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www.strategy-business.com
strategy+business
ONLINE OCTOBER 27, 2014
The 10 Principles of
Organizational DNA
Based on 10 years of organizational design research and
220,000 diagnostic surveys, here’s what we’ve learned about
building high-performance companies.
BY JAIME ESTUPIÑÁN AND GARY L. NEILSON
www.strategy-business.com
1
silient. People who take our online survey (the Org
DNA Profiler®) continue to identify their company as
one of these archetypes, regardless of industry and geog-
raphy. That means that, no matter how pernicious a
performance problem may seem, other companies have
undoubtedly faced it before—and some have prevailed,
often by changing their organizational personality.
2. Companies are mosaics of personalities. Most
companies contain a mix of personalities—having two
or three, or more business units that fall under differ-
ent archetypes. This is especially true of companies
that have made major acquisitions. For example, a
20-year-old technology powerhouse might be a resil-
ient organization. But its newly acquired health-tech
division matches the fits-and-starts profile, character-
ized by smart entrepreneurial talent but a lack of collec-
tive discipline.
3. Weak execution is prevalent. The connection
between the organization’s personality type and how
well the organization executes on strategy is always
strong. When we analyzed our most recent data set
(more than 20,000 respondents), we discovered that a
whopping 48 percent fit a profile distinguished by weak
execution. And 11 percent fit into the most vexing of
those profiles: the passive-aggressive organization, in
which people pay lip service to results but consistently
undermine the necessary efforts.
A
nyone who’s celebrated a significant work an-
niversary knows just how a company can
change over the years—who has a seat at the
table, what customers expect, the most coveted skills.
But there’s just as much that stays the same: what your
brand stands for, the shared lexicon, your unique cul-
ture. We use the term organizational DNA as a meta-
phor for the underlying organizational and cultural de-
sign factors that define an organization’s personality and
determine whether it is strong or weak in executing
strategy. (See Exhibit 1.)
This year marks the 10th anniversary of our work
on organizational DNA. Since our first article in 2004
(“The 7 Types of Organizational DNA,” by Gary L.
Neilson, Bruce A. Pasternack, and Decio Mendes, s+b,
Summer 2004), we’ve analyzed more than 220,000 on-
line surveys in which people describe their company’s
personality and performance. Amid the turbulence of
changing business environments and personnel, 10 pre-
cepts have remained useful, for empowering people and
unlocking any organization’s potential.
1. There are only a few organizational personality
types. Every company may seem unique, but in their
enterprise-wide behavior, they fall into just seven behav-
ioral patterns (in order from the least to most effective at
execution): passive-aggressive, overmanaged, outgrown,
fits-and-starts, just-in-time, military-precision, and re-
The 10 Principles of
Organizational DNA
Based on 10 years of organizational design research and
220,000 diagnostic surveys, here’s what we’ve learned about
building high-performance companies.
by Jaime Estupiñán and Gary L. Neilson
www.strategy-business.com
2
lessly seek feedback from those closest to the market,
encouraging and acting on criticism from customers
and front-line employees, and taking action to address
minor issues before they become bigger problems.
5. Performance is based on interdependent factors.
Your organization’s DNA is made up of four pairs of
4. Strong execution is not self-sustaining. The 52
percent of respondents with a strong-execution arche-
type can’t afford to be complacent. In our experience,
even a company with the most desirable profile, the re-
silient organization, must continually work to stay at the
top of its game. For example, its leaders should relent-
Jaime Estupiñán
jaime.estupinan@strategyand
.pwc.com
is a partner with Strategy&
based in New York. He focuses
on organization and change
leadership for the healthcare
industry.
Gary L. Neilson
gary.neilson@strategyand
.pwc.com
is a senior partner with
Strategy& based in Chicago.
He focuses on operating
models and organizational
transformation.
For more on organizational
DNA, see “How to Design a
Winning Company,” by Ashok
Divakaran, Gary L. Neilson, and
Jaya Pandrangi, s+b, Autumn
2013; and “10 Minutes on
Organizational DNA” (pwc.com/
us/en/10minutes/
organizational-dna.jhtml].
Exhibit 1: The Eight Elements of Organizational Design
Grouped by purpose (the four rungs) and
formality, these components can be
combined into a design that matches each
organization’s strategy and purpose. When
initiating an organizational redesign, start
with two or three elements.
