JustOrg Design

JustOrg Design

Non-profit Organizations

San Francisco, CA 418 followers

Jeanne Bell & Dan Tucker, Co-Founders We help justice leaders get unstuck on organizational design.

About us

Our purpose is to cultivate and sustain the practice of strategic alignment in justice-committed organizations. In justice organizations, our expectations of work structures and processes are fundamentally different than in mainstream nonprofits and philanthropies. We created JustOrg Design specifically for leaders actively rethinking traditional ways of holding power and working to distribute decision-making in concert with their values of inclusion and justice. JustOrg Design helps organizations to get out of structural limbo: unwilling to sustain structures that have lost relevance but unsure of where to go next. We take as inspiration what the the renowned abolitionist and scholar Ruth Wilson Gilmore recently said: “If consciousness is the means through which we imagine ourselves into the future then organizations are the form.” If this resonates, we hope to connect with you on the path forward sometime soon.

Website
http://justorgdesign.com
Industry
Non-profit Organizations
Company size
2-10 employees
Headquarters
San Francisco, CA
Type
Privately Held
Founded
2022
Specialties
Non-profit Organizational Design and Non-profit strategy, structure, and decision-making

Locations

Employees at JustOrg Design

Updates

  • “Strategy: ---> Strategic Intent – How will we get there? ---> Drivers – What will we focus on? ---> Enablers – What frameworks, resources, and skills will we use?” Love this notion of “enablers.”👏🏼👏🏼 #organizationaldesign #strategy

    View profile for Alan (AJ) Silber, graphic

    Multiple 7-Figure Exit in 4 Years | Now Helping Founders Scale Their Sales Processes With Vantom Group

    The key to growth: connecting purpose, strategy & execution. 👇 Wendy McGuinness created the Strategy Pyramid after attending a short course at Harvard University in 2010. Her goal was simple. ---> To understand strategy better. What did she discover? Most companies miss the link between purpose and execution. That gap is where strategy breaks down—and that’s when the Strategy Pyramid was born. Purpose: ---> Mission – Why do we exist? ---> Values – What’s important to us? ---> Vision – What do we want to be? Strategy: ---> Strategic Intent – How will we get there? ---> Drivers – What will we focus on? ---> Enablers – What frameworks, resources, and skills will we use? Execution: ---> Targets and Initiatives – What will we need to do? ---> Performance Indicators – How will we know we are successful? ---> Strategy Map – How will we test and communicate the strategy? It’s about turning your purpose into actionable strategy, and... ---> Turning your strategy into measurable execution. -- Enjoyed this post? Share it with your audience! ♻️

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  • YES YES 👏🏼 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 “The rules, processes, and governance in place were designed—and they can be redesigned for smarter ways of working.” Let 2025 be the year social justice leaders go at org design with fresh, strategic, and courageous eyes. #organizationaldesign #leadership

    View profile for Jodie Goulden, graphic

    Guiding senior leaders to design organizations with impact. Certified Organization Design Professional (CODP)

    No quick fixes: org design gets you to smarter ways of working. Leaders sometimes feel overwhelmed, like the system is just not working for them. But you shouldn't have to work around it. Org design is about making changes to the system. The rules, processes, and governance in place were designed—and they can be redesigned for smarter ways of working. If you identify the organizational capabilities needed for your strategy, you'll figure out how to put in place the right 'systems' for your specific situation. I love bringing my org design knowledge to show leaders that they have agency to make changes to the system so that their organizations and people will thrive. That's what we do at Orgdesign Works. In this conversation with Tim Brewer and ⍙ Amy Springer from the Org Design Podcast, we talk about leadership, org design, and dancing. Thanks Beth Gunderson for the 'Dance Floor and Balcony' analogy. I'll put the link to the podcast in the comments for anyone who wants to listen.

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  • On making decisions work AFTER you make them. Critical!

