When organizations transition to flatter structures, they often aspire to empower teams, foster collaboration, and enable agile decision-making. Yet, one of the most common challenges we encounter when we are being called into an organization is the persistence of "zombie structures." These are legacy habits, processes, and behaviors that refuse to stay buried, undermining the transformation effort. With our methodology, these challenges don’t linger because we proactively address them during the transformation process.
Zombie Structures: Legacy Challenges in Organizational Transformations
Topics: Organization Design, Business Innovation, Adaptability, OrgDesign
Happy 2025: Designing Organizations with Purpose
As we welcome 2025, we want to start by wishing everyone a Happy New Year! Reflecting on the past year, we’re deeply grateful for the positive impact we’ve created together with our clients. Now, we look forward to a year filled with adaptive organization design, business model innovations, and business transformation.
While the new year naturally brings action-oriented energy, it’s also a valuable opportunity to reflect, plan, and align with the goals that truly matter. What do we want to achieve in 2025? How can our business create meaningful change? And how can we ensure that the transformation we undertake leads to a positive, lasting impact—both within our organizations and beyond?
Topics: Organization Design, Business Innovation, Adaptability, OrgDesign
5 Organization Design Questions to Prepare for 2025!
For leaders, this reflective process goes beyond tidying up. It’s about creating room to innovate, realign, and prepare for the road ahead. As the year draws to a close, it’s the perfect time to ask bold, transformative questions that challenge the status quo and unlock new pathways to success.
Here are five powerful organization design questions to guide your thinking and set the stage for a stronger, more focused 2025.
Topics: Organization Design, Adaptability
Shifting Focus: Organization Design to Generate Expertise
Organization design has long been recognized as critical to driving business impact. This trend has prompted many companies to establish internal functions, from Organizational Design teams to expanding C-suite roles, such as Chief Transformation Officer. Additionally, reorganizations are on the rise. McKinsey data shows that nearly 60% of executives have experienced organizational redesigns within the past two years, and 25% more companies are redesigning three or more times as often as they did just a few years ago. These developments evidence the growing number of businesses embracing organizational design to enhance adaptability and ensure business continuity. While this is a promising trend, the challenge now lies in moving beyond approaches that might necessitate frequent redesigns, toward creating systems that naturally regenerate and evolve dynamically.
Topics: Organization Design, Adaptability, Expertise, Generative Learning
Adaptive Organization Design - Podcast Episode
Topics: Organization Design, Adaptability, EmployeeEngagement
Designing Roles and Organizations for Engagement and Motivation
Anyone who has tried to design a work environment for engagement, connectedness, and motivation knows it’s no small task. The challenge lies in the wide range of factors that influence these outcomes. Motivation exists on a spectrum—from self-driven (intrinsic) to externally regulated (extrinsic) forms. Intrinsic motivation, such as personal enjoyment or fulfillment, typically leads to better outcomes like happiness and improved performance. Extrinsic motivation, driven by external rewards and recognition, also plays a role, though it tends to be less impactful. Finding the right balance is a challenge. Transitioning from motivation as a foundation to true engagement is even harder. While motivation drives action, engagement depends on creating a deeper sense of belonging, purpose, and well-being. This is where the need for uniqueness comes in—people won’t feel connected to an organization that isn’t distinct but is just like any other company.
Topics: Organization Design, Employee Engagement, Self-Determination Theory, Motivation
Sound familiar? The latest employee satisfaction survey results are in, and they deliver what feels like a gut punch for any HR/OD team: a significant dip in employee engagement. After the initial shock, the team is sent back to the drawing board. Under immense pressure from management, focus groups are formed to brainstorm new initiatives in the hope of driving those numbers back up and reigniting engagement.
Topics: Organization Design, Employee Engagement
Does Your Organization Design Sabotage Your Culture?
Imagine a scenario we've seen unfold time and time again: A company that prides itself on being a tech innovation trendsetter embarks on a high-spirited journey to revamp its corporate culture. Leadership is all in, pouring resources into comprehensive workshops, inspirational team-building retreats, and even a vibrant rebranding of company values that now grace every corner of the office and the digital workspace alike. Management feels good. Employees have their healthy, but well-camouflaged doubts.
Topics: Organization Design, Culture Of Innovation, corporate culture, Organizational Development
Organization Design and Development in Various Business Environments
In our rapidly evolving business landscape, two often discussed yet frequently confused concepts are Organization Design (OD) and Organizational Development (also OD). Although they share the same acronym, their focuses, processes, and outcomes are distinct, each playing a crucial role in the success and adaptability of organizations. Considering the prominence of the two terms, it’s surprising how frequently they are used interchangeably in interviews, meetings, and projects, often leading to avoidable misunderstandings.
Believe – 2024: Drawing Inspiration from “Yes, Virginia” for Business and Change Leadership in the New Year.
Each Christmas season, Macy's iconic store in New York City adorns its façade with a single, powerful word: "Believe."
This tradition is inspired by the timeless message of the New York Sun’s 1897 editorial "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus." A young girl named Virginia had written a letter to the newspaper wondering whether Santa Claus existed. She asked for confirmation from a credible source while her friends mocked her for what she believed to be true. The response she received from Francis Pharcellus Church became one of the most famous editorials in newspaper history. Its message is a timeless and heartwarming affirmation of the existence of Santa Claus, not as a person but as coming to life through our positive actions and embodiment of values such as hope and goodwill. The now-famous editorial symbolizes the powerful spirit of childhood wonder, hope, and joy. Transcending its original context, it is a rallying cry urging us to translate our beliefs and hopes into positive action.
Topics: Organization Design, Change Leadership