
Organisational Development
At Both&More, Organizational Development is about helping businesses succeed in complex environments by building strong, adaptable, and high-performing organizations. We use a range of tools and frameworks to support this growth.
Many organizations struggle to balance high performance with a great workplace culture. Using BAPO, we align business goals, architecture, processes, and structures to create this balance. With a mix of systems thinking, organizational design, and Agile methods, we help businesses stay both stable and innovative—efficient, scalable, and always connected to their core mission.
A key part of our approach is helping organizations navigate complexity. With the Cynefin Framework, we guide teams in understanding and tackling different types of challenges, from clear-cut to unpredictable. We apply Both-And-More Thinking to keep what works while improving what needs change. By mapping value streams, we ensure workflows run smoothly, allowing teams and leaders to focus on delivering real value while fostering a culture of trust, adaptability, and ownership.
The result? A resilient, future-ready organization that can adapt to change, make smarter decisions, and continuously improve—ensuring long-term success while creating an environment where people thrive.
Delivery examples
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Diagnose structural, cultural, and operational challenges and provide clear recommendations.
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Align leadership teams around a shared vision, strategy, and execution model.
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Restructure how work gets done by clarifying responsibilities, optimizing team structures, and streamlining decision-making. The result is a faster, more adaptable organization with less friction and clearer accountability.
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Streamline services and internal structures for efficiency and reduced complexity.
Some Methods We use
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BAPO—Business, Architecture, Process, and Organization—is a decision-making framework that emphasizes the interconnectedness of key dimensions in an organization. It helps organizations balance strategic goals, technical systems, operational workflows, and the people involved, ensuring sustainable and effective solutions.
Business: Focuses on value creation, customer needs, and strategic objectives that drive organizational success.
Architecture: Encompasses the technical and structural foundations needed to support business goals, including systems, tools, and infrastructure.
Process: Refers to the workflows, practices, and methodologies that deliver value efficiently and effectively.
Organization: Includes the people, teams, culture, and leadership that enable and sustain business operations.
The BAPO framework highlights the need to align these four dimensions, ensuring that decisions in one area support and reinforce the others. For example, a new business strategy should be backed by appropriate architectural investments, streamlined processes, and an organizational structure that can execute the plan effectively.
By using BAPO, organizations can create a holistic approach to change and innovation, breaking down silos and fostering a shared understanding across all levels of the business. This alignment helps drive agility, scalability, and long-term success.
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Value Stream Identification and Mapping is a strategic methodology designed to help organizations visualize and optimize how value is delivered to their customers. While both identification and mapping are part of the process, each has its own purpose and can provide unique benefits depending on the organization's goals and maturity level.
Value Stream Identification
This initial step focuses on defining and recognizing the critical value streams within an organization. A value stream is the series of activities—both value-adding and non-value-adding—that take a product or service from concept to customer delivery.
The key benefits of Value Stream Identification include:
Clarifying Organizational Focus: Identifying value streams ensures alignment with customer needs and strategic goals.
Creating a Shared Understanding: It brings visibility to how different teams and departments contribute to delivering value.
Highlighting Bottlenecks and Gaps: Even without deep mapping, identifying value streams can reveal misaligned priorities, silos, or areas of inefficiency.
Prioritization for Change: Organizations can determine which value streams to focus on first, ensuring efforts are targeted where they will have the greatest impact.
Value Stream Identification is particularly useful for organizations in the early stages of process improvement. It provides a high-level overview and sets the foundation for deeper analysis. Organizations may choose to stop at identification initially to create awareness, foster alignment, and gain buy-in from stakeholders before committing to the more detailed mapping process.
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Value Stream Mapping (VSM) is a visual tool used to analyze and optimize how value flows through a process. By mapping out each step from start to finish, organizations can identify inefficiencies, reduce waste, and improve the overall flow of work. Originally developed in Lean manufacturing, VSM is now widely applied in software development, service industries, and business operations to enhance efficiency, quality, and responsiveness.
