Break Down Org Chart Silos: Why Design Managers and Lead Designers Must Embrace Overlap, Experts Say
Shared Leadership Model Redefines Design Team Structure
The traditional separation between Design Managers (people-focused) and Lead Designers (craft-focused) is a 'fantasy' that hinders team performance, according to a new framework emerging from design leadership circles. Instead of drawing clean lines on an org chart, teams should treat the design organization as a single living organism where both roles share overlapping responsibilities.
'You can't have a healthy person without both mind and body working in harmony,' said Dr. Maria Chen, a design leadership consultant who has studied the dynamic for over a decade. 'The magic happens when you embrace the overlap instead of fighting it.'
Background: The Flawed Org Chart
For years, companies have rigidly assigned Design Managers to handle people, career growth, and psychological safety, while Lead Designers own craft, standards, and hands-on execution. But in reality, both roles care deeply about team health, design quality, and shipping great work.
This creates confusion, overlap, and the dreaded 'too many cooks' scenario when roles aren't clearly defined. The new framework proposes that both roles must work together across three critical systems, each with a primary caretaker and a supporting role.
The Three Systems of a Healthy Design Team
1. The Nervous System: People & Psychology
Primary caretaker: Design Manager | Supporting role: Lead Designer
This system governs signals, feedback, and psychological safety. The Design Manager monitors the team's pulse, ensures healthy feedback loops, and prevents burnout. The Lead Designer provides sensory input on craft development needs and spots stagnating skills, offering growth opportunities the manager might miss.
2. The Musculoskeletal System: Craft & Standards
Primary caretaker: Lead Designer | Supporting role: Design Manager
This system handles design quality, process, and standards. The Lead Designer sets benchmarks, mentors on technique, and ensures output meets user needs. The Design Manager supports by adjusting workload to allow time for skill-building and reinforcing quality goals in career conversations.
3. The Circulatory System: Delivery & Communication
Shared responsibility | Both roles co-own
This system covers how work flows through the team, how decisions are communicated, and how feedback reaches stakeholders. Neither role owns it alone; they must synchronize to keep information moving smoothly and avoid bottlenecks.
What This Means for Design Teams
Immediate action: Stop fighting overlap. Start mapping which responsibilities belong primarily to each role and where they need to collaborate. Use the living organism metaphor to diagnose weak systems.
'When both roles work in harmony, the team becomes adaptable, innovative, and resilient,' Chen added. 'The old org chart fails because it doesn't reflect how human beings actually collaborate.'
Companies that adopt this framework can expect fewer conflicts over ownership, faster decision-making, and higher design quality. Teams should schedule regular 'overlap check-ins' where Design Manager and Lead Designer discuss each system's health.
For more details on implementing shared design leadership, see our guide on nervous system health and craft standards.
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