Skip to Content
  • オフィス

    オフィス

    北米・南米
    • Atlanta
    • Austin
    • Bogota
    • Boston
    • Buenos Aires
    • Chicago
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Houston
    • Los Angeles
    • Mexico City
    • Minneapolis
    • Monterrey
    • Montreal
    • New York
    • Rio de Janeiro
    • San Francisco
    • Santiago
    • São Paulo
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Toronto
    • Washington, DC
    ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
    • Amsterdam
    • Athens
    • Berlin
    • Brussels
    • Copenhagen
    • Doha
    • Dubai
    • Dusseldorf
    • Frankfurt
    • Helsinki
    • Istanbul
    • Johannesburg
    • Kyiv
    • Lisbon
    • London
    • Madrid
    • Milan
    • Munich
    • Oslo
    • Paris
    • Riyadh
    • Rome
    • Stockholm
    • Vienna
    • Warsaw
    • Zurich
    アジア・オーストラリア
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Bengaluru
    • Brisbane
    • Ho Chi Minh City
    • Hong Kong
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
    • Manila
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • Perth
    • Shanghai
    • Singapore
    • Sydney
    • Tokyo
    全てのオフィス
  • アルムナイ
  • メディア
  • お問い合わせ
  • 東京オフィス
  • Japan | 日本語

    地域と言語を選択

    グローバル
    • Global (English)
    北米・南米
    • Brazil (Português)
    • Argentina (Español)
    • Canada (Français)
    • Chile (Español)
    • Colombia (Español)
    ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
    • France (Français)
    • DACH Region (Deutsch)
    • Italy (Italiano)
    • Spain (Español)
    • Greece (Elliniká)
    アジア・オーストラリア
    • China (中文版)
    • Korea (한국어)
    • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items (0)
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    後で閲読、共有できるようにするためにブックマークしてください

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 業界別プラクティス
    メインメニュー

    業界別プラクティス

    • 航空宇宙、防衛、政府関連
    • 農業
    • 化学製品
    • インフラ、建設
    • 消費財
    • 金融サービス
    • ヘルスケア
    • 産業機械、設備
    • メディア、エンターテインメント
    • 金属
    • 採掘・鉱業
    • 石油、ガス
    • 紙、パッケージ
    • プライベートエクイティ
    • 公共、社会セクター
    • 小売
    • テクノロジー
    • 通信
    • 交通
    • 観光産業
    • 公益事業、再生可能エネルギー
  • 機能別プラクティス
    メインメニュー

    機能別プラクティス

    • カスタマー・エクスペリエンス
    • サステイナビリティ、 社会貢献
    • Innovation
    • 企業買収、合併 (M&A)
    • オペレーション
    • 組織
    • プライベートエクイティ
    • マーケティング・営業
    • 戦略
    • アドバンスド・アナリティクス
    • Technology
    • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォーメーション
  • Digital
  • 知見/レポート
  • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて
    メインメニュー

    ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて

    • ベインの信条
    • 活動内容
    • 社員とリーダーシップ
    • プレス・メディア情報
    • クライアントの結果
    • 受賞歴
    • パートナーシップを結んでいる団体
    Further: Our global responsibility
    • ダイバーシティ
    • 社会貢献
    • サステイナビリティへの取り組み
    • 世界経済フォーラム(WEF)
    Learn more about Further
  • キャリア
    メインメニュー

    キャリア

    • ベインで働く
      キャリア
      ベインで働く
      • Find Your Place
      • ベインで活躍する機会
      • ベインのチーム体制
      • 学生向けページ
      • インターンシップ
      • 採用イベント
    • ベインでの体験
      キャリア
      ベインでの体験
      • キャリアストーリー
      • 社員紹介
      • Where We Work
      • 成長を後押しするサポート体制
      • アフィニティ・グループ
      • 福利厚生
    • Impact Stories
    • 採用情報
      キャリア
      採用情報
      • 採用プロセス
      • 面接内容
    FIND JOBS
  • オフィス
    メインメニュー