    View profile for Paul Byrne, graphic

    Follow me for posts about leadership coaching, teams, and The Leadership Circle Profile (LCP)

    Stop Trying to Make the Right Choice—Focus on Making the Choice Right At the start of a new year, we often find ourselves faced with important decisions. Where should I focus my efforts? How should we allocate our budget? What will we start and stop? As a coach, I often work with leaders to help them make thoughtful, intentional choices—but I also emphasize that success often isn’t about finding the “perfect” option. In fact, choosing a path and starting to walk it is often far better than getting stuck in endless analysis, trying to get it right. The real work—and the real opportunity—lies in what happens after the decision is made. Harvard professor Ellen Langer offers a powerful reframe for this mindset: “Don’t waste time trying to make the right decision. Focus on making the decision right.” Similarly, Jeff Bezos underscores this with his philosophy of “decide and commit.” These ideas remind us that while thoughtful decision-making is valuable, overemphasis on the “right” choice can leave us stuck. What truly matters is how we commit to making any choice successful. Here’s why this approach works: 1. Decisions Aren’t Destiny. No choice guarantees success, and no single decision dooms us to failure. Outcomes are shaped by the effort, creativity, and persistence we bring after deciding. Whether it’s a career change, a project goal, or even personal priorities, it’s what happens next that makes the difference. 2. Action Beats Analysis. Spending too much time weighing every detail can lead to paralysis-by-analysis. Often, there’s no clear “right” choice, just a set of possibilities. Decide with the best information you have, trust your intuition, and commit to moving forward. 3. Commitment Creates Success. What makes a decision “right” isn’t the choice itself—it’s the energy and focus you put into making it work. Once you’ve chosen, go all in. It’s this effort that transforms a good decision into a great outcome. As you approach the year ahead, ask yourself: What decisions am I overthinking? How can I shift my focus from finding the “perfect” path to creating success with the path I choose? Make your best choice and then commit to making it work. Because, in the end, it’s less about the decision and more about what you do after you’ve decided.

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  • JustOrg Design reposted this

    View profile for Jeroen Kraaijenbrink, graphic
    Jeroen Kraaijenbrink Jeroen Kraaijenbrink is an Influencer

    According to 50 years of textbook wisdom, strategy is a linear, structured process from SWOT to measure and control. But, did you know this model was already called ‘traditional’ and ‘distorted’ 40 years ago? Time for a recall. There’s an extremely persistent myth about strategy: that it is a linear, step-by-step and largely analytical process. It goes like this: • You do a SWOT • You define a mission, vision, purpose or high level goals • You generate alternatives, options or scenarios • You choose and define targets and initiatives • You implement • You measure and control There’s variations of this model, but altogether this is the dominant approach we find in strategy textbooks for about half a century. And not just back then, also today. Most strategy scholars and experts today accept that this is not how strategy goes in reality. They realize that the world is too dynamic and complex for such an approach to work, and that strategy needs a more dynamic, short-cycle approach with more place for creativity, agility and iteration. Nevertheless, this model is so persistent that as soon as people speak about strategy, it is this model that comes to the surface. But guess what? There’s an interesting 1984 article by Roy Wernham in Long Range Planning about “The Awful Gap Between Strategy and Action.” In this article, Wernham calls this the “traditional” approach that doesn’t have much to do with reality. Here’s the most interesting quote from that article: “it is oversimplified for presentational or teaching purposes to the extent that it seriously distorts the reality” (p35). This is 1984. Almost 40 years ago. Do you still subscribe to this traditional approach? Wernham’s alternative (right side of the picture) may be realistic, but it is not very compelling. Therefore, we need an “in-between” approach that acknowledges the fuzziness of the real world, but at the same time provides method and structure. I call such an approach “Short-Cycle Strategy” and it is the heart of my teaching, mentoring and consulting. #strategyconsulting #changemanagement #developmentmanagement

