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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

タグ: organizational analysis

  • Case 02: Why Good Practices Fail to Take Root in Organizations

    Case 02: Why Good Practices Fail to Take Root in Organizations

    Organizations often introduce “ good practices ” with confidence.
    The ideas are reasonable. The intentions are sincere.
    Yet, months later, nothing remains.

    The practice disappears quietly, as if it never existed.

    This is rarely a problem of motivation or competence.
    It is a structural phenomenon.



    The Illusion of Improvement

    New initiatives often create a temporary sense of progress.

    • A new framework is announced
    • Training sessions are conducted
    • Documentation is distributed

    For a short period, behavior changes.
    Meetings sound different. Reports look cleaner.

    Then, slowly, the organization returns to its previous state.

    The failure is usually interpreted as resistance or lack of discipline.
    This interpretation is convenient—and incorrect.



    When Structure Rejects Change

    Practices do not survive on intention alone.

    If the surrounding structure remains unchanged, the organization will treat the new practice as a foreign body.

    Common structural mismatches include:

    • Evaluation systems that reward old behaviors
    • Decision paths that bypass the new process
    • Time constraints that make adherence impractical

    In such environments, the practice is not adopted.
    It is filtered out.



    Symptoms of Non-Integration

    When a practice fails to take root, the symptoms are consistent.

    • Only a few individuals maintain it
    • Progress depends on personal effort
    • The practice collapses when key people leave

    At this stage, the organization often concludes that the idea itself was flawed.

    In reality, the idea was never integrated.



    Repeated Misdiagnosis

    The same explanation appears again and again:

    • “ People didn’t commit.”
    • “ The culture wasn’t ready.”
    • “ Execution was weak.”

    These explanations focus on individuals.
    They ignore the environment in which those individuals operate.

    As a result, the organization repeats the cycle—introducing new practices into an unchanged structure.



    Diagnosis

    A practice that cannot survive beyond specific individuals was never part of the system.

    It was an addition, not an integration.

    Until the structure changes, even the best practices will fail to take root.




    Explore the full case index

    This article is part of the Organizational Pathology case archive.
    All published cases can be found here:

    Organizational Pathology — Case Index

  • Case 01: The Relationship Between Organizational Structure and Human Capital

    Case 01: The Relationship Between Organizational Structure and Human Capital


    Defining the Problem

    Organizations often explain failure by pointing at people.

    The wrong hires. The lack of motivation. The missing talent.

    This explanation is convenient.

    It is also frequently incorrect.

    To understand recurring organizational failure, two concepts must be separated clearly:

    • Organizational Structure
      The system that determines how decisions are made, how information flows, and how work is evaluated.
    • Human Capital
      The people, skills, and behaviors operating inside that system.

    Confusing these two leads to persistent misdiagnosis.



    Structure Comes First

    Human performance does not exist in isolation.

    It emerges inside a structure.

    The same individual can appear highly competent in one organization and ineffective in another.

    The difference is rarely the person.

    Structure determines:

    • What behaviors are rewarded
    • What behaviors are punished
    • What problems are visible
    • What problems are ignored

    When outcomes repeat despite frequent personnel changes, the variable being adjusted is not the one causing the failure.

    If replacing people worked, the problem would have disappeared years ago.



    Common Misdiagnoses

    Many organizations repeat the same explanations:

    • “ We need better people.”
    • “ The team lacks ownership.”
    • “ The culture is not strong enough.”

    These explanations focus on symptoms, not causes.

    They assume that individuals are the primary drivers of outcomes, while structure plays a secondary role.

    In reality, the relationship is reversed.

    Blaming human capital for structural failure is not accountability.

    It is avoidance.



    Why This Distinction Matters

    Organizations that misunderstand this relationship tend to repeat a familiar cycle:

    • Hire new talent
    • Observe short-term improvement
    • Experience the same failure again

    The structure remains unchanged.

    Only the people rotate.

    At that point, the issue is no longer performance.

    It is pathology.

    Understanding the relationship between structure and human capital is not a solution by itself.

    It is the prerequisite for any accurate diagnosis.

    Without it, organizations continue treating symptoms—efficiently, consistently, and unsuccessfully.




    Explore the full case index

    This article is part of the Organizational Pathology case archive.
    All published cases can be found here:

    Organizational Pathology — Case Index