The McKinsey Quarterly

  • Recommend (61)
  • Text Size
  • Print
  • Download PDF
  • Link to This

Putting organizational complexity in its place

Not all complexity is bad for business—but executives don’t always know what kind their company has. They should understand what creates complexity for most employees, remove what doesn’t add value, and channel the rest to employees who can handle it effectively.

Putting organizational complexity in its place article, employee institutional complexity, Organization

In This Article

Audio

audio MP3 Putting organizational complexity in its place

To use the audio player, please install the Adobe Flash Player plugin version 9 or greater.

Download MP3

Despite widespread agreement that organizational complexity creates big problems by making it hard to get things done, few executives have a realistic understanding of how complexity actually affects their own companies. When pressed, many leaders cite the institutional manifestations of complexity they personally experience: the number of countries the company operates in, for instance, or the number of brands or people they manage. By contrast, relatively few executives consider the forms of individual complexity that the vast majority of their employees face—for example poor processes, confusing role definitions, or unclear accountabilities.

This is not a trivial difference in perception. Our experience suggests that such a disconnect highlights a blind spot many executives have when it comes to managing complexity effectively. A focus on institutional complexity at the expense of the individual kind can lead to wasted effort or even organizational damage. What’s more, failing to tackle complexity as most people experience it can, as we’ve shown before, be financially costly.1

Once senior executives recognize that employees typically see complexity very differently than they do, they can begin to take straightforward steps to pinpoint where in their organizations complexity hinders productivity and why. The goal? To identify where institutional complexity is an issue, where complexity caused by factors such as a lack of role clarity or poor processes is a problem, and what’s responsible for the complexity in each area. Companies can then boost organizational effectiveness through a combination of two things: removing complexity that doesn’t add value and channeling what’s left to employees who can either handle it naturally or be trained to cope with it.

 

In this article, we review the experience of a multinational consumer goods manufacturer that applied this approach in several regions and functions and consequently halved the time it needed to make decisions in critical processes. This, in turn, helped it bring products to market faster in response to changing customer needs. Such payoffs aren’t unusual. Our work with companies in the banking, mining, retail, and other sectors suggests that managing complexity more effectively helps remove unnecessary costs and organizational friction and can even lead to new sources of profit and competitive advantage by boosting a company’s resilience and its ability to adapt quickly.

Executives at the manufacturer knew they had a problem with complexity. Rapid growth in the company’s Australasia region was requiring significant management attention and travel time and, consequently, was making it difficult for the senior team to manage effectively there and across the company’s two other regions (Europe and the United States).

For most employees, however, such institutional complexity didn’t matter. They struggled instead with forms of individual complexity—for example, processes that had initially been effective but over time had become increasingly bureaucratic. Many employees, for instance, were frustrated both with how long it took for decisions to filter through to the front line and the amount of work required to implement them (new-product development, for example, took more than a year and required numerous consultations across the company). Duplicated roles (the regions replicated activities performed by the corporate center) and unclear role definitions, which left several groups accountable for sales forecasting and other key activities, only exacerbated the problems. The result was too much time spent on managing internal processes and not enough on understanding customers’ needs.

Survey the scene

To take stock of the situation, the manufacturer launched a survey that asked employees about the clarity of roles and accountabilities across the company, whether systems and processes were linked effectively, how much coordination individual jobs required and how predictable they were, and, very simply, how hard it was for individuals to get things done and to make decisions.

Although surveys like this are a relatively straightforward way in order to collect useful information, structured interviews or focus groups are also effective for gathering quantitative data about the intensity of complexity and qualitative information on what drives it. Companies can also make a first assessment simply by looking at their own organization charts with fresh eyes. If, for example, employees report that role duplication is a problem, executives can examine job descriptions and org charts to better determine the likely extent of duplication and follow up with the appropriate managers to learn more.

Likewise, companies can uncover hidden pockets of complexity by interviewing employees to understand the key activities, data, and handoffs involved in various business processes. Whatever the method of data collection, companies must avoid sampling subsets—say, a single business unit—and assuming that these views are representative.

