Browse our library of 72 Organizational Development templates, frameworks, and toolkits—available in PowerPoint, Excel, and Word formats.
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Organizational Development is a systematic approach to improving an organization's effectiveness through planned change in processes, culture, and structure. Successful initiatives require a commitment to continuous learning and adaptability. Leaders must prioritize alignment between strategy and people to drive sustainable results.
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Organizational Development Templates
Organizational Development Overview Top 10 Organizational Development Frameworks & Templates Designing Effective Diagnostic and Intervention Approaches Building Sustainable Learning and Adaptation Systems Defining OD Success and Sustaining Momentum Organizational Development FAQs Flevy Management Insights Case Studies
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Organizational Development (OD) is fundamentally different from a one-time restructuring or change initiative. It is a deliberate, long-horizon capability-building practice rooted in applied behavioral science. McKinsey research shows that 75% of organizations are failing to build high-performance cultures, yet most treat culture change as a discrete project rather than an ongoing developmental system. Effective OD practitioners approach culture, team effectiveness, and leadership capability as interconnected systems that require systematic diagnosis and sustained intervention.
The distinction matters. Organizational Change focuses on managing the mechanics of transition, moving people through a defined state shift. Organizational Design addresses structure, reporting lines, and formal roles. OD goes deeper. It uses diagnostic interviews, employee surveys, appreciative inquiry, and team interventions to surface root causes of performance gaps. It builds internal capability to sustain progress. OD work spans leadership alignment, team effectiveness, coaching systems, learning architecture, and values integration. All these interventions are designed to enable an organization to adapt continuously rather than merely survive discrete disruptions.
This list last updated April 2026, based on recent Flevy sales and editorial guidance.
TLDR Flevy's library includes 72 Organizational Development Frameworks and Templates, created by ex-McKinsey and Fortune 100 executives. Top-rated options cover Galbraith Star Model, McKinsey 7-S, operating model design, and org restructuring playbooks. Below, we rank the top frameworks and tools based on recent sales, downloads, and editorial guidance—with detailed reviews of each.
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck stands out by coupling a standardized six-phase Organization Design methodology with a governance framework that uses sign-off gates aligned to project complexity, and it was developed by ex-EY consultants to embed real-world rigor. It also includes an embedded Day In the Life (DILO) tool to visualize new roles and processes, a concrete asset beyond the generic framework. Primarily useful for HR business partners and line managers guiding design-phase OD initiatives, it supports governance setup and outcome measurement as projects transition into implementation. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck stands out by weaving a ten-step organizational-design framework with an early-focused capabilities thread, using a Venkat Matrix to surface strategic gaps alongside practical assessment tools. It provides templates for Vision and Business Architecture, a competency-mapping tool, and a Venkat Matrix to guide decision-making, making it useful for executives and consultants involved in an initial redesign and capability alignment. The resource is well suited for strategic planning sessions and transformation work where aligning vision with operational capabilities is critical. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck stands out by pairing a six-phase organizational design process with an embedded Organizational Design Maturity Model, giving practitioners a concrete, hands-on frame to assess both structure and behavior. It includes a detailed ODMM with 16 attributes across 4 maturity stages (Initial, Developing, Mature, Optimized) and references the BCG Smart Design approach, plus an Organizational Maturity Assessment available in PowerPoint and Excel. The resource is most beneficial for transformation teams conducting current-state assessments and redesigns who need a guided pathway from diagnosis through prototyping and behavioral change to ongoing improvement. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This integrated playbook fuses capability-driven structures with governance alignment and talent-to-strategy linkages, delivering a practical, end-to-end approach to enterprise redesign. It includes 100+ organizational design slides and 6 Excel models for spans, layers, governance, and ROI. The toolkit is especially valuable for CEOs, CHROs, COOs, strategists, and consultants steering large operating-model transformations who need a coherent framework to translate strategy into organizational design. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck distinguishes itself by pairing a structured 7-S diagnostic with an in-depth '7S Deep Dives' section that links each element to benchmarks, case examples, and diagnostic questions. It also includes practical PowerPoint templates to drive workshops and executive reviews, helping teams translate analysis into actionable plans. Overall, it is well aligned for strategy offices and transformation programs aiming to diagnose misalignment and drive realignment across the 7 elements. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck stands out by tying organizational performance to behavior, offering a three-step framework—Purpose, Design Elements, Execution—that translates strategic goals into concrete behavioral changes. A concrete detail a buyer wouldn't guess from the title is that it includes slide templates for use in their own presentations and stresses challenging traditional design assumptions to enable a behavior-driven approach. The resource is most relevant for Transformation and HR leaders guiding large-scale change initiatives who need to align execution plans with clearly defined behaviors and outcomes. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck distinguishes itself by pairing a structured three-step design framework with hands-on assessment tools that connect current-state diagnostics to future-state implementation. It includes blueprints for the target organization—covering P&L structure, degree of centralization, and role charters—and evaluates strategic options across divisional, functional, and matrix designs. The resource is most useful for transformation leaders and HR teams coordinating a current-state assessment and rollout of a high-performance operating model, helping them align design choices with strategic priorities and plan the implementation. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck stands out for its practical, strategy-aligned approach to organization design, tying eight core attributes to concrete vertical structures and cross-functional processes. It includes actionable templates and tools, notably a RAID analysis framework, to clarify roles and decision rights during implementation. This deck is especially useful for executives shaping strategy-aligned design and for integration leads coordinating cross-functional changes across divisions. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck centers on Galbraith's Star Model, detailing 5 design policies—Strategy, Structure, Processes, Rewards, and People—and showing how policy alignment can offset the downsides of any chosen structure. Unlike a pure theory deck, it includes slide templates and actionable templates that can be dropped into client presentations to operationalize the framework. It is particularly valuable for HR leaders and consultants who need to align organizational policies with strategic goals during redesign initiatives and to support clearer decision-making and engagement. [Learn more]
EDITOR'S REVIEW
This deck stands out by presenting Greiner's five-stage framework as a maturity-driven journey, linking each phase to a distinct evolution, crisis, and revolution that prompts concrete organizational responses. It includes practical templates and visual aids to operationalize the model, and it notes how industry growth rate can shape strategies across stages. The resource is especially helpful for executives diagnosing growth-stage bottlenecks and crafting stage-appropriate change plans to sustain momentum. [Learn more]
Every OD engagement begins with diagnosis. Leaders often assume poor performance stems from strategy or execution mechanics when the real drivers are behavioral and systemic. A manufacturing plant's throughput problem may trace to unclear accountability, inadequate cross-functional dialogue, or leadership behaviors that discourage candid feedback. Competent OD practitioners use structured methods: one-on-one interviews at multiple levels, pulse surveys, process walkthroughs, and culture assessments to distinguish symptom from cause.
Once diagnosis surfaces patterns, OD work targets specific levers. Team effectiveness interventions might address dysfunctional group dynamics by establishing psychological safety, clarifying roles, or redesigning meeting cadence. Leadership Coaching targets capability gaps in self-awareness, delegation, or emotional intelligence. Talent Pipeline work ensures high-potential employees have visibility, mentoring, and stretch assignments. Flevy's library of OD frameworks provides the diagnostic and intervention templates for this work. Internal practitioners and external advisors use these resources to execute with rigor and speed, rather than starting from blank paper.
OD practitioners distinguish between one-off training and learning systems. A 2-day leadership program teaches techniques but rarely changes behavior at scale. Sustainable OD builds feedback loops, peer learning cohorts, coaching cadences, and after-action reviews into daily operations. This is where OD connects to execution. Teams that practice regular retrospectives, surface disagreement in psychological-safe forums, and adjust course collaboratively outpace those that rely on command-and-control.
Research on leadership development effectiveness shows that 75% of L&D professionals report less than half of trained content gets applied on the job. Closing that gap requires designing learning systems into the work itself, not around it. Ready-made assessment tools and action-learning frameworks available on Flevy help organizations embed reflection and development into their existing cadence. Strategy reviews, talent calibrations, and post-project debriefs become learning moments without adding meetings or overhead.
OD outcomes are measurable but require different metrics than a change rollout. Track engagement survey scores, internal promotion rates, span of control ratios, and time-to-fill for critical roles. Involuntary turnover among high performers signals whether an organization is building capability or bleeding talent. Leadership self-reflection practices are linked to adaptability. Even simple pulse checks after key decisions strengthen this connection. Organizations where leaders practice regular self-reflection are twice as likely to believe they can quickly adapt to change.
The commitment required is structural, not episodic. OD functions partner with HR, Strategy, and operational leaders as an integrated capability. Where OD is treated as a cost center or a nice-to-have, momentum stalls when leadership attention shifts. Where OD is anchored to business imperatives like filling critical roles, accelerating manager capability, and sustaining culture through scale, it becomes self-reinforcing. The payoff is organizations that retain talent, adapt faster, and maintain psychological health during inevitable disruptions.
Here are our top-ranked questions that relate to Organizational Development.
The editorial content of this page was overseen by Joseph Robinson. Joseph is the VP of Strategy at Flevy with expertise in Corporate Strategy and Operational Excellence. Prior to Flevy, Joseph worked at the Boston Consulting Group. He also has an MBA from MIT Sloan.
Last updated: April 14, 2026
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