⭐ Business Performance Intelligence
Axis
Reads the business
you are running.
Your OKRs tell you what you planned to achieve. Your dashboards tell you what happened last month. Axis tells you what is actually happening right now — and which single decision will move your most important number the fastest.
How Axis works
From business data.
To the decision that matters.
Most business intelligence tools give you more data to look at. Axis gives you fewer decisions to make — and makes sure they are the right ones.
Reads your OKR data
Axis continuously reads your OKR performance, KR completion rates, BU progress and strategic initiative status.
Identifies the pattern
Not the number that is red — but the pattern behind it. The OKR that looks healthy but is disconnected from outcomes.
Isolates the lever
Axis does not give you four things to fix. It gives you the one lever that will move your most important metric fastest.
Delivers the decision
The right leader receives a specific, confident recommendation — what to do, why now, and projected impact.
Intelligence Patterns
Six patterns. Every major challenge.
Axis is built to detect the six execution patterns that derail more business strategies than any other. Click any to see it in action.
Revenue Intelligence
Identifies where a revenue gap is coming from and the single fastest recovery action.
Strategic Execution
Detects where strategy has been declared but execution has quietly diverged.
BU Performance
Surfaces which BUs are genuinely contributing vs cosmetic compliance.
Market Expansion
Reads organisational readiness for growth decisions before the board forces an answer.
OKR Quality
Identifies OKRs that drive outcomes vs OKRs that drive reports.
Decision Velocity
Detects where strategic decisions are stalling inside the organisation.
These six are the foundation. Axis goes much further.
During implementation, Axis is configured to your organisation — activating additional intelligence patterns relevant to your industry, competitive context and the specific execution challenges you face.
Use cases by role
What Axis means for your role specifically
Select your role to see exactly what Axis surfaces for you.
Axis vs what you have now
Why dashboards tell you what happened — not what to do
Business intelligence tools were built to visualise data. Axis was built to produce decisions.
Axis in numbers
What organisations achieve with Axis
Across 100+ organisations in India, UK and the US.
See Axis read your business
A 30-minute live demo - real scenarios from your industry, your OKR maturity level, the execution challenge you are actually dealing with right now.
Intelligence Patterns
What Axis detects — and what it enables you to do
Each pattern is described by what Axis finds and what action it produces. The intelligence behind each detection is proprietary to Worxmate.
Revenue Intelligence
"The revenue gap has an answer. Axis finds it before panic sets the agenda."
When a revenue OKR falls behind, most organisations respond with four competing recovery initiatives — each owned by a different team, each consuming resource, none of them the fastest path. Axis reads the full commercial picture, identifies why the gap exists, and isolates the single lever that will close the most ground in the time remaining. One decision. Clear rationale. Projected outcome.
How Axis identifies the revenue lever is proprietary. What it produces: a specific action, a confidence level, and a modelled recovery projection — not a list of options to debate.
Q3 revenue OKR is 61% complete with 5 weeks left. The board wants to know if this quarter is recoverable — and the leadership team has four different theories about what to do.
What Axis surfacesAxis identifies that new business pipeline is not the constraint. The fastest available lever is the CS upsell motion — currently underutilised — which historically closes 3× faster. Redirecting two CS team members to upsell activation for 5 weeks is projected to recover 79% of the shortfall.
A new product launched in Q2 is hitting its adoption KRs. Revenue from the product is not moving. The team is celebrating the wrong number.
What Axis surfacesAxis detects an OKR-revenue decoupling — the adoption KRs are being met but they are not connected to the revenue KR in any meaningful way. Axis flags the specific step in the conversion flow where the connection breaks.
Strategic Execution Intelligence
"The strategy looks aligned in every deck. Axis checks whether the execution actually is."
Strategic divergence rarely announces itself. It accumulates quietly — in the gap between what OKRs say and what teams actually prioritise, between the strategy document and the daily decisions made three levels below the leadership team. Axis reads that gap continuously — detecting where execution has drifted from strategic intent before the quarterly review reveals it.
Axis does not describe how it detects execution divergence. It surfaces what it finds — clearly, with evidence, and with a specific course correction.
The company strategy says "customer retention is the primary growth lever for this year." Every team has a retention-related OKR. Customer churn has not improved in 6 months.
What Axis surfacesAxis detects a strategic execution gap — the retention OKRs across teams are measuring different things, none of which are leading indicators of actual churn reduction. Axis recommends a unified retention KR framework.
A strategic initiative to move upmarket has been running for two quarters. OKR completion is at 85%. Average deal size has not changed. The board asks why.
What Axis surfacesAxis identifies that the 85% completion is real — but the KRs being completed are sales activity metrics, not deal size outcomes. The upmarket strategy is being executed as a pipeline volume exercise. Axis identifies the KRs to rewrite.
Business Unit Performance
"Every BU reports green. Axis shows you which ones actually are."