How Value Stream Mapping Works
VSM provides a structured approach to understanding how work moves through a system by:
Mapping the current state – Visualizing every step in a process, including workflows, handoffs, and wait times.
Identifying waste and bottlenecks – Spotting delays, inefficiencies, and non-value-adding activities.
Defining the future state – Designing a more efficient, streamlined version of the process.
Prioritizing improvements – Implementing targeted changes to enhance speed, quality, and resource utilization.
Why It Matters
VSM helps organizations see the bigger picture and make data-driven decisions about where to improve. It enables teams to eliminate unnecessary steps, reduce delays, and align work with customer needs. By providing a clear, shared understanding of how value flows, VSM fosters collaboration across teams and departments, ensuring that efforts are focused on what truly matters.
Applications
VSM is widely used in software development, operations, and service delivery to optimize workflows and improve outcomes. In product development, it helps teams reduce cycle time, minimize handoffs, and improve delivery predictability. In service environments, it ensures that customer needs are met more efficiently and effectively. Organizations use VSM to continuously refine their processes, ensuring they remain adaptive, customer-focused, and operationally efficient.
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Team Topologies, developed by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais, is a framework for designing and evolving team structures in modern organizations. It emphasizes creating team arrangements that align with business goals, foster collaboration, and minimize cognitive load, enabling teams to deliver value efficiently and sustainably.
The framework identifies four fundamental team types, each with a specific role:
Stream-aligned teams: Focused on delivering end-to-end value for a specific product, service, or customer journey.
Enabling teams: Supporting stream-aligned teams by providing expertise, training, or guidance in specialized areas.
Complicated subsystem teams: Handling areas that require deep, specialized knowledge, such as algorithms or complex systems.
Platform teams: Building and maintaining platforms that streamline work for other teams, enhancing their efficiency.
Team Topologies also defines three interaction modes—collaboration, facilitation, and service—to guide how teams work together. It encourages organizations to manage dependencies thoughtfully, reduce handoffs, and adapt team boundaries as needs evolve.
By applying Team Topologies, organizations can optimize their team structures to support fast flow, enhance autonomy, and maintain alignment, driving both agility and long-term success in complex environments.
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Developed by Jurgen Appelo, unFIX is a pattern library designed to help organizations create adaptive, flexible, and scalable ways of working. Instead of imposing a rigid framework, unFIX offers modular building blocks— this includes specific building blocks which can be combined to fit an organization’s unique context.
unFIX is built around five key pattern groups that provide a structured yet adaptable approach to organizational design:
Structural Patterns define how teams are arranged and interact, including Base, Crew, and Leadership Cells, which help balance autonomy and alignment.
Teaming Patterns guide how individuals collaborate, ensuring that roles and responsibilities evolve in response to business needs.
Decision Patterns help organizations determine how choices are made, using concepts like Autonomy Gradient to balance flexibility with governance.
Goal-Setting Patterns provide methods for aligning teams with strategic objectives while maintaining adaptability.
Process & Growth Patterns focus on continuous improvement, learning, and organizational scaling.
A key advantage of unFIX is its visual and workshop-ready approach. Organizations can use its set of cards to experiment with different configurations, refining their design based on real-world challenges. This makes unFIX an evolutionary alternative to static models, empowering businesses to stay resilient, customer-centric, and innovative in a rapidly changing environment.
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The Cynefin Framework, developed by Dave Snowden, is a strategic model that helps organizations navigate complexity, uncertainty, and change. It categorizes challenges into five domains—Clear, Complicated, Complex, Chaotic, and Confused—each requiring a tailored approach to decision-making and problem-solving. Additionally, the framework incorporates liminal spaces, which represent transitional states between these domains, allowing organizations to navigate shifts with greater awareness and adaptability.
Clear: Routine operations with predictable outcomes; focus on efficiency and standard processes.
Complicated: Scenarios requiring expert analysis and structured problem-solving; prioritize expertise and established methods.
Complex: Adaptive challenges where outcomes emerge over time; emphasize experimentation, learning, and iterative solutions.
