How to Reduce Operational Friction and Decrease Organizational Complexity
Overly complex processes, procedures, systems, and decision-making structures create operational friction that:
Few things drain momentum faster than:
To improve business performance, strengthen organizational agility, and retain top talent, leaders must make it easier for people to get the right work done in the right way.
Unfortunately, many organizations focus on treating symptoms instead of addressing the root causes of operational friction. They add more meetings to improve communication, more approvals to reduce risk, or more processes to create consistency — often making work even harder instead of simpler.
The first step to reduce operational friction is understanding where complexity exists and how it interferes with execution, collaboration, and decision-making.
Understand Different Perspectives on Operational Friction
Operational friction looks different depending on where someone sits in the organization.
Customers typically experience friction as unnecessary effort. They want interactions to feel seamless, responsive, and straightforward — especially during critical moments that shape loyalty and trust.
Senior leaders often view complexity through a strategic lens — product lines, organizational layers, geographic expansion, acquisitions, business units, technologies, or operational scale.
Employees, however, experience operational friction much more directly in their day-to-day work. Common sources include:
When these barriers accumulate, productivity, accountability, collaboration, innovation, and engagement suffer.
If your goal is to simplify execution and reduce organizational complexity, begin by identifying where friction is most disruptive to performance.
Misaligned success metrics and conflicting incentives frequently make the problem worse.
Signs of strategic ambiguity include:
— Employees frequently seeking approval before acting.
— Slow or inconsistent decision-making.
— Limited cross-functional collaboration.
— Confusion about priorities.
— Inconsistent execution across teams or regions.
Research from Harvard Business Review has consistently shown that organizations with clear strategic alignment outperform peers in execution speed, employee engagement, and adaptability.
If strategy is unclear, operational friction inevitably increases.
Leaders should regularly evaluate whether people, teams, and functions are organized to support efficient execution.
Surveys, focus groups, interviews, and workflow assessments can help uncover where time, energy, and resources are being wasted.
Indicators of structural friction often include:
— Resources spread too thin.
— Excessive handoffs between teams.
— Decision bottlenecks.
— Role confusion.
— Conflicting priorities across functions.
— Slow responsiveness to customers or market changes.
McKinsey research has repeatedly found that organizations with simplified structures and clearer accountability adapt more quickly and execute strategy more effectively.
Organizations often accumulate unnecessary layers of approvals, meetings, technologies, reporting requirements, and policies without questioning whether they still add value.
Leaders should assess whether complexity is being reinforced by:
— Risk-averse decision-making.
— Overly cautious management practices.
— Siloed thinking.
— Legacy systems.
— Duplicative technologies.
— Inefficient workflows.
— Unclear ownership.
The goal is not oversimplification. The goal is to ensure that the way work gets done is as focused, efficient, aligned, and frictionless as possible.
Toyota’s widely studied continuous improvement model offers a strong example of how empowering employees to identify and eliminate inefficiencies can improve both performance and engagement over time.
The Bottom Line
The best leaders know how to align strategy, culture, structure, and talent to reduce operational friction and decrease unnecessary complexity. When done well, organizations operate with greater clarity, faster execution, stronger collaboration, and far less frustration.
If you are worried that your strategy or ways of doing business is too complex, download 7 Ways to Stress Test Your Strategic Clarity to see where you stand.

Tristam Brown is an executive business consultant and organizational development expert with more than three decades of experience helping organizations accelerate performance, build high-impact teams, and turn strategy into execution. As CEO of LSA Global, he works with leaders to get and stay aligned™ through research-backed strategy, culture, and talent solutions that produce measurable, business-critical results. See full bio.
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