• Governance forums
• Decision rights
• Decision processes
• Decision analytics
• Monetary rewards
• Career models
• Talent processes
• Key performance indicators and metrics
• Information flow
• Knowledge management systems
• Organizational design
• Roles and responsibilities
• Business processes
• Values and standards
• Expectations and “unwritten rules”
• Behaviors
• Shared vision and objectives
• Individual goals and aspirations
• Sources of pride
• Identity, shared language, and beliefs
• Assumptions and biases
• Mental models
• Relationships and collaboration
• Teams and other working units
• Organizational influence
Commitments
How people are inspired to contribute
Mind-Sets
How people make sense of their work
Motivators
How people are compelled to perform
Information
How the organization formally processes data and knowledge
Structure
How work and responsibilities get divided
Networks
How people connect beyond the lines and boxes
INFORMAL
• Role
• Business pro
Norms
How people instinctively act or take action
Decisions
How decisions are made
FORMAL
g units
uence
and boxes
INFORMAL
on
Source: Strategy&
www.strategy-business.com
3
more companies making smart use of digital informa-
tion technology to differentiate themselves. But these
changes can also be low-tech. One company boosted its
performance by setting up regular meetings to ensure
that people at the top and the bottom of the hierarchy
were regularly talking together, and information flowed
more effectively among them.
9. Informal factors change when you focus on what
works. The best approach for improving intangibles like
norms and commitments is to use them as a force for
transformation. So, instead of trying to change the cul-
ture of your company, use your intangible strengths to
help improve it. Suppose your company is losing cus-
tomers despite having a deep commitment to customer
service. By focusing attention on a few powerful and
positive behaviors, you can draw out that commitment
and boost customer retention rates.
10. High performance can’t be isolated. Rarely do
departments or business units work in isolation. Chang-
es are more likely to last when they’re made holistically,
across a company or division. Manufacturing needs to
know what sales intends to sell, and sales, in turn, needs
to know what marketing will promote. The more con-
nectivity among different groups or functions, the more
effective they can become. +
building blocks: decision rights and norms, motivators
and commitments, information and mind-sets, and
structure and networks. The way that the building
blocks combine determines your company’s aptitude for
execution. It is crucial, then, for companies that want to
improve their execution to consider the building blocks
as a whole and not individually.
6. The org chart isn’t the solution. Many company
leaders fall into a common trap: They think that chang-
ing their organization’s structure will solve their prob-
lems. They may remove significant management layers
and temporarily reduce costs that way—but all too
soon, the layers creep back in and the short-term effi-
ciencies disappear. We see structure as the capstone, not
the cornerstone. It’s better to change other formal ele-
ments first, like decision rights, motivators, and infor-
mation flows, and then figure out the structural changes
needed to support the revitalized company.
7. Intangibles matter. Those formal organizational
DNA elements are attractive to companies because
they’re tangible. They can be easily defined and mea-
sured. But they’re only half the story. Companies often
realize this after they’ve made significant changes—re-
assigned decision rights, reworked the org chart, estab-
lished new incentives, or set up knowledge-sharing sys-
tems—yet don’t see the results they expect. That’s
because they ignored the informal, intangible elements.
These include norms (what people think is the right way
to behave), commitments (the promises people feel
motivated to keep) mind-sets (deeply held attitudes and
beliefs), and networks (connections among employees
outside the formal structure). They add up to influence
the ways people think, feel, communicate, and behave.
Until you learn to influence these factors, your efforts to
build performance will be unbalanced.
8. Decision rights and information flows deliver. De-
cision rights and information traits are twice as power-
ful as structure and motivators in driving organizational
effectiveness. We analyzed dozens of strong-execution
companies and discovered that information had the
strongest correlation to execution, at 54 percent, and
decision rights correlated at 50 percent. Structure came
in at 25 percent. That may be why we see more and
strategy+business magazine
is published by PwC Strategy& Inc.
To subscribe, visit strategy-business.com
or call 1-855-869-4862.
For more information about Strategy&,
visit www.strategyand.pwc.com
• strategy-business.com
• facebook.com/strategybusiness
• http://twitter.com/stratandbiz
101 Park Ave., 18th Floor, New York, NY 10178
Articles published in strategy+business do not necessarily represent the views of PwC Strategy& Inc. or any
other member firm of the PwC network. Reviews and mentions of publications, products, or services do not
constitute endorsement or recommendation for purchase.
