Onboarding Your Team
Adopting OKRs is a cultural change, not just a tool rollout. This guide covers how to introduce Runsheet to your team in a way that builds genuine buy-in and lasting habits.
Before You Start
Set yourself up for success with some prep work:
- Get leadership buy-in — OKRs work best top-down. Make sure leadership will model the behavior.
- Start small — Don't roll out to the entire company at once. Pick one team or department to pilot.
- Set expectations — The first cycle is about learning the system, not perfect execution.
- Clear competing systems — If you have existing goal frameworks, decide what stays and what goes.
Phase 1: Setup (Week 0)
- Create your workspace — Set up your company workspace in Runsheet and configure basic settings.
- Set up teams — Create teams that mirror your org structure (or however you want to organize OKRs).
- Create the first cycle — Set up your current quarter or planning period.
- Draft initial OKRs — Have leadership create 2-3 company-level objectives as examples.
Don't invite the team yet. Get the structure right first so they see a polished starting point.
Phase 2: Introduction (Week 1)
Kick-off Meeting (30-60 min)
Schedule a team meeting to introduce OKRs and Runsheet:
- Why OKRs — Explain the problem you're solving (alignment, focus, visibility).
- How OKRs work — Quick primer on objectives vs key results. Keep it simple.
- Show the tool — Walk through Runsheet: objectives, key results, check-ins.
- Show the company OKRs — Let them see leadership has already committed.
- Explain the rhythm — Weekly check-ins, who owns what, when reviews happen.
Invite the Team
- Send workspace invites
- Have everyone log in and explore
- Assign them to their teams
Phase 3: OKR Creation (Week 1-2)
Help each team create their first OKRs:
- Team leads draft objectives — 2-3 objectives aligned to company goals.
- Collaborative key results — Team members contribute key results they'll own.
- Review and refine — Coach on quality (outcomes not outputs, measurable, ambitious).
- Assign owners — Every OKR has one person accountable.
Office hours
Offer "OKR office hours" where teams can get help writing their objectives and key results. The first time is the hardest.
Phase 4: First Check-ins (Week 2-3)
Get the weekly rhythm established:
- Walk the team through submitting their first check-in
- Run a guided weekly review meeting
- Celebrate progress and address confusion
- Remind stragglers — the habit takes a few weeks to stick
Handling Resistance
You'll encounter pushback. Here's how to address common objections:
- "This is just more busywork" — Emphasize that OKRs replace other reporting, not add to it. Show how check-ins take 5 minutes.
- "My work doesn't fit OKRs" — Help them find outcomes in their work. Everyone contributes to something measurable.
- "What if I miss my targets?" — OKRs are aspirational. 70% achievement is success. This isn't a performance review.
- "Leadership doesn't do this" — If leadership isn't participating, OKRs will fail. Make sure they lead by example.
Signs of Success
After 4-6 weeks, look for these positive signals:
- Check-ins are submitted consistently without reminders
- Teams reference OKRs in planning and prioritization discussions
- People can explain their team's objectives from memory
- Conversations shift from "what are we doing" to "are we making progress"
Common Mistakes
- Rolling out to everyone at once — Start small, learn, then expand.
- Too many OKRs in the first cycle — Keep it simple. 3 objectives max per team.
- No training — People need context on why and how, not just access to a tool.
- Skipping the weekly rhythm — If you don't establish weekly check-ins, OKRs become another abandoned doc.
- Making it punitive — OKRs are for learning and alignment, not punishment.
Related Topics
- Getting Started — Setting up your Runsheet workspace
- Writing Effective OKRs — How to write good objectives and key results
- Weekly Reviews — Running your first review meeting
- Teams — Setting up teams in Runsheet