **Weekdone** — simple and affordable for smaller teams If you want one recommendation: - **Small company / startup:** **Profit.co** or **Weekdone** - **Mid-size company:** **Betterworks** or **Lattice** - **Enterprise:** **WorkBoard** or **Betterworks** If you tell me your company size and whether you want **OKRs only** or **OKRs + performance reviews**, I can narrow it to the best one.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall:** **Profit.co** It’s one of the strongest all-around OKR platforms for companies because it combines **OKRs, task execution, check-ins, dashboards, 1:1s, and performance management** in one place. ### Best OKR software by use case - **Profit.co** — best overall for most companies - **Weekdone** — best for simple, easy OKR adoption - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs + performance management - **WorkBoard** — best for larger enterprises - **Quantive Results** — best for strategy execution and enterprise analytics - **Perdoo** — best for growing teams that want a clean OKR system ### My quick recommendation - **Small teams/startups:** **Perdoo** or **Weekdone** - **Mid-size companies:** **Profit.co** or **Lattice** - **Large enterprises:** **WorkBoard** or **Quantive Results** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table by price, ease of use, and enterprise features**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
**Best overall:** **WorkBoard** It’s the strongest all-around OKR platform for larger companies: good enterprise workflow, integrations, reporting, and accountability. **Best for mid-market teams:** **Weekdone** Simple, practical, and easier to roll out than heavier enterprise tools. **Best for product/tech companies:** **Perdoo** Great OKR structure, clear alignment, and solid execution tracking. **Best for growing companies on a budget:** **Profit.co** Feature-rich for the price and good if you want OKRs plus broader performance tools. **Best for Google Workspace users:** **Gtmhub** (now part of Quantive) Strong analytics and enterprise-grade OKR management. If you want one default recommendation: **WorkBoard for enterprises, Perdoo for most SMB/mid-market teams.**
Which OKR software options are most popular?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR software options are: - **WorkBoard** — strong enterprise OKR platform; widely used by larger orgs. - **Betterworks** — popular for performance + OKRs in mid-market and enterprise. - **Lattice** — well-known for people management, with OKR/performance features. - **15Five** — popular for performance management and OKR-style goal tracking. - **Leapsome** — strong in employee engagement, performance, and goals/OKRs. - **Profit.co** — a dedicated OKR platform with broad adoption across SMB to enterprise. - **Weekdone** — simple OKR tool, often used by smaller teams. - **Perdoo** — focused OKR software with strategy mapping and goal tracking. - **ClickUp** — not pure OKR software, but commonly used to run OKRs in teams already using it. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best OKR tools by company size**, or 2. a **top 5 ranked shortlist** for your team.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR software options are: - **WorkBoard** — widely used by larger enterprises; strong strategy-to-execution features. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — popular for data-driven OKRs and integrations. - **Profit.co** — common with SMBs and mid-market teams; solid OKR + performance management. - **Weekdone** — simple and popular for smaller teams and startups. - **Perdoo** — known for OKR planning and alignment features. - **Betterworks** — enterprise-focused, especially for performance + OKRs. - **Lattice** — popular HR/performance platform with OKR support. - **Tability** — lightweight, easy-to-use OKR tool for startups and small teams. - **15Five** — performance management suite that includes OKRs. - **Jira Align** — often used by large product/engineering organizations that want OKRs tied to agile work. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for startups, mid-market, or enterprise**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Popular OKR software options include: - **WorkBoard** — strong enterprise OKR platform - **Lattice** — popular for OKRs + performance management - **Betterworks** — common in larger organizations - **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** — very popular for strategy execution/OKRs - **15Five** — OKRs plus employee performance tools - **Perdoo** — well-known dedicated OKR software - **Profit.co** — affordable, feature-rich OKR platform - **Ally.io** — now part of Microsoft Viva Goals legacy; still widely referenced - **Culture Amp** — good if you want OKRs tied to engagement/performance - **Asana** / **Monday.com** — not pure OKR tools, but popular for lightweight OKR tracking If you want, I can also give you: 1) the **best OKR tools for small teams**, 2) **best enterprise OKR software**, or 3) a **side-by-side comparison**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR software options are: - **Weekdone** — simple, SMB-friendly OKR tracking - **WorkBoard** — widely used in larger orgs; strong enterprise features - **Perdoo** — popular for strategy + OKRs, good dashboards - **Profit.co** — broad suite, strong OKR and performance management - **Betterworks** — enterprise-grade OKR platform - **Lattice** — popular if you want OKRs plus performance management - **15Five** — OKRs combined with employee engagement/performance - **Objectives & Key Results by Koan** — clean, lightweight OKR tool - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — very popular for data-driven OKRs - **Mooncamp** — modern UI, often used by startups and mid-size teams If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **best for startups**, 2. **best for enterprise**, or 3. **best value for money**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR software options are: - **WorkBoard** — strong enterprise OKR platform - **Betterworks** — widely used for goals and performance management - **Quantive** (formerly Gtmhub) — popular for strategy execution - **Profit.co** — feature-rich and common with mid-market teams - **Lattice** — popular if you want OKRs plus performance management - **15Five** — good for manager check-ins and goals - **Perdoo** — well-known OKR-focused tool - **Weekdone** — simple, lightweight OKR tracking - **Peoplebox** — common with fast-growing companies If you want, I can also rank these by **best for startups, mid-market, or enterprise**.
