New Framework for Design Leadership Reveals Overlap Is Key, Not Problem
Breaking: Design Leadership Overhaul Urges Embrace of Role Overlap
San Francisco, CA — A provocative new framework for design team leadership is challenging decades of conventional wisdom, arguing that the overlap between Design Managers and Lead Designers is not a bug but a feature. The model, dubbed “The Design Organism,” positions the two roles as interdependent systems that thrive on shared responsibilities rather than rigid boundaries.
“The old approach of drawing clean lines on an org chart is a fantasy,” said Dr. Elena Torres, a design leadership researcher and co-author of the framework. “In reality, both roles care deeply about team health, design quality, and shipping great work. The magic happens when you embrace the overlap instead of fighting it.”
Background: The Org Chart Myth
Traditionally, organizations have attempted to separate Design Manager and Lead Designer responsibilities: the Manager handles people—career growth, psychological safety, workload—while the Lead Designer handles craft—skills, standards, deliverables. This binary model, however, often leads to confusion, gaps, or the “too many cooks” scenario.
The Design Organism framework, developed over five years of studying high-performing teams, proposes that a healthy design team functions like a living organism. The Design Manager tends to the “mind” (team dynamics, safety, growth), while the Lead Designer nurtures the “body” (craft skills, design standards, hands-on work). Yet, just as mind and body are not fully separate, these roles must collaborate across three critical systems.
Three Systems of Shared Leadership
The framework identifies three interconnected systems, each requiring both roles to contribute — but with one taking primary responsibility.
The Nervous System: People & Psychology
The Design Manager acts as primary caretaker, monitoring psychological safety, feedback loops, and workload. The Lead Designer supports by identifying craft growth opportunities and flagging skill stagnation. “You can’t have a healthy person without both mind and body working in harmony,” Torres added.
The Muscular System: Craft & Execution
Here, the Lead Designer leads, setting design standards and guiding hands-on quality. The Design Manager supports by removing blockers and ensuring the team has time to refine skills. “Both roles must be fluent in the other’s domain to avoid blind spots,” explained Marcus Chen, a senior design director who piloted the framework.
The Circulatory System: Strategy & Vision
Both roles co-own this system — the Manager aligning organizational goals with team capacity, the Lead Designer ensuring design decisions tie back to user needs. “This is where the overlap is most valuable,” Chen said. “Shared leadership prevents strategic drift.”
What This Means for Design Teams
The framework signals a shift from siloed accountability to distributed ownership. Teams that adopt it can expect fewer handoff bottlenecks, faster decision-making, and higher retention — because both managers and lead designers feel equally invested in outcomes.
“This isn’t about blurring roles into chaos,” Torres emphasized. “It’s about recognizing that the best work happens when leaders share the lens — one focusing on the team’s heartbeat, the other on its craft pulse.”
Design leaders are urged to revisit their org structures, starting with mapping shared responsibilities rather than dividing them. The full framework, including diagnostic tools for assessing team health, is available at designorganism.org.
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