# Can Matrix Orgs Actually Work?

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Lattice
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QK7XrBwuRA
- **Дата:** 29.05.2026
- **Длительность:** 3:10
- **Просмотры:** 31

## Описание

Matrix organizations are built different, with ICs reporting to a minimum of two bosses: One at the department level, and one (or more) at the project level. For HR, that means coordinating performance reviews from multiple stakeholders. It also means making sure roles and priorities are crystal clear for everyone across the org.

This view explains how matrix organizations work, their pros and cons, and what it all entails for HR teams.

Dig deeper here: https://lattice.com/articles/what-are-matrix-organizations

0:00 - Intro
0:23 - Traditional vs. Matrix Org Charts
1:06 - Matrix Organizations Pros and Cons
1:42 - Types of Matrix Orgs: Weak vs. Balanced vs. Strong
2:31 - What It Means for HR
2:51 - More Resources

## Содержание

### [0:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QK7XrBwuRA) Intro

Imagine you have a boss. Great, normal, very classic. Now imagine you have two bosses — and they both think their project is the priority and neither of them knows about the other's deadline. Congratulations. You work in the matrix.

### [0:23](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QK7XrBwuRA&t=23s) Traditional vs. Matrix Org Charts

At a traditional company, the chain of command is simple. You report to one person who reports to another person all the way up. Tidy, predictable, comforting. On the flip side, in a matrix, employees report to more than one manager. Usually a functional head like your traditional department lead and then a manager overseeing a project. It's like an old school org chart but with a second dimension. One axis is your functional team like marketing, engineering, or finance — and then the other is your project and you live at the intersection.

### [1:06](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QK7XrBwuRA&t=66s) Matrix Organizations Pros and Cons

It's not all bad. And some companies operate this way for good reason. It lets you build cross-functional teams without constantly blowing up your org chart. Here's the thing about matrix companies. The benefits and the headaches are basically the same thing just viewed from different angles. On the good side, faster collaboration, flexible resources, better decision-making. On the complicated side, competing priorities, unclear accountability, and the eternal question of, wait, who's actually in charge here?

### [1:42](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QK7XrBwuRA&t=102s) Types of Matrix Orgs: Weak vs. Balanced vs. Strong

There are three types of matrix structures, weak, balanced, and strong. And they basically describe just how much power the project manager has relative to your regular boss. In a weak model, your functional manager calls the shots. And the project manager simply coordinates. In the balanced model, power is shared. Everyone negotiates. Sounds like a lot of fun. And then lastly, in the strong model, the project manager leads. And your functional manager focuses just on your development rather than your day-to-day work. Most large companies end up somewhere in between. Kind of a hybrid model that sounds great in a strategy deck, but requires a lot of calendar management in practice.

### [2:31](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QK7XrBwuRA&t=151s) What It Means for HR

For HR teams, matrix orgs require a bit more scaffolding than your traditional company. Roles need to be crystal clear. Performance management needs to account for input from multiple managers. And then someone needs to make sure that employees aren't being quietly assigned to six projects at the same time. This article goes deeper on all of this

### [2:51](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QK7XrBwuRA&t=171s) More Resources

including the honest truth about when a matrix structure stops working and it's time to simplify. We hope you enjoy it. Best of luck and happy reading.

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*Источник: https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/52641*