What are the leading OKR software tools?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the leading OKR software tools: - **Quantive Results** — strong enterprise OKR platform with strategy mapping, analytics, and integrations. - **WorkBoard** — popular for enterprise OKRs, business reviews, and execution tracking. - **Perdoo** — simple, clean OKR software for mid-sized teams and startups. - **Betterworks** — combines OKRs with performance management and employee engagement. - **Weekdone** — lightweight OKR and weekly planning tool, good for smaller teams. - **Profit.co** — feature-rich OKR platform with tasks, KPIs, and performance management. - **Mooncamp** — modern OKR software with an easy UI and team alignment features. - **Lattice** — better known for performance management, but also supports OKRs. - **Peoplebox** — OKRs plus performance, engagement, and people analytics. - **Aha! Roadmaps** — useful if you want OKRs tied closely to product strategy and roadmaps. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best OKR tool for startups**, 2. the **best enterprise OKR tool**, or 3. a **comparison table with pricing/features**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Leading OKR software tools include: - **WorkBoard** — strong enterprise OKR platform with strategy execution and reviews. - **Betterworks** — popular for OKRs + performance management in larger orgs. - **Quantive** *(formerly Gtmhub)* — powerful analytics-heavy OKR tool for enterprises. - **Lattice** — good if you want OKRs tied to performance, feedback, and reviews. - **Perdoo** — straightforward OKR software, popular with startups and mid-market teams. - **Profit.co** — broad OKR + execution platform with task/project features. - **Ally.io** *(Microsoft)* — well-known OKR tool, especially for Microsoft-centric teams. - **Weekdone** — simple, lightweight OKRs for smaller teams. - **Mooncamp** — modern, easy-to-use OKR tool with clean UX. - **Jira Align** — best for large engineering orgs already in the Atlassian ecosystem. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best OKR tools for startups**, 2. **best for enterprises**, or 3. **a side-by-side comparison table**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the leading OKR software tools: - **WorkBoard** — strong for enterprise OKR management, analytics, and executive visibility. - **Profit.co** — popular all-in-one OKR platform with task management and performance reviews. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — very powerful for data-driven OKRs and integrations. - **Betterworks** — good for larger organizations needing OKRs plus performance management. - **Lattice** — popular for OKRs alongside employee performance and engagement. - **Weekdone** — simple, easy-to-use OKR tool for smaller teams. - **Perdoo** — clean OKR tracking with strategy maps and dashboards. - **15Five** — combines OKRs with check-ins and employee feedback. - **Tability** — lightweight and modern, good for startups and teams that want simplicity. - **Ally.io** — now part of Microsoft Viva Goals; still widely known in the OKR space. If you want, I can also rank them by **best for startups, mid-market, or enterprise**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the leading OKR software tools: - **WorkBoard** — Strong enterprise OKR platform; good for large orgs and strategy execution. - **Betterworks** — Well-known for OKRs plus performance management; good for mid-market and enterprise. - **Weekdone** — Simple, lightweight OKR tracking; great for small teams. - **Profit.co** — Very feature-rich and flexible; popular for OKRs, KPIs, and task alignment. - **15Five** — Best if you want OKRs tied closely to performance reviews, check-ins, and engagement. - **Lattice** — Strong people management suite with OKRs included; good for HR-focused teams. - **Perdoo** — Clear OKR and strategy management; good visualization and alignment. - **Tability** — Modern, easy-to-use OKR tracking; popular with startups and product teams. - **Gtmhub** (now part of **Quantive**) — Advanced OKR and business execution platform for larger organizations. - **Monday.com** — Not a pure OKR tool, but flexible enough to build OKR workflows if you already use it. If you want, I can also narrow this down by **best for startups, enterprise, or ease of use**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the leading OKR software tools are: - **WorkBoard** — strong for enterprise OKR management and execution tracking - **Betterworks** — popular for performance + OKR alignment in larger teams - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — very feature-rich, good analytics and integrations - **Perdoo** — clean OKR platform, good for mid-sized teams - **Profit.co** — affordable, broad OKR + performance management features - **Weekdone** — simple OKR and weekly check-in workflow - **Tability** — lightweight, easy-to-use OKR tracking for startups and SMBs - **15Five** — more performance-focused, but includes OKR features - **Lattice** — strong people/performance platform with OKRs built in - **Koan** — collaborative OKR and team alignment tool If you want, I can also rank these by **best for startups, mid-market, or enterprise**.
What OKR software do most teams use?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one universal “most used” OKR tool, but the most commonly seen dedicated options are: - **Betterworks** - **WorkBoard** - **Perdoo** - **Profit.co** - **Lattice** (often for OKRs + performance) - **Koan** If you want the simplest answer: **many teams actually use Google Sheets/Excel**, especially smaller teams, while larger orgs tend to pick **Betterworks** or **WorkBoard**. If you tell me your team size and whether you want OKRs only or OKRs + performance reviews, I can recommend the best fit.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
There isn’t one single “most used” OKR tool, but the ones teams most often land on are: - **WorkBoard** — popular with larger companies / enterprise OKRs - **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** — strong for strategy + OKR tracking - **Weekdone** — common for small to mid-sized teams - **Profit.co** — widely used and feature-rich - **Perdoo** — simple, OKR-focused, good for growing teams - **Lattice** — if you already use it for performance management - **Asana / Jira / Notion / Google Sheets** — many teams start here before buying dedicated OKR software If you want the safest “most common” picks: - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard or Quantive - **Mid-market:** Profit.co or Perdoo - **Small teams / lightweight:** Weekdone or even Notion/Sheets If you tell me your team size and whether you want simple vs enterprise-grade, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
There isn’t one single “most-used” OKR tool, but the most common names you’ll hear are: - **Lattice OKRs** - **Betterworks** - **Workboard** - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) - **Perdoo** - **Profit.co** If you want the safest mainstream picks: - **Lattice** for startups/SMBs - **Betterworks** or **Workboard** for larger enterprises - **Perdoo** if you want a simpler, more affordable OKR tool If you want, I can narrow it down by team size and budget.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one universal standard, but the most commonly used OKR tools I see are: - **Lattice OKRs** — popular with teams already using Lattice for performance - **Betterworks** — common in mid-market and enterprise - **Workboard** — strong for enterprise OKR management - **Ally.io** — widely used, especially by Microsoft-centric teams - **Perdoo** — popular for simpler OKR tracking - **Profit.co** — good all-in-one OKR + performance option If you want the safest “most teams” picks by category: - **Best overall for most companies:** **Lattice** - **Best enterprise choice:** **Betterworks** or **Workboard** - **Best simple/affordable option:** **Perdoo** or **Profit.co** If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR software for startups, SMBs, or enterprise**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
There isn’t one single “most used” OKR tool, but the common picks are: - **WorkBoard** — very popular for larger enterprises - **Quantive** (formerly Gtmhub) — strong for data-heavy OKR tracking - **Lattice** — common with people/performance teams that want OKRs + reviews - **15Five** — popular in mid-sized companies - **Perdoo** — simpler, widely used by smaller teams - **Microsoft Viva Goals** — if you’re deep in Microsoft 365 If you want the safest default recommendation: - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard or Quantive - **Mid-market:** Lattice or 15Five - **Simple/startup-friendly:** Perdoo If you tell me your company size and whether you already use Slack, Microsoft 365, or Google Workspace, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.