Draw a map of what’s really going on

Armed with the survey data, the manufacturer constructed several “heat maps” to help senior managers pinpoint where, and why, complexity was causing trouble for employees. Each map showed a particular breakdown—a region or function, for example—and how much complexity of various kinds was occurring there, as well as the level of coping skills employees possessed. The manufacturer’s maps helped identify several problems that executives had previously been unaware of.

  • A regional map, reproduced here (Exhibit 1), highlighted confusion over accountability between the company’s headquarters and a country office in the same region. The country’s head of operations found it difficult to get things done because some of the roles in her group were shared with headquarters—her marketing function, for example, also worked for headquarters, while the corporate HR function worked, in part, for her country office. Moreover, the same map showed that employees in Region B found it markedly easier to do their work than employees in Region D did, despite having similar mandates and processes and selling, essentially, the same products. The reason? Region B’s employees had far fewer interactions with headquarters than did their colleagues in Region D.
  • Another map showed how the manufacturer’s supply chain employees were struggling with duplication that stemmed from confusing sales forecasting and from ordering processes that required decisions to pass through multiple loops (including time-consuming iterations with regional offices) prior to approval. What’s worse, a closer look found that the additional checks and inputs weren’t improving the accuracy of the forecasts—these efforts were wasted.
  • Meanwhile, executives learned that midlevel managers in all the regions were not using the company’s performance-management system effectively. This meant both that the performance information collected was not as accurate as it could be and (more important) that the system was being used only for tracking performance against targets and not for coaching or for conducting developmental discussions on skill gaps and how to close them. Poor data, in turn, made it hard to align employees’ skills with the manufacturer’s overall strategic needs.
Reduce—and redirect—complexity

Once senior managers have a clear picture of where complexity hampers effectiveness, they can begin to remove any complexity that doesn’t add value and channel what’s left to people who can handle it. Of course, managers must be mindful that not all complexity is equally manageable, and proceed accordingly (Exhibit 2).

Exhibit 2: Types of complexity

  • Imposed complexity includes laws, industry regulations, and interventions by nongovernmental organizations. It is not typically manageable by companies.
  • Inherent complexity is intrinsic to the business, and can only be jettisoned by exiting a portion of the business.
  • Designed complexity results from choices about where the business operates, what it sells, to whom, and how. Companies can remove it, but this could mean simplifying valuable wrinkles in their business model.
  • Unnecessary complexity arises from growing misalignment between the needs of the organization and the processes supporting it. It is easily managed once identified.

For example, to tackle the confusion that had arisen between company headquarters and the country office, the manufacturer redrew its functional boundaries so that marketing and other groups served either the country office or corporate headquarters—but not both. This simplified the jobs of the majority of employees and funneled the necessary interactions between the country office and headquarters to the country managers.

To improve sales and forecasting processes, the manufacturer zeroed in on the information its marketing employees needed most: insights on likely sales volumes given customer needs and the competitive situation. Some insights, it turned out, could be converted into forecasts relatively easily by using data from prior sales periods; others required very specific local input. To provide it, the manufacturer created small teams based in—and focused on—each geographic area. Team members’ job descriptions were standardized, and each member was given clear accountabilities for working with headquarters on forecasting, pricing, and promotions. This allowed the manufacturer to remove all unnecessary inputs to the processes, focus local efforts where they were most valuable, and cut the number of rounds of consultations in half.

Meanwhile, the company simplified the sign-off process by building it into its regular business-planning activities, thereby providing more regularity and clarity around the timing of decisions. While these actions added complexity for some workers, the overall level of complexity for most employees dropped markedly, reducing wasted time and frustration while generating forecasts that were just as good as the old ones. Equally important, to prevent unnecessary complexity from returning, the new job descriptions were agreed to globally, and the right to change them was retained by the executive team.

Finally, to tackle the HR problems, the manufacturer put in place a consistent talent review process across the business that focused much more on performance-management conversations and developmental discussions.