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  • Yes Yes Yes—the required balance. “Balance is key here because on the opposite end, inclusion without efficiency is unsustainable. It will exhaust our resources and burn us all out.” — Farzin Farzad #organizationaldesign

    Efficiency at its core is about the conservation of energy. It exists all across the natural world. In an ideal world, we streamline our activities to meet our human needs so we can free up more physical and mental resources to pursue the things we love. However, over time, the connotation has shifted to represent a process that bolsters unlimited growth. We speak of efficient production and extraction not in service of humanity, but to support a hierarchical system in which only a handful of people truly benefit. Efficiency in this case has mostly a single direction, flowing our societal resources upward to the hands of the few to determine allocation. In this current state, efficiency and inclusion are antithetical, and in constant conflict. You cannot ignore the needs of a diverse population and still remain efficient to capitalist hyper-production, which requires a certain level of groupthink (and is enforced by either propaganda or physical coercion). True inclusion will always remain in conflict with capitalist efficiency unless we design a new system where they are in balance. Balance is key here because on the opposite end, inclusion without efficiency is unsustainable. It will exhaust our resources and burn us all out.

  • An excellent, must-save and must-read list from Julia Roig. #change #systemsthinking #communications

    View profile for Julia Roig, graphic

    Founder & Chief Network Weaver at The Horizons Project; bridging peacebuilding, social justice & democracy. Evangelist for Narrative Engagement Across Difference and Restorative Practices for Social Change.

    Time of year for Top 10 lists, so I compiled my favorite articles of 2024. Any I missed? 💫 Slow Change Can Be Radical Change, by Rebecca Solnit - http://bit.ly/3VYY4e4 “Describing the slowness of change is often confused with acceptance of the status quo. It’s really the opposite.” 💫 Healing Systems by Laura Calderon de la Barca, Katherine Milligan & John Kania - https://bit.ly/4iUuLDg "Systems carry trauma because they are relational." 💫 Calling People Forward Instead of Out: Ten Essential Steps by Justin Michael Williams & Shelly Tygielski - https://bit.ly/49Wmfzk "You can call anyone forward, but it doesn’t mean they’re going to immediately walk toward you. Remember, they may not have the tools yet to do so." 💫 Communication is Sacred: Why change happens in the spaces between us by Nora Bateson & Alexander Beiner - https://lnkd.in/eTYQqUGn "All living and social systems are vitalized through their relational ecologies. When the relationships shift, the whole structure of the surrounding relationships also shifts." 💫 Building a Reparative Organization and Nation by Aria Florant - https://lnkd.in/eWbm3eEG "When we expect perfection in leadership, we give up our individual and collective power, and the entire enterprise suffers. This is true in our organizations as well as our nation." 💫 Don't believe what they're telling you about misinformation by Manvir Singh - https://bit.ly/3BOImLA "[Scholars] encourage us to see misinformation more as a symptom than as a disease. Unless we address issues of polarization and institutional trust...we’ll make little headway against an endless supply of alluring fabrications." 💫 On Relational Infrastructure by Sam Rye - https://bit.ly/4gDfJQS "To take on challenges which rely on collective and collaborative efforts, we need to better understand how to cultivate connection, trust and shared identity." 💫 We Have Decades Of Research Telling Us How Change Works. We Need To Start Following The Evidence by Greg Satell "...if we know that shifts in knowledge and attitudes don’t necessarily result in changes in practice and that ideas about change are transmitted socially, we should focus our efforts on empowering enthusiasts rather than wordsmithing and broadcasting slogans." 💫 Convenings, Cohorts + Communities: Notes on so-called "impact" gatherings by Renee Lertzman, PhD - https://lnkd.in/eUcJ3uJR "We are in a collective global moment of figuring out, testing and experimenting with ways of bringing people together for impact." 💫 Beyond the Broadcasting Model by Sean Gibbons & Tristan Mohabir -  https://lnkd.in/ecZ3pgGG "Today’s communications landscape demands that social sector organizations move away from a 20th-century broadcasting approach and toward dialogue, relationship-building, and fostering community."

