Two CEOs. Same market. Similar team sizes. Comparable products. One finishes every quarter within range of where they planned to be. The other spends the last three weeks of every quarter scrambling to close the gap between the forecast and reality.

The difference is rarely strategy. It’s almost never talent. It’s almost always what happens between the planning session and the end-of-quarter review — the six weeks where goals either get managed or get forgotten.

The Planning Session Is Not the Product

Every CEO has run a good planning session. The objectives are clear. The team is aligned. Everyone leaves the room with a shared sense of what the quarter is for. And then the work starts — the customer escalations, the hiring decisions, the product fires — and within three weeks, the goals that felt so clear in the planning session have quietly stopped shaping any decision being made.

This is the most common performance problem in growing companies, and it’s almost entirely invisible until the end of the quarter makes it visible. The goals didn’t fail in the planning session. They failed in the weeks after it, when the tracking system that was supposed to keep them alive turned out to be a document nobody opened and a check-in nobody scheduled.

What the Highest-Performing CEOs Build Instead

The CEOs who consistently hit their targets aren’t running more sophisticated goal-setting processes. They’re running more disciplined tracking processes — and the distinction matters.

Goal setting is a meeting. Goal tracking is a system. The meeting produces the objectives. The system determines whether those objectives survive contact with the quarter.

The system has three non-negotiable components. The first is a named owner for every goal — one person, not a team, whose job it is to know whether the number is moving and what’s in the way.

The second is a weekly check-in that happens because the infrastructure prompts it, not because someone remembers to schedule it — research across 750+ organisations by OKRs Tool found that teams maintaining this rhythm complete 43% more goals than those reviewing monthly or ad hoc.

The third is a mid-cycle review with enough rigour to catch problems in week six rather than week eleven — when there’s still time to change the outcome rather than just explain it.

None of those components are complicated. All of them require a decision to build them rather than assume they’ll happen.

The Invisible Goal

Every organisation running goals has a version of the same problem: the goal that goes off track mid-quarter and never resurfaces. It stays listed as active. Nobody updates it. No decision gets made about it. The quarter ends and it either scores at whatever percentage it reached or disappears from the review entirely.

This is what happens when goal tracking becomes a compliance exercise rather than a management tool. The goal exists in the system. It means nothing to the work being done.

The fix is a rule that removes the ambiguity: every off-track goal must leave the mid-cycle review with one of three outcomes — revised, escalated, or formally closed. There is no fourth option. A goal that isn’t being actively managed isn’t a goal. It’s a record of an intention that no longer applies.

The Retrospective Most CEOs Skip

By the time the quarter ends, most leadership teams are already deep into planning the next one. The retrospective — the honest accounting of what hit, what missed, and what needs to change — gets compressed into a brief discussion that produces no structural changes.

The CEOs who compound their performance over time are the ones running this conversation properly. Not a celebration or a post-mortem — a specific, honest review of what worked in the process and what needs to change before the next cycle opens. That conversation, held consistently, is where the system gets better. Without it, the same planning mistakes repeat at a higher level of ambition.

The Question Worth Asking

Before the next planning session, ask one question: is the strategy the leadership team agreed on last quarter still shaping decisions being made this week?

If the honest answer is no — or if nobody is quite sure — the problem isn’t the strategy. It’s the system that was supposed to keep it alive.

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Olivia is a contributing writer at CEOColumn.com, where she explores leadership strategies, business innovation, and entrepreneurial insights shaping today’s corporate world. With a background in business journalism and a passion for executive storytelling, Olivia delivers sharp, thought-provoking content that inspires CEOs, founders, and aspiring leaders alike. When she’s not writing, Olivia enjoys analyzing emerging business trends and mentoring young professionals in the startup ecosystem.

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