,Differentiating OKR MBO KPI
We put together an OKR MBO KPI Comparison Chart to help our readers differentiate these popular management strategies.
- KPI (Key Performance Index)
- MBO (Management by Objectives)
- OKR (Objectives and Key Results)
In Taiwan we’ve seen KPI frequently used, followed by MBO, but much less so. Since the 2000s OKR (Objectives and Key Results) has been on the rise worldwide – but Taiwan has been slow to catch on until recent years, where we’ve seen an uptick in OKR queries on the web. We hope our chart helps to distinguish the three clearly.
OKR-MBO-KPI Comparison Chart
Our table below compares 18 features accross the three Management Strategies. We score each from 0 (worst) to 10 (best). The scores are in parentheses. At the end we add up the scores and show you how they compare by the numbers.
Methodology / Feature | KPI | MBO | OKR |
🏢 Tracks Company Health | Core function to track vital metrics (9) | Can adapt to measure health (7) | Can adapt to measure health (7) |
👥 People-Oriented | Metric-driven, low individual engagement (3) | Tends to be top-down with moderate involvement (5) | Highly collaborative and inclusive (9) |
✅ Accountability | Mixed — team or individual (6) | Individual ownership (6) | Shared across teams or individuals (8) |
🤝 Integrates Teams | Not emphasized (0) | Not emphasized, often Siloed structure (0) | Strong cross-functional alignment (9) |
🎯 Goal-Oriented | Metric-tied and specific (8) | Clear and measurable (8) | Ambitious and outcome-driven (9) |
🚀 Aspirational / Stretched | Fixed targets, not aspirational (2) | Realistic, not stretched (3) | Stretch goals are core (10) |
🌀 Agile | Moderate flexibility (6) | Rigid cycles (3) | Highly adaptable, quarterly rhythm (9) |
📈 Progress-Based | Regular monitoring (7) | Encourages monitoring but tends to be End-cycle evaluation (5) | Continuous tracking and iteration (9) |
🧩 Simplicity | Easy to track and report (8) | Structured but rigid (6) | Transparent and intuitive (9) |
🔍 Transparency | Metrics visible, context lacking (6) | Internal and limited visibility (3) | Open and visible across teams (10) |
🛠️ Implementation Difficulty | Simple to deploy (9) | Requires planning and buy-in (5) | Flexible by Company, Team, or Individual (7) |
⏱️ Time Allocation Needed | Low — minimal setup (9) | High — annual planning (3) | Moderate — quarterly check-ins (6) |
🧠 Strategic Alignment | Alignment not clearly emphasized (2) | Cascades from top (8) | Aligns all levels deeply (10) |
🗣️ Communication Style | Minimal — report-centric (4) | Formal and structured (5) | Open and feedback-driven (9) |
🧭 Flexibility | Adjustable metrics (6) | Fixed goals, low adaptability (3) | Highly flexible and responsive (9) |
🧪 Innovation Potential | Tracks existing performance (3) | Execution-focused, low innovation (2) | Encourages critical thinking & experimentation (10) |
🧱 Scalability | Easily applied broadly (9) | Not easily scalable (6) | Scales across teams/orgs (9) |
🧮 Quantitative Measurement | Purely quantitative (10) | Mix of qualitative and quantitative (10) | Quantitative with strategic context (10) |
🧠 Learning Curve | Quick ramp-up; intuitive metrics (9) | Moderate coaching required (6) | Requires guidance and onboarding (4) |
🧰 Tool Support & Ecosystem | Mature dashboards and analytics (10) | Limited automation; often manual (6) | Growing ecosystem; strong SaaS platforms (9) |
Here are the Average Scores:
Methodology | Score |
KPI | 6.1 |
MBO | 4.9 |
OKR | 8.6 |
Conclusion: There’s a clear winner.
OKR is the predictable winner – it’s more sophisticated than KPI. Furthermore OKR was derived from MBO so it stands to have a higher score.
However, it’s a little surprising to find KPI beating out MBO – it’s mostly because KPIs are simpler, easier to conceptualize, implement and adapt to.
As far as KPI and OKR, you have to put things into context – KPI is widely adapted in Taiwan because its simplicity – but management problems continue to hamper productivity. OKRs remedies those issues in addition to providing KPI management – in fact KPIs can easily be folded into the OKR framework.
Is OKR the next evolution in Taiwan Management?

(Look who’s using OKR)


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