Chaotic: Crisis situations needing immediate action to stabilize and restore order before planning can occur.
Confused: Unclear circumstances where understanding and categorization are needed to determine the appropriate response.
Liminal spaces occur at the boundaries of these domains, such as moving from Complex to Clear or from Chaotic to Complex. These transitional zones are opportunities for learning, creativity, and innovation but can also involve discomfort and ambiguity. Organizations that recognize and navigate liminal spaces effectively can better adapt to change, foster resilience, and harness the potential of transformation.
By leveraging the Cynefin Framework and its liminal theories, leaders can align their strategies to meet the unique demands of different situations, ensuring sustained success in an ever-evolving landscape.The Cynefin Framework, developed by Dave Snowden, is a strategic model that helps organizations navigate complexity, uncertainty, and change. It categorizes challenges into five domains—Clear, Complicated, Complex, Chaotic, and Confused—each requiring a tailored approach to decision-making and problem-solving. Additionally, the framework incorporates liminal spaces, which represent transitional states between these domains, allowing organizations to navigate shifts with greater awareness and adaptability.
Clear: Routine operations with predictable outcomes; focus on efficiency and standard processes.
Complicated: Scenarios requiring expert analysis and structured problem-solving; prioritize expertise and established methods.
Complex: Adaptive challenges where outcomes emerge over time; emphasize experimentation, learning, and iterative solutions.
Chaotic: Crisis situations needing immediate action to stabilize and restore order before planning can occur.
Confused: Unclear circumstances where understanding and categorization are needed to determine the appropriate response.
Liminal spaces occur at the boundaries of these domains, such as moving from Complex to Clear or from Chaotic to Complex. These transitional zones are opportunities for learning, creativity, and innovation but can also involve discomfort and ambiguity. Organizations that recognize and navigate liminal spaces effectively can better adapt to change, foster resilience, and harness the potential of transformation.
By leveraging the Cynefin Framework and its liminal theories, leaders can align their strategies to meet the unique demands of different situations, ensuring sustained success in an ever-evolving landscape.
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Systems Thinking is a holistic approach to understanding and managing the interconnected elements within an organization or broader system. Rather than focusing on individual components in isolation, Systems Thinking emphasizes the relationships, feedback loops, and dynamics that influence outcomes over time.
Organizations operate as complex systems where changes in one area can ripple across others, often producing unintended consequences. By adopting a Systems Thinking perspective, leaders can identify patterns, anticipate potential impacts, and design more effective, sustainable solutions.
Key principles of Systems Thinking include:
Interconnectedness: Recognizing how parts of the system influence one another.
Feedback Loops: Understanding how reinforcing or balancing feedback drives system behavior.
Causality Over Time: Identifying root causes and long-term effects rather than treating symptoms.
Emergence: Observing how collective behaviors arise from individual actions and interactions.
For organizations, Systems Thinking fosters collaboration, innovation, and adaptability. It encourages breaking down silos, aligning strategies with systemic goals, and addressing challenges at their core. By viewing problems through a systems lens, organizations can improve decision-making, manage complexity, and drive sustainable success.
Key practices include encouraging open dialogue, normalizing constructive feedback, and embracing failures as learning opportunities. By cultivating a culture where mistakes are seen as valuable for growth, teams can navigate the complex and uncertain nature of work more effectively. Psychological safety empowers teams to experiment, innovate, and adapt, driving performance and fostering a collaborative, supportive workplace.
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Improvement Kata is a structured, scientific approach to continuous improvement, built on hypothesis-driven experimentation and iterative learning. It helps individuals, teams, and organizations navigate the unknown by systematically expanding their knowledge threshold—the point where existing expertise is no longer sufficient, and new learning is required.
At its core, Improvement Kata follows a step-by-step routine: defining a long-term vision, assessing the current state, setting a target condition, and running small, structured experiments to overcome obstacles. This approach mimics the scientific method, where each experiment generates new insights, guiding the next step forward.
