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現場から生まれた「社腸」という組織論で、会社の詰まりを言語化する

Case 05: How Organizations Destroy Their Own Capability

Abstract visual representing organizational pathology and structural diagnosis

Organizations rarely lose capability by accident.
They dismantle it—quietly, systematically, and often with good intentions.

What appears as decline is usually the result of internal erosion, not external pressure.



Capability Is Not a Resource

Many organizations treat capability as something to be “acquired.”

Hire skilled people.
Bring in experts.
Outsource difficult functions.

This approach misunderstands the nature of capability.

Capability is not a resource.
It is a systemic outcome.

It emerges from:

  • structure
  • continuity
  • internal learning
  • repeated practice under stable conditions

Remove these, and capability collapses.



The Illusion of Replacement

When internal capability weakens, organizations often respond by replacing people.

New hires.
New teams.
New leadership.

This creates the illusion of action.

But replacement without structural continuity does not restore capability.
It resets it.

The organization becomes dependent on individuals rather than systems.



Outsourcing as a Structural Shortcut

Outsourcing is often framed as efficiency.

In practice, it frequently serves as a shortcut around structural reform.

Instead of fixing:

  • decision bottlenecks
  • incentive misalignment
  • knowledge silos

Organizations externalize the function.

The immediate problem disappears.
The internal system deteriorates further.



Capability Requires Friction

Internal capability develops through friction:

  • slow feedback
  • repeated failure
  • accumulation of tacit knowledge

Outsourcing removes this friction.

What remains is execution without understanding.

Over time, the organization loses the ability to:

  • diagnose problems
  • adapt processes
  • recover independently



When Capability Becomes a Threat

In some organizations, internal capability is not rewarded.

It challenges hierarchy.
It exposes inefficiencies.
It questions established authority.

As a result, capable units are:

  • isolated
  • overburdened
  • ignored
  • or eventually dissolved

The system protects itself by eliminating what it cannot absorb.



Structural Self-Sabotage

Organizations often describe this outcome as unavoidable.

Market pressure.
Talent shortage.
Speed requirements.

But the pattern is consistent.

Capability is not lost because it is unnecessary.
It is lost because the structure cannot sustain it.



Diagnosis

When an organization:

  • repeatedly replaces expertise
  • depends on external solutions
  • fails to retain institutional knowledge

The issue is not strategy.

It is structural self-sabotage.

Until structure changes,
capability will continue to be destroyed—
by the organization itself.

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