What are the best OKR software solutions for businesses?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software solutions for businesses: 1. **Workboard** Best for: enterprise OKRs and execution management Strong dashboards, alignment, and performance tracking. 2. **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) Best for: data-driven teams and large organizations Great integrations, automation, and real-time OKR updates. 3. **Profit.co** Best for: mid-market businesses wanting a full OKR + performance platform Good balance of OKRs, tasks, reviews, and 1:1s. 4. **Lattice** Best for: companies that want OKRs tied to performance management Strong for employee development plus goal tracking. 5. **15Five** Best for: people-focused teams and manager check-ins Useful for OKRs, engagement, and coaching workflows. 6. **Betterworks** Best for: larger companies focused on enterprise goal management Solid for continuous performance and alignment. 7. **Weekdone** Best for: small to mid-sized teams Simple OKR setup, weekly planning, and progress reporting. 8. **Perdoo** Best for: straightforward OKR adoption Easy to use, with strategy maps and KPI tracking. 9. **ClickUp** Best for: teams that want OKRs inside a broader work management tool Flexible, but less specialized than dedicated OKR platforms. 10. **Asana** Best for: teams already using Asana for project management Good for lightweight goal tracking, but not a pure OKR tool. **Best overall picks:** - **Enterprise:** Workboard, Betterworks, Quantive Results - **Mid-market:** Profit.co, Lattice, 15Five - **Small teams:** Weekdone, Perdoo If you want, I can also give you: - the **best OKR software for small businesses** - a **price comparison** - or a **top 5 based on ease of use**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software solutions for businesses: 1. **Profit.co** — Strong all-in-one OKR platform with performance reviews, tasks, and dashboards. Good for mid-size to large teams. 2. **Weekdone** — Simple, easy to adopt, great for smaller teams and startups that want lightweight OKR tracking. 3. **Lattice** — Excellent for companies that want OKRs plus performance management, reviews, and engagement tools. 4. **Betterworks** — Enterprise-grade OKR software with strong alignment, check-ins, and reporting. 5. **Perdoo** — User-friendly OKR tool with strategy maps and goal alignment; good for growing businesses. 6. **WorkBoard** — Best for larger organizations needing enterprise strategy execution and deep analytics. 7. **Quantive Results** — Strong for enterprise OKR management, especially if you want robust reporting and integrations. 8. **Asana Goals** — Good if your team already uses Asana and wants a lighter OKR setup tied to project work. **Best overall by use case:** - **Best for startups/small teams:** Weekdone or Perdoo - **Best for mid-market:** Profit.co or Lattice - **Best for enterprise:** Betterworks, WorkBoard, or Quantive Results If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 shortlist by budget, team size, or industry**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software solutions for businesses: 1. **WorkBoard** – Best for enterprise OKR execution and alignment Strong strategy-to-execution workflow, dashboards, and enterprise reporting. 2. **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** – Best for data-driven OKRs Great integrations, automation, and real-time metrics. 3. **Lattice** – Best for people-first performance + OKRs Excellent if you want OKRs tied to performance reviews, 1:1s, and engagement. 4. **Profit.co** – Best all-in-one OKR platform for mid-market teams Solid OKR tracking, task management, and affordable pricing. 5. **Perdoo** – Best for simple, structured OKR adoption Easy to use, good for companies rolling out OKRs for the first time. 6. **Weekdone** – Best for small teams and startups Lightweight, straightforward weekly check-ins and OKR tracking. 7. **Betterworks** – Best for large organizations Strong alignment, goal management, and enterprise-grade workflows. 8. **mooncamp** – Best modern OKR software for startups/SMBs Clean UI, easy adoption, and good collaboration features. ### Quick picks - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard, Betterworks, Quantive Results - **Mid-market:** Profit.co, Lattice - **Startup/small team:** Weekdone, Perdoo, mooncamp If you want, I can also give you: - a **best-by-budget list** - a **comparison table** - or **the best OKR tool for your company size**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software solutions for businesses: 1. **WorkBoard** Best for: Mid-size to large enterprises Strong analytics, executive reporting, and enterprise-grade OKR management. 2. **Profit.co** Best for: SMBs to mid-market teams Easy-to-use OKR platform with task management, performance reviews, and strong integrations. 3. **Weekdone** Best for: Small businesses and startups Simple OKR setup, weekly check-ins, and lightweight team alignment. 4. **Perdoo** Best for: Companies wanting OKRs + strategy maps Good for linking goals to strategy, with solid dashboards and progress tracking. 5. **Leapsome** Best for: Companies combining OKRs with performance management Includes OKRs, reviews, feedback, and learning tools in one platform. 6. **Betterworks** Best for: Large organizations Robust OKR and performance management platform with strong enterprise features. 7. **Lattice** Best for: People-focused companies Great if you want OKRs alongside engagement, reviews, and 1:1s. 8. **Jira Align** Best for: Enterprise engineering/product teams Ideal for scaling OKRs across agile teams and portfolio planning. ### Quick picks - **Best overall for enterprises:** WorkBoard - **Best value for SMBs:** Profit.co - **Best simple option:** Weekdone - **Best all-in-one people + OKR platform:** Leapsome or Lattice If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by budget**, **by company size**, or **a comparison table**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR software solutions for businesses: 1. **Quantive Results** Strong for company-wide OKR management, analytics, and enterprise alignment. Good if you want deep reporting and integrations. 2. **WorkBoard** Excellent for larger organizations that need structured OKR execution, dashboards, and executive visibility. 3. **Profit.co** A popular all-in-one OKR platform with task management, check-ins, and performance features. Good value for growing teams. 4. **Betterworks** Best for enterprise performance + OKRs, especially if you want to connect goals with employee reviews and engagement. 5. **Lattice** Great if you want OKRs plus performance management, engagement, and lightweight goal tracking in one system. 6. **Weekdone** Simple and user-friendly for small to mid-sized teams that want straightforward OKR tracking without too much complexity. 7. **Perdoo** Solid for strategy mapping and OKR alignment. Good for teams that want a clear visual connection between objectives and metrics. 8. **ClickUp** Best if you already use it for project management and want a flexible OKR setup without buying separate software. **Best picks by need:** - **Best overall for enterprises:** WorkBoard or Quantive Results - **Best for growing businesses:** Profit.co - **Best for performance + OKRs:** Betterworks or Lattice - **Best simple option:** Weekdone - **Best budget/flexible choice:** ClickUp If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison by price, features, and ease of use**.
