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By Carson Kolb
Restructuring Your Leadership Team Before It's Too LateHealth systems often wait until a crisis forces leadership restructuring, but the strongest organ...
Health systems often wait until a crisis forces leadership restructuring, but the strongest organizations recognize structural misalignment early and act deliberately. Knowing when and why to reshape your executive team is a strategic advantage, not an admission of failure.
Health systems evolve faster than their leadership structures. A team designed around a single-hospital operation doesn't scale when the system acquires two ambulatory networks and a post-acute division. Yet many organizations keep bolting new responsibilities onto existing roles instead of rethinking the structure itself.
This creates a compounding problem. Leaders stretch across portfolios they weren't hired to manage. Decision-making slows. Strategic priorities compete for attention inside the same reporting line. By the time the board notices, the issue isn't one person's performance it's the architecture around every person.
Spring 2026 is an especially relevant moment for this conversation. Many health systems completed significant growth moves over the past eighteen months, partnerships, service line expansions, technology overhauls. The leadership structures behind those moves deserve scrutiny now, before operational drag sets in.
When a health system doubles its outpatient footprint but keeps the same number of senior leaders overseeing operations, something gives. It's rarely dramatic. Instead, it shows up as:
Delayed decisions on capital allocation because too many initiatives compete for one executive's bandwidth
Inconsistent execution across sites because regional oversight hasn't been formalized
Talent attrition at the director and VP level, where high performers leave because upward mobility is blocked by a flat senior structure
Strategic drift, where the organization's stated priorities don't match where leadership attention actually goes
These symptoms get misdiagnosed constantly. Boards blame individual performance. Senior leaders blame resourcing. The real issue is structural, the team was built for a different organization.
Not every organizational challenge requires tearing up the leadership model. But certain conditions, especially when they appear in combination, point clearly toward structural change.
1. Your strategy has shifted, but your reporting lines haven't.
If your system moved aggressively into value-based care, population health, or digital access over the past two years, your leadership team should reflect those priorities at the senior level, not bury them two layers down.
2. Multiple executives are managing portfolios that have doubled in scope.
Role creep is normal. Role explosion is a design problem. When a single leader oversees clinical operations, quality, patient experience, and now two newly acquired facilities, the structure is asking too much of any individual.
3. Your board keeps asking "who owns this?"
If governance conversations repeatedly circle back to unclear accountability for major initiatives, the org chart has gaps. Clear ownership at the executive level isn't just an operational preference, it's a governance requirement.
4. You've lost more than one senior leader in twelve months for reasons other than retirement.
Turnover at the top rarely happens in isolation. When multiple executives leave, particularly to peer organizations, the structure itself may be creating dissatisfaction that no retention package can fix.
5. Merger, acquisition, or partnership integration stalled after the first six months.
The integration playbook usually addresses clinical alignment and system consolidation. Leadership structure gets treated as a phase-two problem. In practice, it should be phase one.
The most common mistake health systems make is treating leadership restructuring as an HR exercise. It's not. It's a strategic decision that should flow directly from where the organization is headed, not just where it's been.
A few principles that separate effective restructuring from cosmetic reshuffling:
Start with the strategy, not the people. Define the leadership capabilities and structures the organization needs for its next three to five years. Then assess how current leaders align. Reversing this sequence leads to structures designed around personalities rather than priorities.
Create roles that executives can actually succeed in. Overly broad portfolios set leaders up to fail. A well-scoped role with clear authority and measurable outcomes attracts better candidates and retains them longer.
Sequence the changes. Announcing a complete leadership overhaul on a Monday morning creates chaos. Phased restructuring, with clear communication at each step, preserves organizational stability and stakeholder confidence.
Don't confuse addition with restructuring. Adding a new C-suite title without changing reporting relationships or decision rights just adds complexity. True restructuring changes how power and accountability flow through the organization.
Organizations that restructure proactively, before performance erodes, spend less time in transition, lose fewer key leaders in the process, and execute their strategic plans faster. Organizations that wait until a crisis forces the conversation end up rebuilding under pressure, with fewer options and less room for thoughtful design.
If your leadership structure was built for the organization you were two years ago, the question isn't whether to restructure. It's whether you do it on your terms or on someone else's timeline.