“Everyone is busy, but I am not sure everyone is productive.” If you have said this about your team, you are probably missing clearly defined KRAs and KPIs. These two tools are the foundation of any effective performance management system — and yet most Indian SMEs either do not use them at all, or use them poorly.
KRAs vs KPIs: What Is the Difference?
KRA (Key Result Area) defines the broad areas of responsibility that an employee is accountable for. It answers the question: What are the key areas where this role must deliver results?
KPI (Key Performance Indicator) defines the specific, measurable metric that tells you whether performance in each KRA is on track. It answers the question: How do we measure success in this area?
Think of KRAs as the map — they define the territory. KPIs are the GPS — they tell you exactly where you are.
Example for a Sales Manager:
- KRA: Revenue Generation → KPI: Monthly revenue vs. target (₹ and %)
- KRA: Client Relationships → KPI: Client retention rate; NPS score
- KRA: Team Development → KPI: Team quota attainment; attrition rate
Why Vague Goals Destroy Performance
When employees do not have clear KRAs and KPIs, three things happen: they prioritise the wrong activities, managers cannot give meaningful feedback, and performance reviews become purely subjective. The result is conflict, disengagement, and decisions based on opinion rather than evidence.
5 Principles for Setting KRAs and KPIs That Work
1. Keep KRAs focused. Three to five KRAs per role is the right range. More than that dilutes focus and creates confusion about what actually matters.
2. Make KPIs measurable. If you cannot put a number on it, it is not a KPI — it is a task. “Improve customer satisfaction” is a goal. “Achieve a CSAT score of 4.2 or above by Q3” is a KPI.
3. Cascade from the top. Individual KPIs should connect to team targets, which connect to organisational goals. When employees can see the line from their daily work to the company’s strategic objectives, engagement and ownership increase dramatically.
4. Review and adjust regularly. KRAs and KPIs set in April should not be frozen until March. Business priorities change. Quarterly reviews keep them relevant.
5. Co-create them with employees. KRAs and KPIs that are handed down without discussion are rarely owned. Managers who set goals collaboratively get significantly higher commitment to the outcome.
The Achievify HR Approach
We help organisations design role-specific KRA and KPI frameworks as part of a broader performance management system — ensuring that every employee, at every level, has clear, fair, and meaningful performance criteria.Clear goals. Better performance. Simpler conversations. 📞 +91 9820 846 856 | www.achievifyhr.com