Organizational Assessment
Understand what is holding execution back and restore the organization’s capacity to perform
WINGMIND helps investors, boards and CEOs identify the human, leadership and organizational barriers that slow execution, performance and value creation.
An organizational assessment helps explain why a company is no longer executing as effectively as it should.
It goes beyond processes and HR practices. It examines the organization as an execution system: leadership, priorities, governance, roles, executive team effectiveness, coordination, management, culture and capacity for transformation.
The objective is to distinguish visible symptoms from root causes and clarify the decisions required across the organization, leadership team, accountabilities and operating model.
Why conduct an organizational assessment?
When the strategy appears clear but execution slows, the issue is rarely strategic alone. It is often organizational.
Decisions take longer, cross-functional initiatives struggle to move forward and priorities change without creating lasting alignment.
Silos become stronger, accountabilities grow unclear and the executive team spends too much time resolving conflicts and managing emergencies.
Growth slows, a function or business unit drifts, engagement declines or results no longer reflect the company’s potential.
When is an organizational assessment useful?
An assessment is particularly useful when leaders need to understand quickly what is blocking execution and where to act first.
- Growth is slowing despite favorable market conditions.
- Decisions are becoming slow, difficult or excessively centralized.
- The executive team no longer operates as a true team.
- Priorities are insufficiently clear or shared.
- Responsibilities are unclear, overlapping or not fully owned.
- Teams are working in silos.
- Conflicts are increasing between leaders, functions or business units.
- A critical function has become a bottleneck.
- A business unit or activity is drifting away from its objectives.
- The organization can no longer absorb growth or complexity.
- An acquisition needs to be integrated.
- A transformation is not producing the expected results.
- Engagement, retention or the employee climate is deteriorating.
- An investor or board wants to understand what is constraining value creation.
What we assess
We assess the dimensions that determine the organization’s actual ability to execute its strategy.
Cohesion, trust, complementarity, roles, decision quality, governance and the ability to mobilize the organization.
Vision, objectives, roadmap, trade-offs, performance indicators, accountabilities and alignment across functions.
Structure, roles, processes, operating model, management routines, resources and cross-functional collaboration.
Engagement, management practices, accountability, cooperation, organizational climate and capacity for change.
The organizational issues we identify most often
An organizational assessment should move from visible symptoms to the underlying causes.
Common symptoms
- Conflicting priorities
- Slow or unstable decisions
- Open or latent conflicts
- Limited collective ownership among executives
What we clarify
The quality of collective leadership, individual roles, governance rules, underlying tensions and the levers required to restore alignment.
Common symptoms
- Results below expectations
- Unclear objectives
- Localized issues affecting the wider company
- Tensions with other functions
What we clarify
The respective impact of local leadership, resources, processes, positioning, governance and interfaces with the rest of the organization.
Common symptoms
- Each function optimizes its own perimeter
- Cross-functional trade-offs are difficult
- Initiatives involving several teams move slowly
- Tensions increase between departments
What we clarify
The critical interfaces, shared accountabilities, coordination mechanisms and recurring friction points that constrain cooperation.
Common symptoms
- The company grows faster than its processes
- Management remains too informal
- Senior leaders become bottlenecks
- Tools, routines and roles no longer keep pace
What we clarify
The organization’s ability to scale: structure, delegation, management, governance, resources, priorities and the maturity of critical functions.
Common symptoms
- Extensive discussion but limited follow-through
- Diluted accountabilities
- Missed objectives without clear consequences
- Weak follow-up on commitments
What we clarify
Performance management mechanisms, management routines, indicators, decision quality and the organization’s ability to deliver on commitments.
Common symptoms
- Transformation plans remain theoretical
- Managers do not reinforce priorities consistently
- Teams resist or do not understand the purpose of the change
- Results remain below expectations
What we clarify
The barriers related to leadership, communication, transformation governance, management capability and culture.
Our approach
We combine several sources of evidence to produce an independent, reliable and actionable view of the organization.
What you receive
A clear view of the root causes and priority decisions required to restore execution.
A clear view of the organization’s strengths, vulnerabilities and dysfunctions.
- Leadership and governance
- Strategic clarity
- Organization and processes
- Management, culture and human capital
A hierarchy of issues that focuses effort where it will have the greatest impact.
- Critical risks
- Execution barriers
- Quick wins
- Structural decisions
Concrete recommendations to restore execution and strengthen sustainable performance.
- Governance and decision-making
- Roles and accountabilities
- Target organization
- Support for leaders and teams
Organizational assessment, audit or diagnostic?
Different market terms for the same type of organizational evaluation.
The terms organizational assessment, organizational audit and organizational diagnostic are often used to describe closely related approaches.
In each case, the objective is to understand the strengths, vulnerabilities and dysfunctions that influence a company’s ability to execute its strategy.
WINGMIND primarily uses the term organizational assessment, while covering the full range of dimensions generally associated with an organizational audit or diagnostic: leadership, governance, roles, executive team effectiveness, processes, management, culture and transformation capability.
Whatever term is used, the central question remains the same: does the organization have the leadership, clarity and operating model required to deliver its ambition?
Why WINGMIND?
An approach connected to business priorities, governance decisions and the real conditions of execution.
An understanding of governance, execution risk and value creation shaped by private equity experience.
We do not simply provide a diagnosis. We help prioritize the issues and translate findings into concrete decisions.
More than 100 assignments across 10 countries with investors, CEOs, SMEs, scale-ups and companies undergoing transformation.
Frequently asked questions
Key questions about organizational assessments.
What is the difference between an organizational assessment and an HR audit?
An HR audit generally focuses on HR practices, processes and risks. An organizational assessment examines the company’s wider ability to execute: leadership, governance, roles, processes, management, culture, collaboration and transformation capability.
How long does an organizational assessment take?
Depending on the scope, an assessment can be completed within a few weeks. The objective is to produce a clear view of the main execution barriers, root causes and action priorities quickly.
Who takes part in the assessment?
The scope depends on the situation. Participants may include executives, leadership team members, key managers, heads of critical functions, investors, board members or employees.
When is an organizational assessment most useful?
It is particularly useful during growth, transformation, restructuring, underperformance, a leadership transition, a build-up or whenever the company is no longer executing its strategy effectively.
Can the assessment focus on one team, function or business unit?
Yes. The scope may cover the entire company, a business unit, a critical function or the executive team, depending on the question to be addressed.
Can WINGMIND support implementation after the assessment?
Yes, where useful. WINGMIND can support governance changes, role clarification, executive team alignment, executive coaching, organizational transformation and change implementation.
Related approaches
Explore the approaches that can complement an organizational assessment.
Let’s discuss your situation
If your organization is slowing down, teams are becoming misaligned or you need to understand what is blocking execution, an organizational assessment can clarify the root causes and priority decisions.
Email: contact@wingmind.co
LinkedIn: David Chouraqui
Book a meeting: Schedule a conversation
Founded by David Chouraqui, a former private equity investor and entrepreneur, WINGMIND helps investors, boards and CEOs assess and strengthen the human and organizational factors that drive execution and value creation.