Can you recommend good OKR software?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Yes — here are some strong OKR tools, depending on your team size and style: - **Betterworks** — best for larger companies; very polished OKR + performance management. - **WorkBoard** — great for enterprise OKRs and exec visibility. - **Lattice** — good if you want OKRs tied to performance reviews and people management. - **15Five** — solid for SMBs; simple OKRs plus manager check-ins. - **Perdoo** — one of the best pure OKR platforms; clean and focused. - **Weekdone** — lightweight and affordable for smaller teams. - **Profit.co** — feature-rich and good value; OKRs plus tasks, KPIs, and projects. - **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** — powerful for data-driven OKRs and integrations. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best overall for most teams:** **Perdoo** - **Best for enterprise:** **Betterworks** or **WorkBoard** - **Best budget-friendly:** **Weekdone** or **Profit.co** - **Best if you already use HR/performance tools:** **Lattice** or **15Five** If you want, I can also narrow it down based on your company size, budget, and whether you want just OKRs or OKRs + performance management.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes—here are solid OKR tools by category: - **Profit.co** — best all-around OKR platform for mid-size teams; strong goal tracking, check-ins, and integrations. - **Weekdone** — simple and affordable, good for small teams that want lightweight OKRs and weekly status updates. - **Perdoo** — excellent for companies that want OKRs plus strategy maps and KPI tracking. - **WorkBoard** — best for larger enterprises; robust reporting and executive-level visibility. - **Betterworks** — strong for enterprise performance management and OKRs together. - **Ally.io** (Microsoft) — good if you’re deep in the Microsoft ecosystem; now part of Viva Goals in many cases. - **Quantive Results** — powerful, enterprise-grade OKR management with strong analytics. - **Lattice** — best if you also want performance reviews, engagement, and people ops in one system. - **Jira Align** — good for engineering-heavy orgs using Agile at scale. If you want the easiest picks: - **Small team/startup:** Weekdone or Profit.co - **Growing company:** Perdoo or Profit.co - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard, Quantive Results, or Betterworks If you want, I can narrow this down based on your team size, budget, and whether you want OKRs only or OKRs + performance reviews.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes — here are a few solid OKR tools worth looking at: - **WorkBoard** — best for larger companies that want strong enterprise OKR management and reporting. - **Quantive Results** — good if you want flexible OKR tracking with decent integrations and analytics. - **Weekdone** — simple, easy-to-use option for small teams getting started with OKRs. - **Perdoo** — popular for straightforward OKR planning, progress tracking, and strategy maps. - **Betterworks** — strong for enterprise performance management plus OKRs. - **Profit.co** — good all-around choice for OKRs, tasks, and check-ins at a reasonable price. - **Tability** — very lightweight and user-friendly, especially for startups and product teams. If you want my quick picks: - **Best for enterprise:** WorkBoard or Betterworks - **Best for small teams:** Weekdone or Tability - **Best balance of features and ease:** Perdoo or Profit.co If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you want OKRs only or OKRs + performance reviews, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes — here are solid OKR tools, depending on what you need: - **Quantive Results** — best for larger teams that want strong OKR tracking and analytics. - **WorkBoard** — great for enterprise OKRs and leadership reporting. - **Betterworks** — good if you want OKRs tied closely to performance management. - **Weekdone** — simple, user-friendly, good for small to mid-sized teams. - **Profit.co** — strong all-around option with OKRs, tasks, and performance tools. - **Ally.io (Microsoft Viva Goals)** — good if your org is heavily in Microsoft 365, though check current Microsoft support/status in your region. - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus performance reviews and employee engagement. If you want my quick picks: - **Small team / easy setup:** Weekdone or Profit.co - **Mid-market:** Quantive Results - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard or Betterworks - **HR/performance combo:** Lattice or Betterworks If you tell me your team size and whether you want OKRs only vs OKRs + performance reviews, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes—here are solid OKR tools, by use case: - **Profit.co** — best all-around pick for most teams; strong OKR tracking, reviews, tasks, and dashboards. - **Quantive Results** — great for larger orgs that want deep OKR analytics and enterprise workflows. - **Betterworks** — strong for performance + OKRs together; good for mid-market and enterprise. - **WorkBoard** — very good for enterprise OKR adoption and alignment across big teams. - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs tied closely to performance management and employee reviews. - **Weekdone** — simple, lightweight, and good for small teams getting started. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Small team:** Weekdone or Profit.co - **Mid-size company:** Profit.co or Lattice - **Enterprise:** Quantive, WorkBoard, or Betterworks If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 3 comparison**, or 2. the **best OKR software by budget**.
What are the most popular OKR platforms?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR platforms are: - **WorkBoard** — strong for enterprise OKR management and alignment - **Betterworks** — popular for performance + OKRs, especially in larger companies - **Lattice** — widely used for performance management with OKRs built in - **15Five** — good for teams that want OKRs plus engagement/performance tools - **Profit.co** — one of the most feature-rich dedicated OKR platforms - **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** — strong analytics and integrations - **Weekdone** — simple, lightweight OKR tool for smaller teams - **Perdoo** — well-known for OKRs and strategy execution - **Koan** — collaborative OKR tracking for teams - **Wrike** / **Asana** / **ClickUp** — not pure OKR tools, but commonly used for OKR tracking in many orgs If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best for startups** - **best for enterprises** - **best budget option** - **best for ease of use**
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR platforms are: - **WorkBoard** — strong enterprise OKR and strategy execution platform - **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** — very feature-rich, popular with larger organizations - **Betterworks** — widely used for performance + OKRs - **Lattice** — popular HR/performance suite with OKR support - **Profit.co** — one of the more affordable, full-featured OKR tools - **Perdoo** — simple and popular for strategy maps + OKRs - **Weekdone** — lightweight OKR and weekly planning tool - **Mooncamp** — modern OKR platform, popular in Europe - **Ally.io** — well-known OKR platform, now part of Microsoft Viva - **15Five** — performance management platform with OKR functionality If you want, I can also rank these by **best for startups**, **best for mid-market**, or **best for enterprise**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR platforms are: - **WorkBoard** - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) - **Weekdone** - **Profit.co** - **Perdoo** - **Betterworks** - **Lattice OKRs** - **15Five** - **Hive** - **Coda** or **Notion** (often used as lighter OKR setups, not dedicated OKR tools) If you want, I can also rank these by **enterprise use**, **ease of use**, or **best for startups**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR platforms are: - **WorkBoard** – strong enterprise OKR software, widely used for company-wide goal alignment - **Betterworks** – popular for OKRs plus performance management - **Profit.co** – one of the most widely used dedicated OKR tools for SMBs and mid-market teams - **Weekdone** – simple OKR setup, good for smaller teams - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) – robust enterprise OKR platform with analytics - **Lattice** – popular HR/performance platform with OKR tracking features - **15Five** – performance management with OKR support - **Perdoo** – focused OKR software with strategy and KPI tracking - **ClearPoint Strategy** – often used for strategic planning and OKRs - **Goalscape** – visual goal-setting and OKR-style planning If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best OKR platforms for startups**, 2. **best enterprise OKR tools**, or 3. a **comparison table with pricing/features**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular OKR platforms are: - **WorkBoard** — very common in larger enterprises - **Betterworks** — strong for enterprise performance + OKRs - **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** — popular for OKR tracking and integrations - **Profit.co** — widely used by SMBs and mid-market teams - **Weekdone** — simple, lightweight OKR tool for smaller teams - **Perdoo** — popular for OKR planning and dashboards - **Lattice** — known more for performance management, but includes OKRs - **15Five** — performance + OKR support, especially for people management - **Wrike** — project management with OKR features - **ClickUp** — flexible work management with OKR use cases If you want, I can also rank these by **best for startups**, **best for enterprise**, or **best value**.
