- Leaders inspire and enable others to do their absolute best, together to realize a meaningful and rewarding shared purpose.
- Deputies are second in command, empowered to act in their leader’s absence.
- Chiefs of Staff give leaders leverage by managing them, priorities, programs and projects, and communication.
- Managers of units, functions, programs and projects directly manage pieces of the overall puzzle and are accountable for delivery of their unit, function, program or project’s results.
- Contributors work for unit, function, program or project managers and are responsible for delivering their own work.
- Coordinators administratively coordinate others’ efforts, but are neither accountable nor responsible – unless they are acting as program or project managers or contributors.
- Deputies are accountable for the decisions they make in their leader’s absence.
- Chiefs of Staff spend a lot of their time consulting and providing input, making others more efficient and effective across the enterprise.
- Unit, function, program and project managers are accountable for delivering results in their areas and, in the spirit of bounded authority, make tactical decisions along the way.
- Contributors are responsible for, wait for it, their contributions.
- Coordinators spend their time communicating across the people within a project if they are the project coordinator or across projects if they are the program coordinator.