Bolster skills where needed

Of course, whenever executives consciously funnel complexity into new locations or “design in” new elements that create added complexity for added reward, they must ensure that the employees in the positions affected are prepared. In many cases, companies will see a need to improve key capabilities in HR and other functional areas.

This was true for the manufacturer, which began addressing its long-term skill gaps by focusing on the recruitment and training of HR employees. At the same time, however, the manufacturer’s senior team was careful to provide immediate training to those HR employees who needed help mastering the company’s revamped talent review process and rolled out training for all line managers across the business on how they should use this new process to coach and develop staff members—and not just to measure staff performance passively against targets.

 

Such experiences are common. Whenever companies tackle complexity, they will ultimately find some individuals who seem less troubled by it than others. This is not surprising. People are different: some freeze like deer in the headlights in the face of ambiguity, uncertainty, complex roles, and unclear accountabilities; others are able to get their work done regardless. Companies need to locate the pockets of individual strength and weakness in order to respond intelligently. Although some people can deal with complexity innately, we now know that others can be trained to develop what we call “ambidextrous” capabilities—the ability to tolerate ambiguity and actively manage complexity. Such skills will enable employees to create and use networks within organizations to build relationships and help overcome poor processes, bridge organizational silos, or manage whatever value-creating pockets of complexity their companies decide to maintain (see sidebar, “Building a better bank”).

Organizations aren’t uniformly complex, and most employees don’t experience complexity the way executives do. To better manage complexity, senior leaders must recognize how employees at all levels see it, and then learn what’s driving it. By doing so, companies can retain the kinds of complexity that add value, remove the kinds that don’t, and channel the rest to employees, at any level, who can be trained to handle it effectively.

Tell us your story
What’s the worst example you’ve seen of complexity undermining the effectiveness of your organization? How did the complexity arise, and how did you cope with—or seek to fix—the problem? We invite you to share your experiences via the comments field below.

About the Authors

Julian Birkinshaw is a professor at the London Business School; Suzanne Heywood is a principal in McKinsey’s London office.

Notes

1 We found that companies reporting low levels of individual complexity had the highest returns on capital employed and returns on invested capital. For more, see Suzanne Heywood, Jessica Spungin, and David Turnbull, “Cracking the complexity code,” mckinseyquarterly.com, May 2007.

Recommend (61)
  • 27 JULY 2010
    Maura Halligan
    Founding Partner
    Agentive
    Lindenhurst, NY USA

    ...So executives invest in a new CRM or a new training workshop thinking that will fix this problem. Those efforts help. But only in the sense that it rolls the ball out onto the field. It doesn’t get it through...

    .
    Maura Halligan
    Founding Partner
    Agentive
    Lindenhurst, NY USA

    In terms of the ‘people’ development issues, people do what they are rewarded for. If they are not rewarded or recognized for developing people, no IT tool will change that. Performance development ROI measurement is hard but absolutely possible. Because managers are not rewarded for developing people, however, they focus on more easily measurable successes: closing the sale, installing a new technology, or resolving a client issue. Our experiences working with large companies is that “coaching” is routinely ranked low in employee satisfaction surveys. So executives invest in a new CRM or a new training workshop thinking that will fix this problem. Those efforts help. But only in the sense that it rolls the ball out onto the field. It doesn’t get it through the net.

    Executive actions, over an extended period of time, make change happen. That means longer than one quarter. That means maintaining the focus even when another fire has to be put out or the next ‘bright, shiny object’ floats by that gets everybody jazzed. When a company makes a commitment, at the highest levels, to identify what signs indicate a manager is truly developing their staff, and rewards the manager, and publicizes their success, over an extended period of time, change happens. It is not complex but it is hard (like dieting). Developing staff is an organizational change that is possible, smart and—dare I say—cheap.

    .
  • 26 MAY 2010
    Ankush Samant
    Associate Consultant
    Mindtree
    Bangalore, India

    Interestingly, I felt the article misses on 2 major points:
    1. Complexity is bound to arise over time
    2. Appropriate Feedback channels can help to keep a check on when to revamp the system....