    オフィス

    • 北米・南米
      オフィス
      北米・南米
      • Atlanta
      • Austin
      • Bogota
      • Boston
      • Buenos Aires
      • Chicago
      • Dallas
      • Denver
      • Houston
      • Los Angeles
      • Mexico City
      • Minneapolis
      • Monterrey
      • Montreal
      • New York
      • Rio de Janeiro
      • San Francisco
      • Santiago
      • São Paulo
      • Seattle
      • Silicon Valley
      • Toronto
      • Washington, DC
    • ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      オフィス
      ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      • Amsterdam
      • Athens
      • Berlin
      • Brussels
      • Copenhagen
      • Doha
      • Dubai
      • Dusseldorf
      • Frankfurt
      • Helsinki
      • Istanbul
      • Johannesburg
      • Kyiv
      • Lisbon
      • London
      • Madrid
      • Milan
      • Munich
      • Oslo
      • Paris
      • Riyadh
      • Rome
      • Stockholm
      • Vienna
      • Warsaw
      • Zurich
    • アジア・オーストラリア
      オフィス
      アジア・オーストラリア
      • Bangkok
      • Beijing
      • Bengaluru
      • Brisbane
      • Ho Chi Minh City
      • Hong Kong
      • Jakarta
      • Kuala Lumpur
      • Manila
      • Melbourne
      • Mumbai
      • New Delhi
      • Perth
      • Shanghai
      • Singapore
      • Sydney
      • Tokyo
    全てのオフィス
  • アルムナイ
  • メディア
  • お問い合わせ
  • 東京オフィス
  • Japan | 日本語
    メインメニュー

    地域と言語を選択

    • グローバル
      地域と言語を選択
      グローバル
      • Global (English)
    • 北米・南米
      地域と言語を選択
      北米・南米
      • Brazil (Português)
      • Argentina (Español)
      • Canada (Français)
      • Chile (Español)
      • Colombia (Español)
    • ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      地域と言語を選択
      ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      • France (Français)
      • DACH Region (Deutsch)
      • Italy (Italiano)
      • Spain (Español)
      • Greece (Elliniká)
    • アジア・オーストラリア
      地域と言語を選択
      アジア・オーストラリア
      • China (中文版)
      • Korea (한국어)
      • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items  (0)
    メインメニュー
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    後で閲読、共有できるようにするためにブックマークしてください

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 業界別プラクティス
    • 業界別プラクティス

      • 航空宇宙、防衛、政府関連
      • 農業
      • 化学製品
      • インフラ、建設
      • 消費財
      • 金融サービス
      • ヘルスケア
      • 産業機械、設備
      • メディア、エンターテインメント
      • 金属
      • 採掘・鉱業
      • 石油、ガス
      • 紙、パッケージ
      • プライベートエクイティ
      • 公共、社会セクター
      • 小売
      • テクノロジー
      • 通信
      • 交通
      • 観光産業
      • 公益事業、再生可能エネルギー
  • 機能別プラクティス
    • 機能別プラクティス

      • カスタマー・エクスペリエンス
      • サステイナビリティ、 社会貢献
      • Innovation
      • 企業買収、合併 (M&A)
      • オペレーション
      • 組織
      • プライベートエクイティ
      • マーケティング・営業
      • 戦略
      • アドバンスド・アナリティクス
      • Technology
      • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォーメーション
  • Digital
  • 知見/レポート
  • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて
    • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて

      • ベインの信条
      • 活動内容
      • 社員とリーダーシップ
      • プレス・メディア情報
      • クライアントの結果
      • 受賞歴
      • パートナーシップを結んでいる団体
      Further: Our global responsibility
      • ダイバーシティ
      • 社会貢献
      • サステイナビリティへの取り組み
      • 世界経済フォーラム(WEF)
      Learn more about Further
  • キャリア
    人気検索キーワード
    • デジタル
    • 戦略
    前回の検索
      最近訪れたページ

      Content added to saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Removed from saved items

      Saved items (0)

      論説

      When a New Organizational Structure Isn’t Enough: How to Truly Live Your Operating Model

      When a New Organizational Structure Isn’t Enough: How to Truly Live Your Operating Model

      The goal of any organizational redesign is for people to work differently, but that only happens if leaders invest in changing the work itself.

      著者:Tracy Thurkow, Emily Emmett, and Adélaïde Hubert

      • min read
      }

      論説

      When a New Organizational Structure Isn’t Enough: How to Truly Live Your Operating Model
      en
      概要
      • Eighty-eight percent of senior leaders believe their new organizational structure will achieve its aims, but only 36% of those working in it agree.
      • One reason: Most jobs change meaningfully in a redesign, but fewer than one in three workers say they get the support they need.
      • Successful leaders focus not only on model design but on “living the model”—clarifying workflows, decision rights, and new habits.

