What is Organizational Design?

Rodrigo Bastos
Target Teal
Published in
3 min readJul 17, 2017

Organizational Design is the process of designing, defining or adapting the organizational structure. It usually tries to answer:

  • Who is responsible for each activity?
  • Who has the authority?
  • What are the limits of this authority?
  • Who does report to whom? (if you still believe it)
  • Who has control over which resources?
  • How does information flow in the organization?

The organizational structure usually has explicit elements such as organizational chart, roles, job descriptions, chains of command, board of directors, processes, policies, and so on. But it also has implicit or intangible aspects, such as the network of personal relationships and the informal flow of information.

When creating a company or organization, most people use some basic and familiar elements and patterns that define the organizational structure. Elements such as the chain of command, a pyramid of positions, and departments with managers soon come to mind. With these traditional elements in place, some common phenomena happen as the organization grows.

  • Formation of silos in the departments
  • Decisions made by managers away from the frontline
  • Inefficient workflow and steps that do not add value
  • Delay in decision-making
  • People don’t take responsibility (or those responsibilities aren't clear)
  • Personal relationships are used as an instrument to earn power or make something happen in the organization

Problems like these or the need for a strategic change generate the famous re-organizations. Deep changes in the organizational structure that in the end use the same elements described before, or sometimes adding “innovations”, like the matrix structure.

The results change little and we start looking for answers, usually blaming other people and their capacities.

Our Approach to Organizational Design

We understand that in order to escape the most common pitfalls encountered by companies, we need a radically different organizational design.

We call “Evolutionary Design” this process that follows some principles:

  • Continuous. It needs to be a continuous and incremental process, seeking a better organizational structure for the present moment. That’s why we like dynamic structures that are easy to adapt.
  • Collaborative. Everyone in the organization should contribute to this design because different perspectives help to avoid inefficient workflows and increase accountability.
  • Organizational clarity. The structure should offer the maximum clarity of expectations so that each one knows his or her accountabilities in the organization. This only happens if the process of (re)defining expectations is continuous and a collaborative effort.
  • Structural Empowerment. Every role and activity must come with automatic autonomy granted to execute it. This creates a kind of empowerment that is structural and does not depend on the “will of the boss”.
  • Free Flow. The structure must allow the free flow of people and information. If there is any possibility for a manager to “shield” a department, you have a problem at hand. That is also why transparency must be more than a word in the organization’s list of values.

These principles are the basis of frameworks such as Holacracy, Sociocracy 3.0 and Organic Organization. They are made concrete through a meta-process (a set of rules) that allow the creation of a new type of organizational structure called nested circles.

If you want to avoid the common problems in traditional corporations, you need a radically different approach to work.

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Target Teal helps other organizations and individuals to adopt new evolutionary practices and reinvent themselves. Check our website to learn more.

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