Keynote Presentation
Structures for Motion:
Org Design for Continuous Change
Evan Leybourn – Business Agility Institute
Evan Leybourn is the co-founder of the Business Agility Institute; a fiercely independent research and advocacy organization for the next generation of companies. Companies that are agile, innovative and dynamic – perfectly designed to thrive in today’s unpredictable markets. As the Head of Advocacy and Thought Leadership at BAI – Evan leads research initiatives, collaborates with corporate members on their stickiest business challenges, and shares insights and aha’s to accelerate business success – no matter what the future brings.
Evan is also the author of Directing the Agile Organisation (2012) and #noprojects; A Culture of Continuous Value (2018), as well as numerous BAI publications.
Companies are not stable systems, but the demand for constant adaptation carries a real human cost. Drawing on research from 2500+ companies, Evan argues that modern organizational design must create dynamic structures and systems that actively carry this burden of continuous change.
Companies are not stable systems, but the demand for constant adaptation carries a real human cost. Whether driven by internal ambition or external pressure, people are continually expected to change what they focus on and how they work. All the while operating within systems and structures that were designed for consistency and predictability. Over time, as the gap between new demand and existing design widens, it becomes increasingly difficult to keep up. In other words, friction begets fatigue.
Drawing on research from over two and a half thousand companies, Evan argues that sustainable adaptive change is not achieved by asking people to be endlessly resilient, but by redesigning the systems around them. This keynote explores how modern organizational design, through structures, governance, funding, and decision-making, can actively carry the burden of continuous change. And from this, enable organizations to move, evolve, and adapt without exhausting the people inside them.