      It’s common for large companies to embark, every few years, on an organizational redesign in pursuit of better performance. Leaders design the new structure intending to change how people work. In the hope of creating meaningfully better business results, they put in place new reporting lines and move boxes on organizational charts, confident that the company will garner the full benefits of the redesign.

      Many in the organization don’t share their leaders’ optimism, however. Only 36% of people working in new structures believe the redesign will meet all expectations—vs. 88% of leaders—according to our recent survey of nearly 1,000 global executives and employees who have recently undergone such a change.

      The disconnect highlights the reason why so many new models eventually fall short: an insufficient focus on how the organization will “live” the new design long term. This is especially critical now, as many organizations reinvent their operating models to capture the benefit of generative AI. Making that shift stick requires more than structure—it demands new habits and new ways of working.

      Unlike merger integrations, in which business continuity planning is standard, in reorganizations, leaders often assume details will get sorted out as they go. Without a plan to work differently, however, their companies slide back into old patterns before the ink on the new org chart is dry.

      Three common traps

      Despite good intentions, most redesigns fall into three predictable traps that prevent people from working differently:

      1. Believing the boxes and lines are enough. Leaders tend to overemphasize the organizational design itself and shortchange planning for the transition to the new model and how people will work differently in it. Most leaders in our survey were satisfied with their design. When asked the main reason transformations fall short of expectations, design flaws were the factor cited least often. The issues they did identify relate to how the organization lives with the new model day to day, including concerns that their people will resist the redesign because they lack a clear handle on the changes to their work and the way they work with others (see Figure 1).
      1. Mistaking change management for transformation. More than 80% of leaders believe they effectively communicate, train, and support those most impacted by a reorganization, but only 57% of the middle managers who must execute the reorganization agree.
      2. Over-communicating about structure and under-communicating about making it work. Even when leaders effectively convey key structural changes and implementation milestones, workers are left struggling. “How will we operate in the new environment?” they wonder. And the middle managers tasked with helping them adapt are just as confused.
      Figure 1
      Top leaders design reorganizations, while middle managers execute; they see different risks to success
      visualization
      visualization
      Source: Bain “Live the Model” Market Survey, September–October 2025 (n=976)

      Planning to “live the model”

      Most organizations “announce and train,” but few equip people to actually operate in the new model. Planning to “live the model” focuses on preparing them for what they will actually do.

      Managers need to:

      • Clarify how day-to-day work changes. Which work processes change and how? How will decisions be made differently? Whose work changes the most?
      • Engage people in understanding and adopting new ways of working. What are the points in time when choosing a certain behavior will have an outsized influence on the success of the new model—the “moments of truth”? How can management enable, inspire, and reinforce new habits?

      In short, people want to do a good job: Managers need to help them do their jobs differently. That’s what it means to “live the model.”

      The 20/200/2000 team

      In our experience, the only way to truly “live the model” is to mobilize the entire leadership spine:

      • the “20” senior leaders who design and sponsor the new operating model;
      • the “200” middle managers who redefine key workflows and help new routines take root; and
      • the “2000+” employees whose day-to-day behaviors must shift.

      A 20/200/2000 framework is a useful tool for clarifying where to invest the time and support needed to ensure the new structure is lived consistently across the organization.

      Addressing the confidence gap

      As the “20” leaders map out the future state and their plan to get there, it’s important to address a number of striking disconnects between leaders’ perceptions and employees’ reality (see Figure 2). First, the fact that nearly 90% of leaders surveyed believe the change process was well organized, while less than one-third of employees agree. Second, the fact that the “200” middle managers have much less confidence in employees’ understanding of their new roles and decision rights than the “20” top leaders have. 

      From employee responses, it’s clear that the “2000” generally understand what is changing—but not how to succeed in the new model. Only 22% say they received sufficient support in training, coaching, or tools.

      When this group raises concerns, they’re not resisting change—they’re signaling where they need help to make it work.

