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Flavio Beretta is the Managing Partner of Signium Argentina, bringing more than 35 years of experience in Executive Search and Human Capital Consulting across Argentina and international markets. He advises Boards, CEOs, and senior executives of nati...
When leadership stalls, it’s tempting to focus on the person in the role. But if authority, resources, incentives, and decision rights are misaligned, is the leader really the problem – or the most visible symptom?
Organizational design is the way a company arranges its roles, reporting lines, decision rights, incentives, and resources to get work done. It determines not only who sits where on the structure chart, but how authority moves through the business, how priorities are resolved, and how leaders are expected to turn strategy into action.
When that design is unclear or misaligned, the effects are often practical and immediate. Decisions require more approvals than expected. Priorities compete across functions and regions. Accountability is clear in the job description, but less clear in practice. A leader may be expected to deliver outcomes while some of the most important levers, such as budget, people, systems, or decision rights, sit elsewhere.
When this happens, organizations often look first at the individual. Is the leader decisive enough? Strategic enough? Resilient enough? These are valid questions. Leadership capability matters, but it’s not the only factor worth questioning.
Flavio Beretta, Managing Partner of Signium Argentina, shares his thoughts:
“Sometimes, boards assume that the wrong person has been placed into the leadership role, but in reality, the organizational design is holding leadership back. A leader may appear to have a mandate, but without real access to the decisions and resources that matter, they are left powerless to build true momentum.”
Leadership is often assessed as an individual capability. Organizations look for people who can set direction, manage complexity, influence others, and deliver results. Yet once leaders are in role, their effectiveness depends heavily on whether the organization around them supports the work they’ve been asked to do.
This is why organizational design cannot be separated from strategy. An organizational structure may appear logical at face value, but if it doesn’t reflect how decisions need to move, how work needs to flow, and where accountability should sit, it can quickly become a barrier to execution.
McKinsey’s 2025 research on operating model redesign reinforces this point. Its refreshed “golden rules” emphasize that redesign should not simply fix current pain points or redraw “boxes and lines.” It should enable the strategy, clarify how work gets done, and involve leaders from the start. This includes aligning the senior team on why the redesign is needed, placing capable leaders into key roles, and helping managers guide their teams through the change.
In practical terms, this means leaders should not only inherit the design after it has been decided. They should help shape the principles behind it, understand how it supports the strategy, and be equipped to lead through the changes it creates.
“A structure can look perfect on paper,” says Beretta. “But if it doesn’t give leaders a practical way to make decisions, align people and resources, and resolve competing priorities, it will not help the strategy move. Good design has to consider the realities of leadership from the start.”
Design failures don’t always appear as dramatic breakdowns or visible conflict. Often, they show up as friction: slower decisions, unclear ownership, duplicated effort, or leaders spending more time aligning stakeholders than moving work forward.
Often subtle enough to go unnoticed, these patterns chip away at leadership effectiveness over time.
Accountability without authority
One of the most damaging design failures occurs when leaders are held responsible for outcomes they can’t fully control.
A leader may be accountable for growth, transformation, cost reduction, culture change, or regional performance, while the people, budget, systems, or decision rights needed to influence those outcomes sit in another part of the organization.
This creates a gap between expectation and reality. Over time, that gap can have several effects:
They cannot simply make a decision or move the work forward. Instead, they have to keep convincing other people to agree, approve, help, or release resources.
The organization asks, “Why did you fail to deliver?” but does not ask, “Did we actually give you what you needed to deliver?”
In theory, the leader owns the result. In reality, other people control the budget, people, systems, or approvals. So the leader has to navigate internal politics to get anything done.
Because they cannot act clearly or confidently, leaders may start playing it safe, become demotivated, or keep pushing decisions upward to more senior people.
“No leader can control every variable,” explains Beretta. “Accountability without authority doesn’t create ownership. It creates pressure without the means to act, and we risk judging people against expectations that the system itself makes difficult to meet.”
Decision congestion
At first, this may look like collaboration. Leaders seek input, teams consult widely, and stakeholders are included. Yet, when every decision requires repeated alignment, collaboration becomes a bottleneck.
Decision congestion often appears when:
Beretta explains, “A leader may even have a clear mandate, but if every decision depends on several other people agreeing, that mandate becomes difficult to exercise. They’re still accountable for progress, but they’re no longer fully able to move decisions forward.”
Matrix overload
Global organizations often rely on matrix structures, where authority is shared across functions, regions, product lines, or business units. These structures can help coordinate complex work, but they can also create tension when different parts of the organization hold different kinds of power.
Matrix structures don’t automatically undermine leadership, but they require deliberate design. In these environments, leaders are often expected to deliver across boundaries they don’t fully control. The more complex the organization, the clearer it must be where authority sits, how trade-offs are resolved, and who ultimately owns the outcome.
