Organisational design is not an HR function. It is a strategic discipline that determines whether a growing venture can execute its strategy reliably or whether every new initiative requires the founder to personally manage it through the organisation.
• Organisation structures and process models the spectrum from flat founder-centric structures through functional, divisional, matrix, and team-based models; when each is appropriate, what each costs in coordination overhead, and what failure mode each produces under growth pressure
• Components of organisational design, such as reporting structure, role definition, decision rights, information flow, performance management, and culture, interact as a system rather than as separate HR elements
• How to identify issues in current structures, systems, and processes, the diagnostic framework for surfacing structural dysfunction before it causes operational failure; what to look for, where to find the evidence, and how to distinguish a structural problem from an execution problem
• How to analyse current structures, systems, and processes, the systematic evaluation method that produces a defensible assessment of organisational capability rather than a founder’s intuition about what is wrong
• Impact of organisational design on stakeholders and labour policies, how structural changes affect employees, investors, customers, and regulatory obligations; the stakeholder impact analysis that prevents redesign initiatives from generating unintended consequences
• Best practices and trends in organisational design implementation, the evidence-based approaches that have worked in comparable ventures, and the patterns that consistently fail; what the research and practitioner literature says about how to redesign organisations without destroying the culture that made them successful
• Procedures to implement organisational design, the step-by-step implementation framework that converts a redesign plan into operational reality without creating the chaos that unmanaged restructures typically produce
• How to formulate structured plans to implement organisational design, the planning document that specifies what changes, in what sequence, with which dependencies, and with which success criteria
• Organisational policies and procedures that affect the evaluation of organisational design processes, the internal governance constraints, and external regulatory requirements that redesign plans must account for
• Ethical and legal considerations in organisational design, employment law implications, MOM requirements, fair consideration obligations, and the governance principles that protect both the organisation and its employees during structural change
• How to lead the implementation of organisational design, the change leadership capability that brings teams through structural transitions without losing key people or destroying operational momentum
• How to explain changes to work processes and structures to employees, the communication discipline that makes structural change comprehensible rather than threatening; the specific principles and methods for communicating redesign decisions clearly, honestly, and in a way that maintains trust
• How to develop mechanisms to gather measurement data and feedback the monitoring systems that tell you whether the redesign is working, where new friction is emerging, and when refinements are needed
• How to implement refinements and enhancements to organisational design, the continuous improvement discipline that treats organisational design as an ongoing activity rather than a one-time event