      Figure 2
      Top leaders are the most confident a new organizational structure will capture all expected benefits
      visualization
      Source: Bain “Live the Model” Market Survey, September–October 2025 (n=976)

      The linchpin “200”: middle management

      Middle managers sit at the center of this challenge, expected to translate the new model into day-to-day execution while their own jobs change as well. They’re supposed to champion the new model, but without clear guidance on decision rights, processes, and expectations, they become overwhelmed. Ninety percent of middle managers we surveyed report experiencing considerable shifts in their own work, yet many don’t feel equipped to lead others through it.

      Because employees take their cues from these managers, any uncertainty at this level cascades across the organization.

      Indeed, structural changes can only succeed with genuine buy-in from this critical group. Supporting these leaders with clarity, practical tools, and consistent coaching is the single best investment executives can make to ensure the redesign sticks.

      How one company succeeded

      Recently, a major energy company launched an operating model redesign that shows what it takes to make change stick. Rather than stopping at structure, leaders appointed executives to identify “hot spots” where work would be most disrupted. They mapped priority workflows in detail and clarified decision rights and required behaviors, ensuring the design would translate into daily behavior. Targeted training and feedback loops helped more than 3,000 employees transition into new roles—embedding new behaviors and faster decision making across the enterprise. Leaders were trained to model the new ways of working. And to ensure adoption and prevent backsliding, the company tracked progress with KPIs and health checks.

      Leaders equipped every people manager to answer a series of essential questions:

      1. What is the new business unit? What’s the new structure, its purpose, and key features?
      2. What is my business segment? What outcomes and processes are we responsible for, and how do we interact with other business segments?
      3. What does my team do? How do I support people on my team through clarity and coaching on their roles, workflows, decision rights, key performance indicators?
      4. What role do I play? How do I work in the new model, where do I spend my time, how do I interact with others?

      The announcement of a redesign isn’t the finish line; it’s the starting gun. Leaders who plan for and help their people live the new model will unlock results others never reach.

      著者
      • Headshot of Tracy Thurkow
        Tracy Thurkow
        パートナー, Atlanta
      • Headshot of Emily Emmett
        Emily Emmett
        パートナー, Houston
      • Adélaïde Hubert
        Practice Director, Paris
      関連するコンサルティングサービス
      • 組織
      コンサルティングサービス
      • Behavior Change
      Behavior Change
      Hybrid Work Culture: Building a High-Performance Environment

      For distributed workforces, cultivating and scaling a high-performance culture is essential. Here’s how to do it.

      詳細
      組織
      Shift to Vertical: David Haines, Group CEO, Flora Food Group

      What does it take to stay connected to your customers when scale and complexity threaten to pull you away? 

      詳細
      Behavior Change
      On Happiness and Leadership: A Discussion with Arthur C. Brooks

      A Harvard professor, social scientist, and best-selling author, Brooks shares his take on leadership and how to build a culture of workplace happiness.

      詳細
      組織
      Leading with Dynamism: AI and the Future of Top Teams

      In the age of AI, dynamic leadership—not just digital tools—is a true competitive advantage.

      詳細
      Behavior Change
      Employee Engagement Systems

      Employee Engagement Systems are tools, processes, and procedures used to drive employee enthusiasm and commitment to their work and company.

      詳細
      First published in 1月 2026
      Tags
      • Behavior Change
      • 組織

      クライアント支援事例

      組織 A Video Game Company Levels Up With a New Operating Model

      ケーススタディを見る

      組織 Building a winning media salesforce

      ケーススタディを見る

      組織 Powering a mining company's growth through cultural change

      ケーススタディを見る

      お気軽にご連絡下さい

      私達は、グローバルに活躍する経営者が抱える最重要経営課題に対して、厳しい競争環境の中でも成長し続け、「結果」を出すために支援しています。

      ベインの知見。競争が激化するグローバルビジネス環境で、日々直面するであろう問題について論じている知見を毎月お届けします。

      *プライバシーポリシーの内容を確認し、合意しました。

      プライバシーポリシーをご確認頂き、合意頂けますようお願い致します。
      Bain & Company
      お問い合わせ Sustainability Accessibility Terms of use Privacy Cookie Policy Sitemap Log In

      © 1996-2026 Bain & Company, Inc.

      お問い合わせ

      How can we help you?

      • ビジネスについて
      • プレス報道について
      • 採用について
      全てのオフィス