Unlock Organisational Success with Effective OKR Alignment, Cascading, and Laddering
Learn how to align, cascade, and ladder OKRs across all levels of your organisation to ensure everyone is working towards the same objectives. These strategies help streamline focus, increase accountability, and drive measurable results that support your business goals.

OKR (Objectives and Key Results) alignment, cascading, and laddering are methods used to ensure that goals at different levels of an organisation are connected and work together to achieve the broader strategy.
Here’s a breakdown of each:
OKR Alignment
OKR alignment refers to the process of ensuring that the objectives set at various levels of the organisation (individual, team, department, and company-wide) are all working toward the same overall business goals. Alignment ensures that every part of the organisation is heading in the same direction, making it easier to prioritise and focus efforts.
For example, a company's objective might be to "expand market share in a new region."
Each department (sales, marketing, R&D, etc.) would then set key results that support this larger objective, ensuring everyone is aligned in their contributions.
Cascading OKRs
Cascading OKRs is the practice of breaking down top-level objectives into smaller, more specific objectives for different levels within the organisation. Essentially, the company’s high-level goals "cascade" down to the team, department, and individual levels. This process helps ensure that everyone in the organisation is contributing to the larger vision and has clear, actionable tasks to work on.
For example, the company-level objective to "increase revenue by 20%" would cascade down into department-level objectives (sales increasing lead conversion rates, marketing improving brand awareness, etc.), and further down into individual OKRs (sales reps increasing call volume or closing rate).
Laddering OKRs
Laddering is similar to cascading but focuses more on how the key results at one level support the key results at the next level up. Think of it like a ladder where each step leads to the next one, and each key result contributes to a larger goal. It is the process of ensuring that the key results at the individual or team level ladder up to support the organisation’s broader OKRs.
For instance, an individual’s OKRs might focus on specific actions (e.g., improving customer service response times), which directly contribute to the department's OKRs (e.g., improving customer satisfaction scores), which ladder up to the company’s OKRs (e.g., increasing customer retention rates).