Strategy & Leadership

Taming organisational complexity

October 19, 2015

Global

October 19, 2015

Global
Josselyn Simpson

Contributor

Josselyn has worked in the thought leadership and quantitative research team of the Economist Intelligence Unit for more than 15 years. She is an expert in creating engaging content for C-level and other senior executives. Among her areas of interest are organisation, governance, and the effects of technology on the workplace. She was also a Senior Campaign Manager at Booz & Company and a Senior Editor at McKinsey & Company. Through those roles she developed significant expertise in global thought leadership development and programme management. She began her career at The New Yorker. She is based in New York and holds an undergraduate degree with honors from Harvard College.

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Taming organisational complexity—start at the top examines the sources of complexity, its effects and the efforts companies have undertaken to reduce it.

Report Summary

Complexity is a serious threat to organisations around the world.  It stems from a variety of sources, is challenging to address, and hinders companies' ability to bring products to market in a timely fashion, to serve customers effectively and to attract and retain employees. Ultimately, it's a threat to the bottom line, but just how costly is complexity and what can be done to counter it?

In a recent survey of executives at large companies around the world conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), more than half say complexity has cut into their profits. Furthermore, 38% of all respondents report that managing complexity occupied 16-25% of their time—time that could have been spent on more productive pursuits—and 17% spent a whopping 26-50% fo their workday dealing with complexity. That translates into at least 8.6m hours a week that could be spent more productively by executives in the US alone—or 45 minutes for every executive every day.

Download the report to learn more.

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