Which OKR software is best for tracking goals?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall:** **Lattice OKRs** It’s strong for goal tracking because it combines OKRs, performance management, check-ins, and visibility in one place. Great if you want goals tied to execution, not just a standalone tracker. **Other top options:** - **Weekdone** — best for simple, lightweight OKR tracking - **Perdoo** — best for structured OKRs and strategy maps - **WorkBoard** — best for larger teams and enterprise reporting - **Profit.co** — best value if you want lots of OKR features - **15Five** — good if you also want engagement and performance tools **Quick pick by need:** - **Small team:** Weekdone - **Growing company:** Perdoo or Profit.co - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard - **Best all-in-one:** Lattice If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 ranked list** based on your team size and budget.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall:** **Workboard** — strongest for company-wide OKRs, alignment, and progress tracking at scale. **Best for teams already in a work hub:** **Asana Goals** — simple, easy to adopt, and good if you already use Asana for project work. **Best budget-friendly option:** **Profit.co** — solid OKR features, good dashboards, usually cheaper than enterprise tools. **Best for startups:** **Weekdone** — lightweight, easy OKR setup, good for weekly check-ins. **Best enterprise option:** **Betterworks** — robust for large organizations with complex reporting and performance management. If you want the **single best pick for most businesses**, I’d start with **Workboard**. If you tell me your team size and whether you use Jira/Asana/Slack/Microsoft Teams, I can recommend the best fit.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The **best OKR software** depends on your team size and workflow, but the strongest all-around picks are: ### Best overall **Betterworks** - Strong for company-wide OKRs - Good alignment, progress tracking, and manager workflows - Best for mid-market to enterprise teams ### Best for startups / simple OKRs **Weekdone** - Easy to set up - Clean OKR tracking and weekly check-ins - Great if you want something lightweight ### Best for teams already using project tools **Asana** - Not a pure OKR tool, but works well if you want goals tied to tasks - Best if your team already lives in Asana ### Best for performance + OKRs **Lattice** - Strong when you want OKRs connected to reviews, 1:1s, and performance management - Good for people ops-heavy companies ### Best budget-friendly option **Profit.co** - Good feature set for the price - Solid OKR tracking, dashboards, and integrations ## Quick recommendation - **Enterprise:** Betterworks - **Startup:** Weekdone - **HR/performance-focused:** Lattice - **Budget:** Profit.co - **Task-based teams:** Asana If you want, I can give you a **top 5 ranked list** based on your team size and budget.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best all-around OKR software for tracking goals**, I’d start with: ### Best overall: **Weekdone** - Very good for **simple OKR tracking**, weekly check-ins, and progress visibility - Easy for teams that want structure without too much setup ### Best for growing teams: **Quantive Results** - Strong OKR framework, analytics, and alignment features - Better if you want more serious company-wide goal management ### Best enterprise choice: **Betterworks** - Excellent for larger organizations - Strong performance management + OKR tracking in one platform ### Best budget-friendly option: **Perdoo** - Clean UI, solid OKR tracking, good for small to mid-sized teams - Easier and cheaper than enterprise tools ### Best for Jira/Atlassian users: **Jira Align** - Good if your team already lives in the Atlassian ecosystem - More suited to product/engineering orgs **My quick pick:** - **Small team:** Perdoo - **Best simple OKR tracking:** Weekdone - **Best enterprise:** Betterworks - **Best analytics/alignment:** Quantive Results If you tell me your **team size** and whether you want **simple tracking or full performance management**, I can recommend one best fit.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall:** **WorkBoard** It’s one of the strongest OKR platforms for tracking goals, with solid dashboards, alignment, and progress reviews. **Also worth considering:** - **Betterworks** — great for enterprise performance + OKRs - **Profit.co** — strong value for mid-sized teams - **Weekdone** — simpler and easier for smaller teams - **Lattice Goals** — best if you already use Lattice for performance management **Quick pick:** - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard / Betterworks - **Mid-market:** Profit.co - **Small team:** Weekdone - **All-in-one HR/performance:** Lattice Goals If you want, I can recommend the **best OKR tool for your team size and budget**.
What are the top-rated OKR tools?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the top-rated OKR tools are: - **Quantive Results** — strong enterprise OKR platform, very customizable. - **WorkBoard** — popular for strategy execution and leadership visibility. - **Betterworks** — solid for performance + OKRs, good for larger orgs. - **Weekdone** — simple, user-friendly, good for smaller teams. - **Profit.co** — feature-rich and often praised for value. - **Perdoo** — clean OKR tracking with good dashboards. - **Tability** — lightweight, easy to adopt, great for startups/SMBs. - **15Five** — best if you want OKRs tied to performance management. If you want the **best overall picks**: - **Enterprise:** WorkBoard or Quantive Results - **SMB/startup:** Tability or Weekdone - **Best value:** Profit.co - **Best if you also need performance reviews:** Betterworks or 15Five If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of use, price, or best for teams of your size**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top-rated OKR tools teams commonly use: 1. **Profit.co** - Strong all-in-one OKR platform - Good for goal tracking, check-ins, and performance reviews - Best for: companies wanting a full performance + OKR suite 2. **Weekdone** - Simple, easy-to-use OKR software - Good weekly progress updates and team alignment - Best for: small to mid-sized teams 3. **Perdoo** - Popular for structured OKR management - Clear dashboards and strategy mapping - Best for: organizations focused on strategy execution 4. **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** - Enterprise-grade OKR tool with strong analytics and integrations - Best for: larger companies with complex reporting needs 5. **WorkBoard** - Strong enterprise OKR and business execution platform - Best for: large organizations with cross-functional OKR adoption 6. **Betterworks** - Well-known for performance management plus OKRs - Best for: companies linking goals with employee performance 7. **Lattice** - Great if you want OKRs inside a broader people management platform - Best for: HR-led teams and growth-focused companies If you want the **best overall**, I’d shortlist: - **Profit.co** for most teams - **Perdoo** for strategy-focused OKRs - **Quantive Results** for enterprise use If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by company size** or **compare pricing/features**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top-rated OKR tools teams commonly use: 1. **Profit.co** — strong all-in-one OKR platform with reviews for ease of use and execution tracking. 2. **WorkBoard** — enterprise-grade OKR software, popular with larger organizations. 3. **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — very robust analytics and integrations. 4. **Perdoo** — good for straightforward OKR management and team alignment. 5. **Weekdone** — simple, lightweight OKR tool for smaller teams. 6. **Betterworks** — strong for performance + OKR management in bigger companies. 7. **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs tied to performance reviews and people ops. 8. **15Five** — good for employee performance plus OKRs/check-ins. 9. **Mooncamp** — modern OKR tool with a clean interface, popular in startups/SMBs. 10. **JOP by JOP** — enterprise-focused OKR solution with strategic planning features. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Profit.co - **Best enterprise:** WorkBoard or Quantive Results - **Best for simplicity:** Perdoo or Weekdone - **Best with performance management:** Lattice or 15Five If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by company size** (startup, SMB, enterprise) or compare **pricing/features**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Top-rated OKR tools include: - **Workboard** — strong enterprise OKR platform with good strategy-to-execution tracking - **Betterworks** — popular for larger organizations; solid performance + OKR management - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — very flexible, analytics-heavy, great for data-driven teams - **Profit.co** — often praised for value; good all-in-one OKR + performance features - **Perdoo** — easy to use, strong for mid-sized teams and alignment - **Weekdone** — simple OKR tracking, good for smaller teams/startups - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus performance management and engagement - **15Five** — good for manager check-ins, goals, and performance reviews with OKRs - **Monday.com** — not a pure OKR tool, but widely used with customizable OKR workflows - **Asana** — also not native OKR-first, but works well for lightweight goal tracking If you want, I can also narrow these down by **startup vs enterprise**, **budget**, or **best overall**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top-rated OKR tools: - **WorkBoard** — strong for enterprise OKR management, analytics, and executive reporting. - **Perdoo** — popular for simple OKR tracking plus KPI alignment. - **Weekdone** — easy to use for startups and small teams; good weekly check-ins. - **Betterworks** — robust for larger organizations, performance + OKR management. - **Profit.co** — feature-rich, affordable, and good for OKRs + tasks + KPIs. - **Tability** — lightweight, modern, and very easy for team adoption. - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs tied to performance management. - **Ally.io (Microsoft Viva Goals)** — good for teams already deep in Microsoft 365. **Best picks by need:** - **Best overall for enterprises:** WorkBoard or Betterworks - **Best for SMBs:** Perdoo or Profit.co - **Best for simplicity:** Tability or Weekdone - **Best for performance reviews + OKRs:** Lattice If you want, I can also rank them by **price, ease of use, or enterprise features**.
