When growing organizations start to feel bogged down with people issues, the natural reaction is to put some structure in place.
And that’s usually where the hesitation kicks in.
No one wants to become “corporate.”
No one wants layers of process, approvals, and red tape.
No one wants to slow down the very thing that made the business successful.
So instead, many leadership teams hold the line because they feel it's part of their cool and agile company culture. They keep things flexible. Keep things loose.
And for a while, it works.
Most small to medium-sized organizations don’t have too much structure. They have just enough to get by, yet not enough to scale.
This is where you start to feel the pain.
None of this feels like a fun, flexible culture. If anything, it feels like confusion for managers and employees.
The issue isn’t bureaucracy. It’s inconsistency.
The kind of structure that supports a growing organization looks different.
It’s quieter. More practical. Less visible.
The goal isn’t to add more process. It’s to reduce the number of decisions that need to be escalated because there are policies for direction and resources for guidance.
And when that happens, the business starts to feel different, and your people start to feel different.
It's not about policies that feel like a drag. It's about day-to-day interactions and operations. This is where it connects back to performance.
Things move faster, not slower. Because fewer decisions get stuck. Because fewer issues bounce around before being resolved. Because there’s a shared understanding of how things get handled.
A stronger operational model doesn’t just improve execution. It creates a better experience for the people doing the work.
There's a way to build consistency into how your organization runs without adding layers or slowing things down and taking away your fun, agile culture.
It doesn’t require becoming more corporate.
It requires being more intentional about how people-related decisions are supported and carried out so your managers and your team have time and confidence to be innovative and contribute to the company.
If any of this feels familiar, but you're not sure where to start, let's have a conversation.
If you want to go deeper, we look at the business performance side of this in Happy Team, Strong Business: What the Data Shows, and the compounding impact in our Morale Multiplier research.