Leadership

How to Run a Quarterly Business Review That Actually Works

12 April 2026 · 6 min read
QBR framework showing what works versus what most organisations do

Most quarterly business reviews are retrospective ceremonies. Teams prepare slides showing what happened over the last three months. Senior leaders ask clarifying questions. A few actions are noted at the end. Two weeks later, those actions have evaporated.

Done well, a QBR is one of the highest-leverage leadership meetings in the calendar. Done poorly, it's an expensive distraction that produces the illusion of alignment without any of the substance.

The fundamental problem with most QBRs

They look backwards almost exclusively. They celebrate wins, explain misses, and move on. The problem isn't reviewing the past, it's that the review rarely drives forward decisions.

A QBR should answer one question above all others: given what we now know, what should we do differently in the next quarter? If the meeting doesn't change any decisions or priorities, it failed, regardless of how well it was presented.

Who should be in the room

The QBR is not a status update for executives. It's a decision-making forum. The people in the room should be the people with authority to change priorities, allocate resources, or restructure how teams are working.

If most attendees are there to observe or receive information, the meeting is too big. Keep it tight: the leadership team plus the owners of the largest bets for the quarter ahead.

What to cover — and what to skip

Cover:

  • Performance against the three or four metrics that actually matter, not every number you track
  • What was learned, not just what happened, the interpretation is more valuable than the data
  • Where the biggest risks sit in the next quarter, before they become problems
  • One or two decisions that need to be made in the room, with the relevant context already shared

Skip:

  • Detailed project status updates, save those for a separate operational forum
  • Celebrating activity as if it were outcomes
  • Any slide that doesn't change what someone does next week

The forward section matters most

At least half the QBR should look forward. What are the biggest risks to the next quarter? What assumptions are embedded in the current plan that haven't been tested? What would change the direction if it turned out to be wrong?

Leaders who run QBRs well treat them as stress-testing sessions, not report-back sessions. The best conversations I've seen in a QBR start with: "What are we most likely to get wrong about the next quarter?" That question surfaces more useful information than an hour of retrospective slides.

Connecting to annual planning

Q3 and Q4 QBRs in particular should be feeding annual planning directly. The insights from a well-run QBR, what's working, what isn't, where the real opportunities have emerged, are the inputs planning needs. If your QBR and your planning cycle operate independently, you're doing extra work for half the value.

Making it work in practice

  • Send the data in advance. Spend the meeting discussing it, not presenting it. If the first thirty minutes is someone reading slides, you've already lost the room.
  • Capture decisions, not actions. Actions are fine, but if nothing was decided differently because of the meeting, the meeting failed. Distinguish between commitments and good intentions.
  • Rate the meeting at the end. Honest, quick feedback on whether it was useful beats a polished format that nobody challenges. Two minutes at the close of the meeting is enough.
  • Vary the format. If every QBR looks identical, people will eventually stop engaging. Rotate who prepares the forward section. Invite a customer perspective occasionally. Change what you stress-test.

The best QBRs I've run feel like a leadership team doing real work together, reasoning through complexity, making calls with incomplete information, holding each other to higher standards. Not a group receiving a briefing and agreeing to meet again next quarter.

SM
Stewart Masters
Stewart is a digital and technology executive advisor working with boards, founders, and senior leadership teams across ANZ and Asia. He specialises in digital strategy, AI adoption, and building high-performance technology organisations.