What OKR software options should I consider?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are solid OKR software options to consider: - **Workboard** — strong for enterprise OKRs, strategic planning, and exec visibility. - **Betterworks** — good for large companies that want OKRs + performance management. - **Weekdone** — simpler OKR tracking, good for small to mid-sized teams. - **Profit.co** — popular all-in-one OKR platform with tasks, KPIs, and dashboards. - **Perdoo** — straightforward OKRs and strategy maps; good for alignment. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — powerful analytics and integrations for larger orgs. - **Lattice** — best if you also want performance reviews, feedback, and goals. - **15Five** — combines goals/OKRs with manager check-ins and performance tools. - **ClickUp** — if you want OKRs alongside project management in one tool. - **Asana** / **Jira** / **Notion** — workable for lightweight OKR tracking if you already use them. Quick picks: - **Best for enterprise:** Workboard, Betterworks, Quantive Results - **Best for SMBs:** Profit.co, Perdoo, Weekdone - **Best all-in-one people + OKRs:** Lattice, 15Five If you want, I can also narrow this down by **team size, budget, and whether you need performance reviews too**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are solid OKR software options to consider: - **Workboard** — strong for enterprise OKR management and strategy execution. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — good for data-driven OKRs and integrations. - **Betterworks** — popular with larger companies; combines OKRs with performance management. - **Perdoo** — straightforward, easy-to-use OKR platform for mid-market teams. - **Weekdone** — simple OKRs + weekly check-ins; good for smaller teams. - **Mooncamp** — modern UI, good balance of OKRs, company goals, and alignment. - **Profit.co** — broad feature set, often good value for the price. - **Koan** — lightweight and collaborative, best for startups and small teams. - **Lattice** — if you want OKRs tied to performance reviews and employee management. A few quick picks: - **Best enterprise:** Workboard, Quantive Results - **Best mid-market:** Betterworks, Perdoo, Profit.co - **Best small team/startup:** Koan, Weekdone, Mooncamp I’d avoid **Microsoft Viva Goals** for new purchases since it’s been discontinued. If you want, I can narrow this down by company size, budget, or whether you need HR/performance features too.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are solid OKR software options to consider: - **Profit.co** — strong all-in-one OKR + performance management; good for mid-market teams. - **Lattice** — best if you want OKRs plus performance reviews, engagement, and 1:1s. - **15Five** — good for OKRs, weekly check-ins, and manager coaching. - **Betterworks** — enterprise-grade OKR platform with robust alignment and analytics. - **WorkBoard** — strong for large orgs; good strategy execution and enterprise reporting. - **Culture Amp** — better known for engagement, but also supports goals/OKRs in some setups. - **Perdoo** — popular OKR-focused tool; straightforward and easier to adopt. - **Weekdone** — simple OKR and weekly planning for smaller teams. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — powerful OKR platform with deep integrations and automation. - **Koan** — lightweight, team-friendly OKR tracking with progress updates. - **Tability** — simple, fast, and visually clear for startup/small team OKRs. - **Asana / Jira / ClickUp** — not pure OKR tools, but workable if you already use them heavily. If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **best for startups**, 2. **best for mid-size teams**, or 3. **best enterprise OKR platforms**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are solid OKR software options to consider, grouped by typical fit: ### Best-known dedicated OKR tools - **Lattice OKRs** — strong if you also want performance reviews, feedback, and employee engagement. - **Betterworks** — enterprise-grade, good for large orgs with complex goal alignment. - **Perdoo** — very popular for straightforward OKR management and visual goal tracking. - **Profit.co** — feature-rich and often a good value for mid-market teams. - **Weekdone** — simple, lightweight, good for smaller teams. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — powerful analytics and integrations, good for data-driven orgs. - **Workboard** — enterprise-focused, strong execution and strategy alignment. - **Leapsome** — combines OKRs with performance and engagement tools. - **Peoplebox** — good for OKRs plus team check-ins and remote team coordination. ### If you already use broader HR/performance platforms - **15Five** — good if you want OKRs alongside manager-employee check-ins and performance management. - **Culture Amp** — better for engagement/performance, with OKR support in some setups. - **BambooHR** — lighter HR suite; OKRs are not usually the main strength, but can work for smaller teams. ### Best for task/project-based teams - **Asana Goals** — useful if you already run work in Asana. - **Jira Align** — better for product/engineering orgs with portfolio planning. - **Monday.com** — flexible if you want goals connected to workflows. ### Quick picks by need - **Small team / simple setup:** Perdoo, Weekdone - **Mid-market / best balance:** Profit.co, Leapsome, Lattice - **Enterprise / complex alignment:** Betterworks, Quantive Results, Workboard - **Engineering/product orgs:** Jira Align, Asana Goals If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best 3 for your company size, budget, and whether you want OKRs only or OKRs + performance management**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are strong OKR software options to consider, grouped by fit: - **WorkBoard** — best for larger enterprises; strong strategy execution and executive reporting. - **Weekdone** — good for smaller teams/startups; simple OKRs + weekly check-ins. - **Perdoo** — solid all-around option; clear OKR structure, dashboards, and integrations. - **Profit.co** — feature-rich and affordable; good for growing companies that want OKRs plus performance management. - **Betterworks** — enterprise-grade; good for large orgs with performance reviews and continuous feedback. - **Lattice** — great if you want OKRs tied to performance and people management. - **15Five** — strong for manager/employee check-ins with lightweight OKRs. - **Quantive Results** (formerly Gtmhub) — powerful analytics and integrations; best for data-driven teams. - **Tability** — simple and fast to adopt; good for teams that want low-friction OKR tracking. - **Ally.io** — now part of Microsoft Viva Goals ecosystem; good if you’re in Microsoft-heavy environments. Quick picks: - **Best simple option:** Weekdone or Tability - **Best mid-market:** Perdoo or Profit.co - **Best enterprise:** WorkBoard or Betterworks - **Best with performance management:** Lattice or 15Five If you tell me your company size, budget, and whether you use Microsoft/Google/Slack, I can narrow this to 3 best choices.
