---
title: "OKR & Co. for Small Businesses: Goal Frameworks Without Dogma"
description: "OKR, SMART, Balanced Scorecard: What goal frameworks are worth for SMEs, where they are overdimensioned, and which minimum actually steers."
type: "wissen"
product: "cockpit"
slug: "okr-for-small-businesses"
source_language: "de"
target_languages: ["de", "en", "es", "pl", "tr"]
published: "2026-06-10"
status: "publish"
faq_json: [{"q":"What is OKR?","a":"OKR stands for Objectives and Key Results: a qualitative goal (Objective) is connected with measurable key results (Key Results) and usually reviewed quarterly. The framework originates from large tech companies."}, {"q":"Is OKR worthwhile for small businesses?","a":"The basic idea – a few clear goals, made measurable, regularly reviewed – is worthwhile for almost every company. The full framework apparatus with cycles, roles, and tools, however, is often overdimensioned for small teams."}, {"q":"Which goal framework is the right one for SMEs?","a":"More important than the framework is the minimum behind it: a short-term goal, a long-term goal, a fixed review rhythm. Those who live this can later place any framework on top – those who don't live it won't be helped by any."}, {"q":"How many goals should a small business have?","a":"Few. A short-term goal (what counts now, e.g. liquidity) and a long-term one (where the journey is heading, e.g. profitability) have proven effective. More goals often mean less steering, because focus is lost."}, {"q":"What is the benefit of storing goals in software?","a":"Visibility and connection: goals that are where the work happens help steer everyday work. In webRichtung cockpit, stored goals also serve as a guideline that the platform's AI functions align themselves with."}]
language: "en"
source_id: "wissen/okr-fuer-kleine-unternehmen"
source_hash: "0a4666fb625ca1eaa6e8c84ed4aa9d0f4f1b286f558b956e0284b45fd1da655c"
---

Goal frameworks like OKR are neither mandatory nor a miracle cure for small businesses: valuable is their core – a few clear goals, regularly reviewed –, while their apparatus is often overdimensioned. Those who live the basic idea don't need a framework to begin with; those who don't live it won't be helped by one either.

## The Well-Known Frameworks in Two Sentences Each

- **OKR (Objectives and Key Results):** A qualitative goal is connected with measurable key results and usually reviewed quarterly. Strength: focus and measurability. Origin: large tech organizations with many teams.
- **SMART:** A checklist for formulating individual goals – specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound. Strength: makes vague goals concrete. Not a steering system, but a quality filter.
- **Balanced Scorecard:** Looks at the company from multiple perspectives (finances, customers, processes, development). Strength: completeness. Effort: considerable.

All three share the same true core: a company steers itself better with a few explicit, verifiable goals than with gut feeling.

## Where Frameworks Are Too Big for SMEs

Frameworks like OKR were designed for organizations in which many teams need to be aligned with one another. A company with five or fifteen people hardly has this alignment problem – but it has another one: no time for ceremony. Typical overdimensionings:

- **Cycle apparatus:** Planning workshops, check-ins, retrospectives – valuable from a certain size, but in small teams often mandatory appointments without insight
- **Cascading:** Breaking down goals across three levels where there is only one level
- **Tool introduction:** A dedicated OKR software for two objectives

The honest consequence in many SMEs: the framework is lived for three months and then quietly dies – together with the actually good idea behind it.

## The Minimum That Really Steers

Instead of starting with the framework, start with the minimum that all frameworks come down to:

1. **One short-term goal:** What counts now? For example liquidity – staying solvent, collecting outstanding receivables.
2. **One long-term goal:** Where is the journey heading? For example profitability – a business that sustains itself.
3. **One fixed review rhythm:** Once a quarter, ask honestly: Is the direction still right? What has changed?

This is deliberately unspectacular – and precisely for that reason sustainable. Once this minimum has become a matter of course after a few quarters, you can refine: add measurable key results (the OKR idea), differentiate goals by stakeholder, add areas. Frameworks are good second steps and bad first ones.

## Goals Where the Work Happens

A goal on a slide steers nothing. For it to take effect, it must be visible where everyday work takes place – and ideally where your tools know about it too. In [webRichtung cockpit](https://www.webrichtung.de/module/cockpit/) you define your short-term and long-term goal in the Organization area; added to this are stakeholders (management, shareholders, employees with goal targets) and the operational structure of your company. The clever part: the platform's AI functions can align themselves with these goals – what your assistant prioritizes and suggests follows the direction you set.

## Conclusion: Principle Before Method

Take the focus from OKR, the precision from SMART, the all-round view from the Scorecard – but start with two goals and a review rhythm. How to formulate these goals concretely and anchor them in the company is described in the article [Setting Company Goals](/en/wissen/unternehmensziele-festlegen.html).