© 2014 PwC. All rights reserved. PwC refers to the PwC network and/or one or more of its member firms,
each of which is a separate legal entity. Please see www.pwc.com/structure for further details.

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10 principles of organizational DNA

  • 1. www.strategy-business.com strategy+business ONLINE OCTOBER 27, 2014 The 10 Principles of Organizational DNA Based on 10 years of organizational design research and 220,000 diagnostic surveys, here’s what we’ve learned about building high-performance companies. BY JAIME ESTUPIÑÁN AND GARY L. NEILSON
  • 2. www.strategy-business.com 1 silient. People who take our online survey (the Org DNA Profiler®) continue to identify their company as one of these archetypes, regardless of industry and geog- raphy. That means that, no matter how pernicious a performance problem may seem, other companies have undoubtedly faced it before—and some have prevailed, often by changing their organizational personality. 2. Companies are mosaics of personalities. Most companies contain a mix of personalities—having two or three, or more business units that fall under differ- ent archetypes. This is especially true of companies that have made major acquisitions. For example, a 20-year-old technology powerhouse might be a resil- ient organization. But its newly acquired health-tech division matches the fits-and-starts profile, character- ized by smart entrepreneurial talent but a lack of collec- tive discipline. 3. Weak execution is prevalent. The connection between the organization’s personality type and how well the organization executes on strategy is always strong. When we analyzed our most recent data set (more than 20,000 respondents), we discovered that a whopping 48 percent fit a profile distinguished by weak execution. And 11 percent fit into the most vexing of those profiles: the passive-aggressive organization, in which people pay lip service to results but consistently undermine the necessary efforts. A nyone who’s celebrated a significant work an- niversary knows just how a company can change over the years—who has a seat at the table, what customers expect, the most coveted skills. But there’s just as much that stays the same: what your brand stands for, the shared lexicon, your unique cul- ture. We use the term organizational DNA as a meta- phor for the underlying organizational and cultural de- sign factors that define an organization’s personality and determine whether it is strong or weak in executing strategy. (See Exhibit 1.) This year marks the 10th anniversary of our work on organizational DNA. Since our first article in 2004 (“The 7 Types of Organizational DNA,” by Gary L. Neilson, Bruce A. Pasternack, and Decio Mendes, s+b, Summer 2004), we’ve analyzed more than 220,000 on- line surveys in which people describe their company’s personality and performance. Amid the turbulence of changing business environments and personnel, 10 pre- cepts have remained useful, for empowering people and unlocking any organization’s potential. 1. There are only a few organizational personality types. Every company may seem unique, but in their enterprise-wide behavior, they fall into just seven behav- ioral patterns (in order from the least to most effective at execution): passive-aggressive, overmanaged, outgrown, fits-and-starts, just-in-time, military-precision, and re- The 10 Principles of Organizational DNA Based on 10 years of organizational design research and 220,000 diagnostic surveys, here’s what we’ve learned about building high-performance companies. by Jaime Estupiñán and Gary L. Neilson
  • 3. www.strategy-business.com 2 lessly seek feedback from those closest to the market, encouraging and acting on criticism from customers and front-line employees, and taking action to address minor issues before they become bigger problems. 5. Performance is based on interdependent factors. Your organization’s DNA is made up of four pairs of 4. Strong execution is not self-sustaining. The 52 percent of respondents with a strong-execution arche- type can’t afford to be complacent. In our experience, even a company with the most desirable profile, the re- silient organization, must continually work to stay at the top of its game. For example, its leaders should relent- Jaime Estupiñán jaime.estupinan@strategyand .pwc.com is a partner with Strategy& based in New York. He focuses on organization and change leadership for the healthcare industry. Gary L. Neilson gary.neilson@strategyand .pwc.com is a senior partner with Strategy& based in Chicago. He focuses on operating models and organizational transformation. For more on organizational DNA, see “How to Design a Winning Company,” by Ashok Divakaran, Gary L. Neilson, and Jaya Pandrangi, s+b, Autumn 2013; and “10 Minutes on Organizational DNA” (pwc.com/ us/en/10minutes/ organizational-dna.jhtml]. Exhibit 1: The Eight Elements of Organizational Design Grouped by purpose (the four rungs) and formality, these components can be combined into a design that matches each organization’s strategy and purpose. When initiating an organizational redesign, start with two or three elements. • Governance forums • Decision rights • Decision processes • Decision analytics • Monetary rewards • Career models • Talent processes • Key performance indicators and metrics • Information flow • Knowledge management systems • Organizational design • Roles and responsibilities • Business processes • Values and standards • Expectations and “unwritten rules” • Behaviors • Shared vision and objectives • Individual goals and aspirations • Sources of pride • Identity, shared language, and beliefs • Assumptions and biases • Mental models • Relationships and collaboration • Teams and other working units • Organizational influence Commitments How people are inspired to contribute Mind-Sets How people make sense of their work Motivators How people are compelled to perform Information How the organization formally processes data and knowledge Structure How work and responsibilities get divided Networks How people connect beyond the lines and boxes INFORMAL • Role • Business pro Norms How people instinctively act or take action Decisions How decisions are made FORMAL g units uence and boxes INFORMAL on Source: Strategy&
  • 4. www.strategy-business.com 3 more companies making smart use of digital informa- tion technology to differentiate themselves. But these changes can also be low-tech. One company boosted its performance by setting up regular meetings to ensure that people at the top and the bottom of the hierarchy were regularly talking together, and information flowed more effectively among them. 9. Informal factors change when you focus on what works. The best approach for improving intangibles like norms and commitments is to use them as a force for transformation. So, instead of trying to change the cul- ture of your company, use your intangible strengths to help improve it. Suppose your company is losing cus- tomers despite having a deep commitment to customer service. By focusing attention on a few powerful and positive behaviors, you can draw out that commitment and boost customer retention rates. 10. High performance can’t be isolated. Rarely do departments or business units work in isolation. Chang- es are more likely to last when they’re made holistically, across a company or division. Manufacturing needs to know what sales intends to sell, and sales, in turn, needs to know what marketing will promote. The more con- nectivity among different groups or functions, the more effective they can become. + building blocks: decision rights and norms, motivators and commitments, information and mind-sets, and structure and networks. The way that the building blocks combine determines your company’s aptitude for execution. It is crucial, then, for companies that want to improve their execution to consider the building blocks as a whole and not individually. 6. The org chart isn’t the solution. Many company leaders fall into a common trap: They think that chang- ing their organization’s structure will solve their prob- lems. They may remove significant management layers and temporarily reduce costs that way—but all too soon, the layers creep back in and the short-term effi- ciencies disappear. We see structure as the capstone, not the cornerstone. It’s better to change other formal ele- ments first, like decision rights, motivators, and infor- mation flows, and then figure out the structural changes needed to support the revitalized company. 7. Intangibles matter. Those formal organizational DNA elements are attractive to companies because they’re tangible. They can be easily defined and mea- sured. But they’re only half the story. Companies often realize this after they’ve made significant changes—re- assigned decision rights, reworked the org chart, estab- lished new incentives, or set up knowledge-sharing sys- tems—yet don’t see the results they expect. That’s because they ignored the informal, intangible elements. These include norms (what people think is the right way to behave), commitments (the promises people feel motivated to keep) mind-sets (deeply held attitudes and beliefs), and networks (connections among employees outside the formal structure). They add up to influence the ways people think, feel, communicate, and behave. Until you learn to influence these factors, your efforts to build performance will be unbalanced. 8. Decision rights and information flows deliver. De- cision rights and information traits are twice as power- ful as structure and motivators in driving organizational effectiveness. We analyzed dozens of strong-execution companies and discovered that information had the strongest correlation to execution, at 54 percent, and decision rights correlated at 50 percent. Structure came in at 25 percent. That may be why we see more and
  • 5. strategy+business magazine is published by PwC Strategy& Inc. To subscribe, visit strategy-business.com or call 1-855-869-4862. For more information about Strategy&, visit www.strategyand.pwc.com • strategy-business.com • facebook.com/strategybusiness • http://twitter.com/stratandbiz 101 Park Ave., 18th Floor, New York, NY 10178 Articles published in strategy+business do not necessarily represent the views of PwC Strategy& Inc. or any other member firm of the PwC network. Reviews and mentions of publications, products, or services do not constitute endorsement or recommendation for purchase. © 2014 PwC. All rights reserved. PwC refers to the PwC network and/or one or more of its member firms, each of which is a separate legal entity. Please see www.pwc.com/structure for further details.