In Saturday’s post we looked at the 5 questions Alice had about implementing an organization-wide weekly status reporting procedure. Today we are going to continue the multiple-team theme by taking a look at how a single manager, such as Alice, can have multiple teams reporting to her, whilst at the same time being on multiple teams herself.
In the illustration below we have four organizational layers.
At the bottom there are team members reporting to a middle manager. Those middle managers report to a senior manager, and the senior managers report directly to the CEO.
This is very much the archetypal organizational tree that anyone who has studied business will be familiar with.

The size of an organization will dictate how many people there are at each level, and indeed how many levels there are in total, but it is safe to say that in most cases there will be more than two people answering to each manager. For example, there might be eight team members reporting to Middle Manager 1, fifteen people reporting to Middle Manager 2, and five Middle Managers reporting to Senior Manager 1.
So, how does Weekly Debrief handle this situation of multiple teams where a manager might be receiving a weekly debrief report from his team members whilst at the same time reporting to a more senior manager?
Weekly Debrief copes with this kind of situation with ease. All you need to do is set up each team with a different name. For example you might have XYZCorpPersonel, XYZCorpFinance, etc.
Each week Weekly Debrief will send out information requests to everyone on each on each of the teams. If a person is on more than one team, which can often happen, they will receive more than one information request.
For example, if a person is on the Finance Team, whilst at the same time being on the Board of Directors team they’d get two requests for information. One of them would relate to the Finance Team and the second would relate to the Board of Directors. The information they respond with may be exactly the same or it may be reworded, or rewritten completely, to suit the needs of that particular team.
At the same time as getting requests for information a member of staff might also be a team leader and have staff of their own. Weekly Debrief will automatically handle sending out all of those information requests too.
The reality is that the Weekly Debrief system is incredible flexible and can cater for pretty much every eventuality.
If you do have a large organization, and want to implement Weekly Debrief at all levels, it will take time to set up and get it running smoothly to start with, but once things click into place, which they will within a week or two, you will have an automated system in place than runs like clockwork week after week.
If you need any further advice on setting up Weekly Debrief within your organization don’t hesitate to contact us. The quickest way to do this is by filling out the form on the following page: