Closing a Cycle
How you end a cycle matters as much as how you start one. A proper close creates learning, celebrates wins, and sets up the next cycle for success. This guide covers the end-of-cycle review process.
When to Close
Start the closing process during the last week of the cycle, not after it ends. This gives you time to:
- Collect final check-ins and data
- Run retrospectives while context is fresh
- Make decisions about incomplete work
- Overlap with planning for the next cycle
Step 1: Final Check-ins
Before anything else, ensure all key results have final updates:
- Send a reminder to all OKR owners to submit final check-ins
- Update metrics with end-of-cycle data
- Note any context needed (external factors, scope changes, etc.)
Step 2: Score and Assess
Review each objective and key result:
Scoring Key Results
For each key result, assess the final outcome:
- 0.0-0.3 — Little to no progress
- 0.4-0.6 — Meaningful progress but fell short
- 0.7-1.0 — Strong achievement (0.7 is often considered success for stretch goals)
Overall Objective Assessment
Beyond the numbers, consider:
- Did we achieve the spirit of the objective, not just the letter?
- Were the key results the right measures of success?
- What did we learn about this area of the business?
Step 3: The Retrospective
Run a retrospective meeting with each team. This is different from weekly reviews — it's a deeper reflection on the entire cycle.
Retrospective Agenda (60-90 min)
- Review results (15 min) — Walk through each objective and its final score.
- What went well (15 min) — What worked? What should we keep doing?
- What didn't work (15 min) — Where did we fall short? What got in the way?
- Learnings (15 min) — What did we learn about our OKRs, our process, our assumptions?
- Carry-forward decisions (15 min) — What unfinished work continues? What do we stop?
Step 4: Handle Incomplete Work
Not everything gets finished. For each incomplete objective or key result, decide:
- Carry forward — Still important? Create a new objective in the next cycle with adjusted targets.
- Abandon — No longer relevant? Mark as abandoned and document why.
- Complete as-is — Did we achieve enough? Mark complete even if not 100%.
Step 5: Update Statuses in Runsheet
Finalize all OKRs in the system:
- Set final status on each objective (Completed or Abandoned)
- Ensure all key results have final values
- Add any notes or context for future reference
Step 6: Celebrate and Communicate
Don't skip this step. Recognition matters:
- Celebrate wins — Acknowledge objectives that were achieved and people who drove them.
- Share learnings — What did the company learn this cycle? Share broadly.
- Thank contributors — OKRs are team efforts. Recognize the team.
Common Mistakes
- Skipping the retrospective — Without reflection, you repeat the same mistakes.
- Blame and shame — Missed OKRs are learning opportunities, not failures to punish.
- No final check-ins — Incomplete data makes retrospectives useless.
- Rushing to the next cycle — Take time to properly close before opening new OKRs.
- Carrying forward everything — If it wasn't important enough to finish, is it important enough to continue?
Closing Checklist
- All key results have final check-ins
- All objectives scored and assessed
- Team retrospective completed
- Carry-forward decisions made
- Statuses updated in Runsheet
- Wins celebrated and learnings shared
- Next cycle planning underway
Related Topics
- Planning a Cycle — Setting up the next cycle
- Weekly Reviews — The regular rhythm that leads to good closes
- Check-ins — Submitting final updates