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  • A gorgeous poem about resting and readying from Angelique Power.

    View profile for Angelique Power, graphic

    President and CEO @ The Skillman Foundation | Non-profits, Philanthropy

    An Out-of-Office Poem We cannot come to the world right now.  We are currently out of these offices, out of zoom rooms, out of meetings, off teams, away from our desks.    Currently we are out of our work selves entirely.   Out of our composed selves.   Out of our time-constrained selves.   Almost some mornings it seems out   of our human presenting form selves.    We are briefly out of frustration for what we cannot change.   Out of anger at our own useless limits to create   something better for others quickly.  Out of hopelessness that what the world   deeply needs   is taking far too long to arrive.    We each are going to stand on the brink. One foot in the past, one in the future.  Reflecting on what was and imagining what might be.    We will see you on the other side.  The side where we shift from resting deeply to waiting restlessly.    Awaiting the moment we wake before the alarm   To get back to the place where we get to try at least to make things change.    Lacing up boots and scrambling toward the path rising up  From the past, well-worn from ancestors’ travels    Where the clouds streak purple at dawn and dusk  Reminding us that there is a rhythm to this universe  And our job is simply to find the current beat.    When we meet not to meet but to readily meet the moment.    So while we are out of office…  Don’t mistake the quiet for quitting.   Don’t confuse the rest with relinquishing.  When we return to our minds, to ourselves, to our mission, to our meaning, to our evolution of the revolution—the rest will be history and trust and believe….  It will also be history in the making. (Thank you for reading the annual poem I write to my staff at The Skillman Foundation. Here's to all we will do together in 2025.)

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  • Just exactly the questions leaders ought to be asking to start 2025. 👏🏼🔥👏🏼🔥👏🏼🔥👏🏼

    🌟 5 Organization Design Questions to Prep for 2025 🌟 De-cember—is more than just the last chapter of the year. It’s a chance to de-clutter, de-tach, de-lete, and even de-compose the habits, processes, or ideas that no longer serve us. It’s about making room for what truly matters in your organization. For leaders, this reflective process is not just about tidying up; it’s about creating space to innovate, realign, and prepare for the road ahead. With 2025 on the horizon, it’s time to ask some bold questions about our organizations—questions that challenge the status quo and unlock pathways for success. 🌟 Below are 5 Organization Design Questions to guide thinking and action as the new year approaches: 1️⃣ What to Let Go? Which processes, mindsets, or skills no longer serve our goals and should be left behind? Holding onto outdated approaches only weighs organizations down. Letting go creates the space needed to innovate and move forward with purpose. 2️⃣ How to Regain Focus? What single aspect is essential for achieving ambitious goals? How can you design your organization to strengthen and amplify that focus? Reclaiming focus is about cutting through the noise and building systems that channel energy into what truly matters. 3️⃣ How to Simplify? What can be simplified to improve efficiency, optimize results, and evoke well-being? Complexity often stalls progress. Streamlining processes drives results and unlocks organizational potential. 4️⃣ How to Engage? What actions will inspire meaningful connections and drive commitment toward shared goals? True engagement goes beyond surface-level initiatives—it’s about creating a shared sense of purpose that energizes teams and aligns them with strategic objectives. 5️⃣ How to Stay Relevant? What changes must you embrace to align with evolving trends and anticipate future demands? Staying relevant requires more than just keeping up; it’s about actively shaping the future and positioning your organization to lead in an ever-changing landscape. Each of these questions highlights essential pillars of organizational success. Reflecting on them now, as the year winds down, can set the stage for a stronger, more focused year ahead. How will your organization evolve in 2025? What will you let go of? Where will your focus sharpen? What changes will strengthen your impact and success in the new year? #OrganizationDesign #2025 #Focus #OrgDesign

    • 5 Organization Design Questions for 2025 - LC GLOBAL Consulting Inc.

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