More than just a problem-solving technique, Improvement Kata builds a culture of adaptability, learning, and continuous progress. By embedding it into daily work and leadership practice, organizations develop the capability to tackle complex challenges, drive innovation, and remain responsive to change. Coaching is a key component, ensuring that improvement efforts are not just individual successes but become sustainable habits across teams and leadership levels.
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The VUCA framework—standing for Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, and Ambiguous—is a tool used to describe and navigate the challenges of today's fast-paced and unpredictable business environment. It highlights the dynamic nature of the world in which organizations operate, and emphasizes the need for adaptability, resilience, and strategic foresight.
Volatile: Situations that are subject to rapid and unpredictable change, often requiring quick responses and flexibility.
Uncertain: Scenarios where the future is unclear, making it difficult to predict outcomes or make long-term plans with confidence.
Complex: Challenges with many interrelated factors, making it hard to identify straightforward solutions or to understand all variables at play.
Ambiguous: Situations with unclear cause-and-effect relationships, where decision-making relies heavily on experimentation and ongoing learning.
The VUCA framework helps organizations understand the nature of the challenges they face, and guides leaders in developing strategies for agility, innovation, and resilience. By recognizing and embracing the characteristics of VUCA environments, organizations can create a culture of adaptability, empowering teams to respond effectively and capitalize on opportunities in times of uncertainty.
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Both&More Thinking challenges the idea that success requires choosing one path at the expense of another. Instead, it demonstrates how structure can coexist with flexibility, how short-term wins can align with long-term vision, and how logic can be complemented by creativity to navigate challenges. This approach doesn’t shy away from tensions but sees them as opportunities for innovation and growth.
Guided by principles like data-driven yet human-centered leadership and the balance of individual brilliance with team synergy, Both&More Thinking fosters an environment where every individual and every idea contributes to a greater whole. It’s about leading with confidence and humility, focusing on immediate outcomes while staying curious and open to future possibilities. By combining efficiency and innovation, organizations can optimize their current systems while creating space for breakthroughs that propel them forward.
What sets Both&More apart is its ability to inspire leaders and teams to look beyond trade-offs and embrace the “and” where others see “or.” By nurturing adaptability, emergence, and continuous evolution, this mindset helps organizations sustain what works while boldly exploring what’s next.
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Organizational Drivers and Requirements is a concept from the Sociocracy 3.0 (S3) framework, which helps organizations make purpose-driven and context-aware decisions. It provides a structured way to identify, articulate, and respond to the real needs and challenges an organization faces.
A driver in S3 is a situation that requires a response—a combination of a current reality and the impact it has on the organization. Identifying drivers helps teams focus on what actually matters, rather than acting based on assumptions or rigid plans. Drivers are not static; they evolve as the organization and its environment change.
Organizational requirements are derived from drivers. They define what is necessary to respond effectively to a given situation. These requirements guide decision-making, ensuring that strategies, structures, and processes align with the organization’s real needs rather than arbitrary goals.
This approach enables continuous adaptation, fosters collaborative decision-making, and ensures that improvements are driven by real challenges and opportunities rather than top-down directives. In practice, defining organizational drivers and requirements supports governance, change management, and strategic alignment, making it a powerful tool for creating responsive and resilient organizations.
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Psychological safety is the foundation of trust, learning, and innovation in any team or organisation. At Both And More, it is a core principle in how we approach our clients and their needs. Inspired by Amy Edmondson’s work, psychological safety ensures that people feel safe to take risks, voice concerns, and share ideas without fear of negative consequences.
Building and sustaining psychological safety is not just about creating a “safe space”—it’s about reinforcing behaviors that enable learning, experimentation, and continuous improvement. This includes normalizing constructive feedback, embracing failures as learning opportunities, and fostering open dialogue. When mistakes are seen as stepping stones to progress rather than setbacks, teams can navigate uncertainty with confidence and drive meaningful change.
By embedding these practices into daily work, organisations unlock higher performance, innovation, and resilience. Teams become more collaborative, more adaptable, and better equipped to tackle complex challenges—creating an environment where both people and the business thrive.
WhEre we have made a difference