    .
    Ankush Samant
    Associate Consultant
    Mindtree
    Bangalore, India

    Interestingly, I felt the article misses on 2 major points:
    1. Complexity is bound to arise over time
    2. Appropriate Feedback channels can help to keep a check on when to revamp the system.

    I would like to start with a simple analogy. We must have seen a three-legged race in which the legs of two participants are tied down and they are asked to run in a race. Consider legs of ‘n’ number of people tied down and they being asked to run a race. What will happen?

    They start from the same place but after some time one person may be leading and pulling everyone forward and another person must be lagging and pulling everyone back. This is the period of complexity. Someone will fall down, someone will definetely get hurt.

    And then the person lagging or any other person shouts, “STOP, let’s reorganize!”. The person shouting is doing nothing but giving feedback.

    This is a very simplified analogy for a complicated organational system. But, this forces us to think about a very critical issue: #8220;Do we have appropriate feedback channels available in our organization?”

    If yes, then we know when it is the time to stop and reorganize!

    .
  • 16 MAY 2010
    Andrey Shovkoplyas
    Founder and CEO
    ImagineWeb
    Kazakhstan

    ...Just as many other tasks in business, managing complexity is probably more an art than a science....

    .
    Andrey Shovkoplyas
    Founder and CEO
    ImagineWeb
    Kazakhstan

    Blaming complexity for every issue in organization has become a popular trend. It might be both risky and misleading as most managers/executives don’t really understand what complexity is. An issue with poorly defined roles is just that and should be fixed accordingly.

    Just as many other tasks in business, managing complexity is probably more an art than a science. Few measures sighted in the article may have both positive and negative effect and provide no guarantee or ultimate solution for organization. It seems that the company had been sharing some of its HR and marketing resources and capabilities between corporate center and business units. If the resource sharing had been abandoned, these resources would have to be duplicated in each of the business units resulting in more costs and perhaps higher complexity. Centralized control over changes in job descriptions will most likely limit flexibility at local level and reduce organizational ability to adapt. Employees creating and using networks within organizations will increase their interconnectedness and interactions and will result in increased individual complexity.

    Recognizing institutional vs. individual and different types of complexity, the need to measure complexity, and benefits that can be derived from complexity mapping, “added complexity for added reward”, complexity that adds value vs. one that doesn’t are all very good points.

    Still, in principle, we should focus our efforts not on finding limited ways to reduce complexity, but on developing organizational capabilities that will allow us to handle ever increasing levels of complexity. M&A, post merger integration, webs, and network management are just few of such capabilities. Educating and building awareness about complexity at every level in organization should also be a prime task.

    .
  • 11 MAY 2010
    Anders Eiby-Johannesen
    Sales Director
    Fujitsu
    Denmark

    In the process of merging two companies into one, we decided that selected sales individuals should, from now on, bring the new and combined services and product stack to the market. This added complexity...

    .
    Anders Eiby-Johannesen
    Sales Director
    Fujitsu
    Denmark

    In the process of merging two companies into one, we decided that selected sales individuals should, from now on, bring the new and combined services and product stack to the market. This added complexity, since each part of the merger had limited knowledge of what the other part had to offer. In the gap process, it was clear that a certain part of the sales force did not have the necessary competencies and, equally important, did not have the potential and willingness to get it. These people were later on replaced with externals. On the other hand, others expressed that they did not have the competencies now, but they were very interested in getting them. These people seeked increased complexity and were encouraged by it. Looking back at their personnel files, we could also see that they had asked their managers for greater challenges for a long time. They expressed that the merger, increased complexity, and subsequent new requirements came as “an answer to their prayers.”

    .
  • 11 MAY 2010
    Pam Hurley
    MD
    TOSCA Consulting
    St Albans, UK

    ...The real challenge facing executives is not how to diminish or control complexity but how best to harness it so as to energise organizational performance.