What is the best OKR tool for organizations? 10/mo
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for organizations:** **Lattice Goals** It’s strong for medium to large orgs because it combines **OKRs, performance management, 1:1s, and engagement** in one platform. **Best alternatives by use case:** - **Perdoo** — best pure OKR platform; very solid for strategy maps, cascaded OKRs, and visibility. - **Profit.co** — best for enterprise-style OKR + task management; highly configurable. - **WorkBoard** — best for large enterprises needing governance and executive reporting. - **Weekdone** — best for smaller teams wanting a simple, lightweight OKR tool. If you want a **single recommendation**: - **Choose Lattice** if you want OKRs plus people management. - **Choose Perdoo** if you want the cleanest dedicated OKR tool. If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison by price, ease of use, and enterprise features**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
**Best overall for organizations:** **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** It’s one of the strongest enterprise OKR platforms for large organizations because it has solid OKR workflows, integrations, dashboards, and reporting. **Other top options by use case:** - **Betterworks** — best for large enterprises that want OKRs plus performance management - **WorkBoard** — excellent for enterprise strategy execution and leadership alignment - **Weekdone** — best for smaller teams or simpler OKR adoption - **Profit.co** — strong value for mid-market companies - **Perdoo** — good for straightforward OKR management with strategy maps **If you want one recommendation:** - **Large enterprise:** **WorkBoard** or **Quantive Results** - **Mid-size organization:** **Profit.co** - **Simple, easy rollout:** **Perdoo** or **Weekdone** If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR tool by company size, budget, or features**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for organizations: _WorkBoard_** It’s usually the strongest choice for larger organizations because it’s built for **enterprise OKR management**, with: - strong **cross-team alignment** - **dashboards and reporting** - **executive visibility** - integrations with common workplace tools - good support for **rolling up objectives across departments** **Good alternatives by need:** - **Quantive** — great if you want a very robust enterprise strategy/OKR platform - **Profit.co** — best value for mid-market companies; broad feature set - **Perdoo** — simpler and easier to adopt; good for growing teams - **Peoplebox** — strong for OKRs + performance management - **Weekdone** — good for smaller orgs and lightweight OKR tracking **Short answer:** If you’re asking for the **best OKR tool for an organization overall**, I’d pick **WorkBoard**. If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR tool by company size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall:** **WorkBoard** It’s usually the strongest choice for organizations that want a serious, enterprise-grade OKR platform with strong alignment, reporting, and executive visibility. **Other top picks by use case:** - **Betterworks** — best for large enterprises that want OKRs tied closely to performance management. - **Profit.co** — best value for mid-market teams; very feature-rich and more affordable. - **Lattice** — best if you already use it for performance and want OKRs in the same system. - **Weekdone** — best for smaller teams wanting something simple and fast to adopt. **If you want one answer:** - **Enterprise / scaled org:** **WorkBoard** - **Mid-market / budget-conscious:** **Profit.co** If you want, I can also recommend the **best OKR tool for your company size** (startup, SMB, or enterprise).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for organizations: _WorkBoard_** It’s the strongest choice for larger organizations that need **enterprise OKRs, integrations, dashboards, and executive-level reporting**. **Good alternatives:** - **Quantive Results** — best if you want a very polished, modern OKR platform with strong analytics. - **Profit.co** — best value if you want OKRs plus broader performance management. - **Perdoo** — best for simpler OKR rollout and mid-sized teams. - **Ally.io** — solid for Microsoft-heavy organizations. **Quick pick:** - **Enterprise / complex org:** **WorkBoard** - **Modern analytics-focused:** **Quantive Results** - **Budget-friendly all-in-one:** **Profit.co** If you want, I can also give you the **best OKR tool by company size** or compare **WorkBoard vs Quantive vs Profit.co**.
What are the best OKR software platforms for enterprises? 10/mo
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest **enterprise OKR platforms** to look at: 1. **WorkBoard** Best for: large enterprises needing strong strategy-to-execution alignment, enterprise reporting, and exec visibility. 2. **Quantive Results** Best for: companies that want flexible OKRs, deep integrations, and good analytics across teams. 3. **Betterworks** Best for: enterprises that want OKRs plus performance management in one platform. 4. **Lattice** Best for: organizations that want OKRs connected to performance, 1:1s, and employee engagement. 5. **Perdoo** Best for: straightforward OKR management with solid strategy maps and adoption across teams. 6. **Profit.co** Best for: feature-rich OKR management at a lower price point than many enterprise suites. 7. **Culture Amp Goals** Best for: companies already using Culture Amp and wanting goals tied to engagement/performance. **Top picks overall:** - **WorkBoard** if you want the most enterprise-grade strategy execution - **Quantive Results** if you want flexibility and integrations - **Betterworks** if you want OKRs + performance management together If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by use case** (best for Fortune 500, best for SaaS, best value, best for integrations).