Misaligned incentives
Some organizational design challenges sit in the scorecard: in the metrics, targets, and incentives that shape what leaders prioritize and steer organization-wide behaviors. A leader might be encouraged to collaborate across the enterprise, yet be measured primarily on local, functional, or short-term performance. They may be asked to support transformation while being rewarded for protecting existing revenue or defending departmental resources.
Beretta shares, “In these situations, people aren’t necessarily behaving badly. They’re responding rationally to what the organization measures and rewards. The problem is mixed messaging: the organization says one priority matters, but rewards another.”
PwC’s 2024 research on incentives reinforces the point that performance metrics matter because they shape how executives assess risk, value outcomes, and respond to reward structures. When performance is measured too narrowly, leaders may focus on what is rewarded, even if the broader strategy requires something different.
Organizational design has always influenced leadership effectiveness, but the issue is becoming harder to ignore as business becomes faster and more complex.
Many businesses are asking leaders to do more with leaner teams, broader mandates, and faster strategic cycles. Technology has also changed the rhythm of work – information moves quickly, visibility has increased, and leaders are expected to respond almost immediately.
However, faster information doesn’t automatically create faster decisions. Leaders may have more data, more dashboards, and more ways to communicate, yet still lack clarity on who owns the decision, who has the authority to act, or how competing priorities should be resolved.
Beretta elaborates: “The pace of business has accelerated, but many organizations are still trying to execute through structures designed for a slower operating rhythm. That creates a contrast between the operational reality, where information moves quickly and visibility is almost instant, and the organizational reality, where decisions may still move slowly and authority is often unclear. This is where friction becomes more visible. It can look as though leadership is holding the business back, when in reality, they’re working inside a system that hasn’t kept pace.”
Many global businesses will always need complexity, coordination, and shared accountability. The difference lies in how deliberately that complexity is designed.
1. They define decision rights before performance expectations
Before asking a leader to deliver, organizations should be clear about what the leader can decide.
This includes defining which decisions the leader:
This is often where leadership friction begins. A mandate without decision rights can create the appearance of empowerment without the reality. Clear decision rights also help surrounding teams. They reduce hidden vetoes, prevent repeated litigation, and make it easier to understand who is accountable for moving work forward.
“A leader doesn’t need unchecked authority,” says Beretta. “They need a clear understanding of where their authority begins and ends.”
2. They align authority, accountability, and resources
Effective organizational design connects what leaders are asked to deliver with the resources they can actually use. This is especially important in roles linked to transformation, growth, regional expansion, integration, or enterprise-wide change.
These roles often require leaders to go above and beyond the typical call of duty:
Many of these may mean adjusting the leader’s mandate. It may mean changing reporting lines, decision forums, budget ownership, or escalation paths. It may also mean clarifying shared accountability where outcomes depend on several leaders.
Beretta adds: “The question is simple: Does this leader control, or meaningfully influence, enough of the system’s resources to affect the outcome? If the answer is no, then the issue may not be the leader’s capability. It may be that the organization has asked them to deliver something they have not truly been empowered to deliver.”
3. They design incentives around enterprise priorities
If an organization needs leaders to collaborate, the way those leaders are measured should support collaboration. If transformation is the priority, leaders should be assessed on progress toward that transformation. If enterprise value is the goal, incentives should not quietly encourage people to protect one part of the business at the expense of the whole.
This doesn’t mean every leader is measured in the same way. Local performance still matters, but if the business needs leaders to work across functions, regions, or business units, the way they’re measured should support that shared work, not pull against it. Without that alignment, leaders are asked to serve the whole organization, yet rewarded only for protecting their own corner of it.
4. They stress-test the structure against the strategy
Too often, organizational design is treated as a rigid organogram: a set of boxes, titles, and reporting lines. However, design should be treated as a living leadership system that determines how strategy is carried out.
CEOs and executive teams can make this practical by periodically asking:
These questions help shift the conversation from “Who is failing?” to “What is making execution harder than it needs to be?” It doesn’t remove accountability from leaders, but it does make accountability more accurate.
When a senior leader struggles, it’s natural to question their capability, and sometimes that conclusion is correct. A leader may not have the judgment, adaptability, or resilience required for the role. Yet, before reaching that conclusion, CEOs and executive teams should also examine the design of the role and the system around it.
W. Edwards Deming, often regarded as the “father of quality management”, argued throughout his work that performance is shaped by the system people work within. For CEOs, that idea remains relevant: leadership performance can’t be understood by looking at the individual alone. The system around the leader matters too.
Beretta concludes by saying:
“Better design doesn’t excuse weak leadership. It makes strong leadership more possible, and weak leadership easier to identify. When decision rights, resources, and incentives are clear, authority becomes more actionable. The organization can see whether the issue lies with the leader, the system, or both. But most importantly, the system stops creating unnecessary friction and allows great leaders to lead.”