    .
    Pam Hurley
    MD
    TOSCA Consulting
    St Albans, UK

    This article provides a real contribution to the growing debate on how to deal with increased complexity. However its focus reflects a general tendency to confuse complexity with complication. Most of the problems described in the article reflect complicated patterns of organizational structures—intricate arrangements for reporting, overlapping responsibilities and unclear roles, gradually emerging through geographical expansion and product diversification. Such problems can significantly hamper organizations performance, increase costs, and depress employees. Yet simplifying processes and clearing up structural overlaps, as important and beneficial as these can be, do not really address the fundamentals of organizational complexity. They simply help calibrate linear processes within complicated organizational systems.

    Complexity presents when groups of interrelated elements exhibit non-linear relations, or in other words, when interdependencies create significant gaps between the intentions underlying decisions and their consequences. Yet such phenomena are a fact of organizational life (by definition constructed of interrelated units and individuals) rather than an ill to be resolved. Complexity is simply a description of the “forces of nature” shaping organizational effectiveness. It is these patterns that depict how decisions made in HQ are really translated into actions on the ground, and the kind of feedback effects generated from the market environment. However, by mapping these patterns and better adapting internal processes to them, executives can stimulate new internal engines in the organization. For example, informal networks can become a hive for internal politics and paralysis, yet taken advantage of, they can become efficient channels for communication and collaboration. The real challenge facing executives is not how to diminish or control complexity but how best to harness it so as to energise organizational performance.

    .
  • 8 MAY 2010
    Cliff Campeau
    CEO
    Marketing Solutions
    Saint Louis, MO USA

    ...Leveraging the skills and aptitude of your best employees, training all and aligning resources, tasks, and outcomes certainly appear to be critical steps in this process.

    .
    Cliff Campeau
    CEO
    Marketing Solutions
    Saint Louis, MO USA

    Removing complexities, to the extent that they are impediments to optimizing value creation, makes good business sense. The authors rightly point out that listening to employees is an appropriate starting place, at least relative to those factors within the direct control of the organization (i.e. processes, culture, resource and organizational contstraints). While complexities sometimes stem from compliance and control requirements and simplification that yields no value and merely represents change for change sake, there are plenty of opportunities for most organizations to streamline their ability to get things done. Leveraging the skills and aptitude of your best employees, training all and aligning resources, tasks, and outcomes certainly appear to be critical steps in this process.

    .
  • 8 MAY 2010
    Sanjeev Himachali
    HR Professional
    India

    ...I believe that these complexities—or rather confusions—not only lead to loss of productivity and cost to the company but they also lead to stress and other health related issues....

    .
    Sanjeev Himachali
    HR Professional
    India

    There are a few very interesting points highlighted in this article, such as confusing role definitions, duplicated roles, unclear accountabilities, and poorly defined processes. I believe that these complexities—or rather confusions—not only lead to loss of productivity and cost to the company but they also lead to stress and other health related issues.

    Here I would like to share one such complexity in one organization, which was a start-up company. The usual and the simple process says that a product development team develops the product and then hands it over to the sales and marketing team to take it to the end-user. And then based on the response from the market, the marketing team can recommend some enhancements in the product. In this organization, this simple process was a bit too screwed-up. They decided that the development team will develop the product as per the recommendations and suggestions of marketing team. The finished product will then be approved by the marketing team before taking it to the end-users. Not only was the process complex, but so also were the roles, responsibilities, and accountabilities of various teams and team-members. It took them more than three years to identify, recognize and then rectify this faulty process and another two years to complete the product. In those five years, not only the company faced enormous financial loss but they also lost the market advantage and lost many talented people to competitors.

    I do understand that many times uncertainty also leads to complexity but the fact is that only 10% of the things are uncertain and remaining things can be planned. Uncertainty does not stop people from taking calculated risks, responsibilities, and accountabilities. Unclear accountabilities and unclear role expectations leads to poor performance. And at the end, I believe that processes in an organization should flow in a linear or chain fashion rather than crisscrossed or circle fashion.

    .
  • 6 MAY 2010
    Marc Effron
    President
    The Talent Strategy Group
    New York, NY USA

    The complexity challenge is exacerbated when complex processes are forced onto all employees. HR and talent-building practices are a primary example of this...

