CONCEPT
Organizational Health
Lencioni's defining concept — an organization is
healthy when its leadership is cohesive, its operations aligned with identity, and its people capable of honesty about knowledge, ignorance, and fear.
Organizational health, in Lencioni's framework, is the single greatest
competitive advantage an organization can achieve—more important than strategy, technology, or talent. A healthy organization is one in which minimal politics exist, minimal confusion about direction, high morale, low unwanted turnover, and high productivity. These outcomes are not achieved through better plans or smarter people but through better relationships—specifically, through the systematic elimination of the five dysfunctions that prevent teams from functioning at their potential. The concept reframes organizational effectiveness from a strategic problem to a relational one, and from a destination to be reached to an ongoing discipline to be maintained. Health is not achieved once and then possessed; it is built through daily practices that reinforce trust, normalize
productive conflict, clarify commitment, maintain accountability, and focus
collective attention on what actually matters.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Lencioni developed the organizational health framework across multiple books, most comprehensively in The Advantage (2012), which argued that the vast majority of organizations are