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top enterprise OKR platforms: 1. **Workboard** - Best for: large, complex enterprises - Why: strong executive reporting, strategy-to-execution alignment, cadence/check-ins, deep enterprise controls 2. **Quantive Results** - Best for: scalable OKR management with analytics - Why: good dashboards, integrations, and visibility across departments; solid for distributed orgs 3. **Betterworks** - Best for: performance + OKRs together - Why: combines OKRs, performance reviews, and continuous feedback; good for HR-driven enterprises 4. **Lattice** - Best for: people + performance + OKRs - Why: easier to adopt than some heavier enterprise tools; strong for orgs already using Lattice for performance 5. **Weekdone** - Best for: simpler enterprise OKR rollout - Why: lighter-weight and easier to deploy, though less robust than top-tier enterprise platforms 6. **Ally.io / Microsoft Viva Goals** - Important note: **Viva Goals has been discontinued by Microsoft**, so I wouldn’t choose it for a new enterprise deployment. ### My short recommendation - **Best overall enterprise OKR platform:** **Workboard** - **Best for analytics and scale:** **Quantive Results** - **Best if you want OKRs tied to performance management:** **Betterworks** If you want, I can also give you a **feature-by-feature comparison table** or recommend the best platform based on your company size and tech stack.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For large enterprises, the strongest OKR platforms are usually: 1. **WorkBoard** – Best overall for enterprise OKR management - Strong strategy-to-execution workflows, enterprise reporting, and exec dashboards - Good for large, complex orgs with many teams and dependencies 2. **Betterworks** – Best for performance + OKRs together - Strong alignment between goals, check-ins, reviews, and feedback - Good if you want OKRs tied closely to talent/performance management 3. **Quantive (formerly Gtmhub)** – Best for data-driven OKRs - Excellent integrations, automation, and analytics - Good for companies that want real-time objective tracking from business systems 4. **Profit.co** – Best value for enterprise features - Broad OKR, KPI, and task management feature set - Often chosen by teams that want a more affordable enterprise-ready option 5. **Cascade** – Best for strategy execution - Strong planning, cascading goals, and progress visibility - Good for leadership teams that want structured execution 6. **Perdoo** – Best for simpler enterprise adoption - Clean UI, decent enterprise OKR workflows, easier rollout - Good if you want less complexity than WorkBoard or Quantive ### My top picks - **Best overall:** WorkBoard - **Best for performance management:** Betterworks - **Best for integrations/automation:** Quantive - **Best budget-to-feature ratio:** Profit.co If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 shortlist based on your company size, budget, and existing HR/PM tools**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
For enterprise OKRs, the strongest platforms are usually: 1. **Workboard** Best for large, complex orgs. Strong enterprise governance, business reviews, strategy execution, and integrations. 2. **Quantive Results (formerly Gtmhub)** Excellent automation and data-driven OKRs. Good for connecting OKRs to metrics across many systems. 3. **Betterworks** Strong for enterprise performance management + OKRs. Good if you want OKRs tied to reviews, check-ins, and employee performance. 4. **Weekdone** Solid OKR execution tool, simpler than the top enterprise suites, but still widely used by larger teams. 5. **Lattice** Best if you want OKRs alongside performance management, engagement, and people ops in one platform. 6. **Perdoo** Good balance of OKRs, strategic planning, and execution tracking. Often chosen by scaling companies. 7. **15Five Align** Useful if you already use 15Five for performance/engagement and want OKRs integrated. 8. **Profit.co** Broad enterprise-friendly OKR platform with task/project tracking and dashboards; often good value. **Best overall for large enterprises:** **Workboard** or **Quantive Results** **Best for combined performance + OKRs:** **Betterworks** or **Lattice** If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by use case** (e.g., best for strategy execution, best for HR/performance, best for IT/data integration).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best OKR platforms for enterprises: 1. **Workboard** Strong enterprise choice for strategic planning, execution tracking, and executive visibility. Good integrations and reporting. 2. **Lattice OKRs** Best if you also want performance management, engagement, and 1:1s in one platform. 3. **Quantive Results** Built specifically for enterprise OKR execution, with strong alignment, dashboards, and analytics. 4. **Betterworks** A long-time enterprise OKR platform with solid goal alignment, coaching, and integration options. 5. **Profit.co** Feature-rich and usually more affordable than top-tier enterprise tools. Good OKRs, tasks, and performance workflows. 6. **15Five** Best for companies that want OKRs tied closely to manager check-ins and employee performance. 7. **Cascade** Good for strategy execution and company-wide alignment, especially if you want planning plus OKRs. **Best overall for large enterprises:** Workboard or Quantive Results **Best all-in-one people + OKR platform:** Lattice or Betterworks **Best value:** Profit.co If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of use, enterprise security, integrations, or pricing**.

All 72 prompts run for Gtmhub

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Gtmhub known for?
  • 2 What are Gtmhub's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Gtmhub? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Gtmhub compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Gtmhub?
  • 6 What is a typical okr software known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best OKR software tools for startups? discovery
  • 2 What OKR software works well for small teams? discovery
  • 3 What are the best OKR tools for remote teams? discovery
  • 4 What OKR software is good for enterprise companies? discovery
  • 5 What are the best OKR platforms for HR teams? discovery
  • 6 What OKR software is best for product teams? discovery
  • 7 What are the best OKR tools for sales teams? discovery
  • 8 What OKR software helps align departments? discovery
  • 9 What are the best OKR software options for managers? discovery
  • 10 What OKR tools are easiest to adopt? discovery
  • 11 What are the best OKR software tools for tracking quarterly goals? discovery
  • 12 What OKR software is best for performance reviews? discovery
  • 13 What are the best OKR tools for cross-functional teams? discovery
  • 14 What OKR software is good for agile teams? discovery
  • 15 What are the best OKR platforms for scaling companies? discovery
  • 16 Which OKR software is best for tracking team progress? discovery
  • 17 What are the best OKR tools for leadership teams? discovery
  • 18 What OKR software is best for annual planning? discovery
  • 19 What are the best OKR software tools with dashboards? discovery
  • 20 What OKR software is best for goal alignment across teams? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to an all-in-one OKR platform? comparison
  • 22 What are the best alternatives to an enterprise OKR suite? comparison
  • 23 Which OKR software alternatives are better for small businesses? comparison
  • 24 What are the best alternatives to a goal management platform? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to a performance and OKR system? comparison
  • 26 Which OKR tools are better alternatives for team alignment? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to a cloud-based OKR tool? comparison
  • 28 What OKR software alternatives are best for remote companies? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to a simple goal tracking app? comparison
  • 30 What are the best alternatives to a workforce goals platform? comparison
  • 31 How do I set company goals and track progress across teams? problem
  • 32 How do I align team goals with company objectives? problem
  • 33 How do I track OKRs in one place? problem
  • 34 How do I make sure employees actually update their goals? problem
  • 35 How do I improve accountability for team goals? problem
  • 36 How do I run quarterly OKR reviews more effectively? problem
  • 37 How do I monitor progress on business objectives? problem
  • 38 How do I connect team OKRs to department goals? problem
  • 39 How do I visualize goal progress for executives? problem
  • 40 How do I stop goals from getting lost in spreadsheets? problem
  • 41 How much does OKR software cost per user? transactional
  • 42 Is there free OKR software? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest OKR software? transactional
  • 44 Do OKR tools offer free trials? transactional
  • 45 What OKR software has pricing plans? transactional
  • 46 What is the best value OKR software for small teams? transactional
  • 47 Are there affordable OKR platforms for startups? transactional
  • 48 What OKR software has a free tier? transactional
  • 49 How much do enterprise OKR platforms cost? transactional
  • 50 What OKR software is worth paying for? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best OKR software tools for teams? 170/mo
  • 2 Which OKR software is most recommended?
  • 3 What are the top OKR software platforms? 20/mo
  • 4 What is the best OKR software for companies?
  • 5 Which OKR software options are most popular?
  • 6 What are the leading OKR software tools?
  • 7 What OKR software do most teams use?
  • 8 What are the best OKR software solutions for businesses?
  • 9 Can you recommend good OKR software?
  • 10 What are the most popular OKR platforms?
  • 11 Which OKR software is best for tracking goals?
  • 12 What are the top-rated OKR tools?
  • 13 What OKR software options should I consider?
  • 14 What is the best OKR tool for organizations? 10/mo
  • 15 What are the best OKR software platforms for enterprises? 10/mo