    .
    Marc Effron
    President
    The Talent Strategy Group
    New York, NY USA

    The complexity challenge is exacerbated when complex processes are forced onto all employees. HR and talent-building practices are a primary example of this—adding complexity to managers’ lives without adding a commensurate amount of value. That complexity not only frustrates managers and employees, it destroys the opportunity to capture the tremendous value that processes like talent reviews and goal setting can add if well implemented.

    The good news is that this complexity can be quickly eliminated from talent management practices like performance management, talent reviews, competency model, etc. The HR field is blessed with a thorough scientific foundation that describes exactly what drives the effectiveness of nearly every HR activity (and what doesn’t). HR leaders need to redesign their processes starting with a review of what this core science says actually gets results. They then need to redesign every process step by step, starting with that scientific base, weighing the value/complexity balance at each step. The only elements that they can put into the process design are those where the value for managers clearly outweighs the complexity it adds to their lives. They’ll find the finished processes are much simpler, and by definition more effective, than what they had previously supported.

    .
  • 6 MAY 2010
    Prakash Bhat
    Chartered Accountant
    Professional
    Mumbai India

    ...many times employees have a vested interest in continuing the complexity. It gives them comfort and sense of security...

    .
    Prakash Bhat
    Chartered Accountant
    Professional
    Mumbai India

    My experience (relates to Pharma) is that existing complexities increase signficantly on mergers/acqusition of businesses. Complexities are of broadly two types, one relating to business, namely, multiple business/SKUs, etcetera, and a second relating to organization. In both we observed that many times employees have a vested interest in continuing the complexity. It gives them comfort and sense of security (particularly in an Indian environment). We worked on both, rationalized portfolios, and also removed complexities in finance, distibution, production, and IT. Complexity not only increases cost but also reduces the focus on core areas. Our effort resulted in addition to bottom line by more than 5% to revenue.

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Chris Rodgers
    Director
    Chris Rodgers Consulting Ltd
    UK

    ...In terms of everyday organizational dynamics, the word “simple” means not complicated; it is not the opposite of complex.

    .
    Chris Rodgers
    Director
    Chris Rodgers Consulting Ltd
    UK

    The call for greater simplicity in organizational design, management, and operation is a natural, commonsense reaction to the overly complicated nature of many modern-day organizations. However, it is misleading and unhelpful to talk of this in terms of “organizational complexity”.

    The dynamics of social complexity are embedded in the everyday conversations and interactions of all organizations. These dynamics are affected by—but do not depend on—how simple or how complicated an organization might be in terms, say, of its structure, systems, processes, roles, accountabilities, or whatever. The desire to simplify organizations and their management is a worthy aspiration. But, however successful managers might be in this, the socially complex dynamics of day-to-day organizational life will continue. In terms of everyday organizational dynamics, the word “simple” means not complicated; it is not the opposite of complex.

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Alex Todd
    Founder
    Trust Enablement Inc.
    Toronto, ON Canada

    Julian and Suzanne, do you distinguish between things that are complex and those that are simply complicated? In my mind, the former is of the world of ambiguity, while the latter of unwieldiness....

    .
    Alex Todd
    Founder
    Trust Enablement Inc.
    Toronto, ON Canada

    Julian and Suzanne, do you distinguish between things that are complex and those that are simply complicated? In my mind, the former is of the world of ambiguity, while the latter of unwieldiness. My sense is that you may be using the term “complexity” for business processes that are “complicated”. There is little that is ambiguous about roads and airports. I would say they are complicated. On the other hand, cause-effect performance dynamics can be complex, since many uncertain variables often impact the outcome. That’s why, for example, establishing valid CEO compensation formulas is virtually impossible—the CEO’s role is “complex”.

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Harold Fethe
    Senior Vice President
    ALZA
    Silicon Valley, CA USA

    ...you can have constructive conflict, competition for resources, multi-technology multi-product complexity, science, government regulation, AND a great corporate culture. It just has to start at the top...