OKR completion rates at BU level are the most commonly misread metric in any organisation. A BU that consistently reports 90% completion may be executing brilliantly — or setting safe OKRs, measuring compliant activity, and producing no meaningful contribution to company strategy. Axis distinguishes between genuine strategic contribution and sophisticated compliance.
How Axis determines genuine vs cosmetic BU performance is proprietary. The output: a clear picture of which BUs are driving company outcomes and which are consuming resource without return.
The operations BU has reported 88-95% OKR completion for three consecutive quarters. The strategic outcomes — cost reduction, cycle time improvement — have not materialised.
What Axis surfacesAxis identifies that the BU is completing OKRs that are internally defined, internally measured and disconnected from company-level outcomes. The high completion rate is real. The strategic contribution is not. Axis recommends rewriting 4 KRs.
Two BUs have overlapping OKRs in a shared strategic area. Both are reporting progress. The shared outcome is not moving because each is waiting for the other to go first.
What Axis surfacesAxis detects the dependency stall — identifying that the two BUs have created an implicit dependency that neither has owned. Both OKRs are technically progressing, but the shared outcome is blocked. Axis recommends a joint OKR.
Market & Expansion Intelligence
"The board wants to know if you are ready to expand. Axis gives you an answer — not a presentation."
Most expansion decisions are made on the basis of market opportunity data — which tells you whether the opportunity exists, not whether your organisation is ready to capture it. Axis reads your OKR performance, capability gaps and resource allocation to produce an execution readiness score — showing you which parts of the business are ready, which are not, and what needs to change before you commit.
Axis's expansion readiness methodology is proprietary. The output: a clear readiness assessment by dimension, a risk score for each scenario, and a sequenced plan.
The board has approved entering two new markets next year. The leadership team is confident. Nobody has asked whether the organisation has the capability to execute both simultaneously.
What Axis surfacesAxis produces an expansion readiness assessment. Entering both markets simultaneously carries a 64% execution risk due to talent and system gaps. Axis recommends phasing: Market A in Q1, Market B in Q3 after preparation OKRs complete.
A new product line is ready to launch. Sales, marketing and operations all say they are prepared. Three weeks after launch, execution falters because a critical dependency was never owned.
What Axis surfacesPre-launch, Axis runs an execution readiness check — identifying a dependency between the sales enablement OKR and operations capacity OKR that has no owner. Axis flags the gap two weeks before launch.
OKR Quality Intelligence
"90% completion means nothing if the OKRs being completed are measuring the wrong things."
The most common failure mode in any OKR programme is not poor execution — it is poor OKR design. Teams write KRs that are easy to measure, easy to complete and completely disconnected from the business outcomes they were supposed to drive. Axis identifies these OKRs — across every team, every level — and produces rewritten alternatives that create genuine accountability.
How Axis assesses OKR quality is proprietary. The output: a quality score per OKR, a classification of activity vs outcome orientation, and rewritten KR alternatives.
Two departments have reported 90%+ OKR completion for two consecutive quarters. Market share growth and customer acquisition cost reduction have not moved.
What Axis surfacesAxis identifies that 68% of KRs across these two departments are activity-based metrics. Axis produces 14 rewritten KRs with outcome-linked alternatives and a projected 2.3× improvement in strategic velocity.
A new leadership team is running their first OKR cycle. Energy is high. The OKRs written look ambitious. Axis has a different assessment.
What Axis surfacesAxis scores the new cycle OKRs before they lock — identifying that 7 of 12 Objectives are ambiguously linked to company strategy and 9 KRs will not produce the outcomes implied. Axis provides a specific rewrite recommendation for each flagged OKR.
Decision Velocity Intelligence
"The strategy is sound. The decisions that need to be made to execute it are not being made fast enough."
Slow execution is rarely caused by poor strategy or unwilling teams. It is caused by decisions that should have been made in week 2 being made in week 8 — because no one owns them, two leaders have conflicting priorities, or the dependency required for the decision to land was never mapped. Axis identifies these stalls before they compound into missed quarters.
Axis's decision velocity methodology is proprietary. The output: a map of where decisions are stalling, who needs to unblock them, and the projected execution impact of each delay.
A strategic initiative has been "in progress" for 11 weeks. Three teams are involved. Every team says they are waiting for someone else. The initiative is not moving.
What Axis surfacesAxis detects a decision stall — identifying that the initiative has three dependencies, none of which have a single owner, and two of which require a decision that sits above the OKR level of all three teams involved. It flags the initiative with a specific escalation recommendation.
The CEO and CFO have conflicting priorities encoded in OKRs they share accountability for. Neither is aware the other's priorities are pulling in opposite directions on the same initiative.
What Axis surfacesAxis identifies the conflict — a revenue growth OKR and a cost efficiency OKR that share a resource dependency and are structurally incompatible at current resourcing levels. Axis surfaces the conflict to force a leadership decision on sequencing.