    .
    Harold Fethe
    Senior Vice President
    ALZA
    Silicon Valley, CA USA

    ALZA, bought by J&J when our revenue line was over $1B, was a highly productive, very complex organization. We had five pharmaceutical technologies, each with multiple products/projects. We purposely had a matrix organization from day one, among the first to do so at the founding of the company in the early 1970s. As head of HR, I brought a matrix organization expert/big-thinker in every 24-36 months to evaluate our organization. We brought 20+ prescription pharmaceutical products to market during the 80s and 90s, with under 1000 employees most of the time. (Avg time/cost per product in pharma is eight years and $200M+, which we routinely beat on both metrics.)

    We rewarded collaborative behavior, with team awards going to more people than individual awards. We recognized that competition for limited resources (budget wrangles, priority debates) actually strengthens the organization, if done civilly. We had both project managers and function managers, a true, classic matrix. And, the most often cited “positive” by departing employees was the culture. So—you can have constructive conflict, competition for resources, multi-technology multi-product complexity, science, government regulation, AND a great corporate culture. It just has to start at the top, and be reinforced constantly as a “condition of membership.”

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Hugh McLellan
    Director
    Businesshealthchecker.com
    Norwich United Kingdom

    The best experience I had with this assessment process was actually as a supplier to the biggest spirits company in the world....

    .
    Hugh McLellan
    Director
    Businesshealthchecker.com
    Norwich United Kingdom

    The best experience I had with this assessment process was actually as a supplier to the biggest spirits company in the world. I was MD of a metal/plastics packaging company supplying bottling halls in Scotland for subsequent worldwide distribution. At the time they were embarking on increased market penetration in the Far East and South America. The distribution, as it is today, is complicated but the company president said that he wanted delivery of any supplies within two days of receipt of order, thus guaranteeing product at the consumer end was available. (The background was that they were competing in those markets with the number two company, globally.)

    When this was put to us, we explained that unless things changed within their organisation, this was impossible. It was not easy to make key stakeholders understand the need for change, but I volunteered my entire organisation to work to achieve the stated aim. What happened next was amazing as both organisations set about changing the status quo beyond all recognition. It started and finished with a complete review of how processes were operating and the various bottlenecks and indecision which prevented the two-day aspiration from being met. The reason I was delighted was that it helped us transform busy, committed individuals in both companies to actually achieve a highly efficient process, front to back.

    If I had to sum up the process of assessment, it was mapping decisions and administration tasks and a subsequent challenge to determine why things were being done that way. As you would expect, it seemed basic but no one had actually asked the questions so nothing was ever likely to change. The desired result was achieved, and to this day the on-time-in-full (OITF) results are still in the 99% category.

    The number one lesson for me was that if you want to take time to learn and review, there will inevitably be change for the better. The other point is that none of this was about moon landings. It was basic, simple decision-making rules and simple behaviour changes that turned a complex set of circumstances into simple processes. In summary, if I explain, that before we started we calculated that when the market was forecasting volume requirements and the information was being processed, it was taking over 120 days to reach us in Scotland. Two days seemed a forlorn hope in such a complex organisation but I can assure you it actually happened.

    .
Submit Your Comments

The user information you enter into this form will not update your site profile. To update your profile, please visit your profile page.

Subject Putting organizational complexity in its place

*Required

We may publish your comments online and in the print edition of McKinsey Quarterly. Those chosen, which may be edited for length and clarity, will appear along with your name and details, but not your e-mail address. We will use your e-mail address only to send you a confirmation copy of your comments and to notify you if we publish them online.

We value your feedback and will consider it carefully. Nonetheless, we receive so many comments that we cannot acknowledge all of them.

See also:
Preview

Related Audio
Sometimes complexity can be a good thing—but executives should know where and when it’s an issue. In this June podcast titled “What executives need to know about complexity,” the authors discuss what kind of complexity is most harmful to companies’ performance, why senior executives are often oblivious to it, and how it can be addressed. To listen, use the audio tool in the box to the left.
Embed E-mail