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Santa’s workshop: Building an agile operating model for the most wonderful time of the year

by | Dec 24, 2024

HR Transformation | People Planning and Strategy | Talent and skills
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Santa’s workshop: Building an agile operating model for the most wonderful time of the year

Back again this Christmas week for round two of our festive fun, Debbie Mitchell gives you some insight into LACE’s approach when it comes to ensuring Father Christmas delivers on North Pole business requirements. We hope you are enjoying your Christmas Eve so far!

Every organisation has its busy season, but few face the logistical mountain that Father Christmas climbs every year. From toy production to global overnight delivery, Santa’s operations are the stuff of MBA case studies (and holiday legends). But how does the big guy in red ensure his team structure is robust enough to handle peak season chaos yet adaptable enough to weather the post-Christmas lull? Let’s take a peek into the workshop to discover how Father Christmas, alongside the brilliant transformation team at LACE Partners, build an agile operating model that keeps the North Pole humming all year long.

A dual-mode model: Seasonal surge and year-round stability

At its core, Santa’s operating model revolves around a dual-mode approach:

  • Peak Season Agility: The Christmas season demands lightning-fast decisions, scalable operations, and unshakable focus on delivery.
  • Post-Season Optimisation: Come January, the team shifts gears to review processes, innovate, and prepare for the next year.

Santa’s elves are divided into two key teams: The Festive Division (FD) and The Evergreen Unit (EU). The FD focuses on peak-season production and distribution, while the EU ensures continuous improvement, off-season projects, and maintaining the magic (because glitter doesn’t rest).

The Agile team structure: Holistic, nimble, and jolly

Santa doesn’t just rely on festive cheer to get things done. His team structure is built for agility:

  • Toy Squads: Cross-functional groups that handle end-to-end toy production, from concept to final assembly. If the Nutcracker Task Force (NTF) encounters a supply chain hiccup (like a candy cane shortage), they can rapidly reallocate resources from the Stuffed Stocking Team.
  • The Sleigh Readiness Committee: This specialised unit ensures Santa’s sleigh is optimised for every delivery scenario. During peak season, they act as the mission control centre. Off-season, they test alternative fuels (yes, Rudolph, we’re looking at you).
  • Flexi-Elves: To meet fluctuating demand, Father Christmas maintains a pool of part-time and freelance elves (dubbed “Flexi-Elves”), who are activated during December’s peak. Many of these elves work remotely from their own grottos – proving that hybrid work even reaches the North Pole.

A reindeer approach to capacity planning

Santa’s reindeer team provides the perfect analogy for capacity planning. During the off-season, they train, rest, and occasionally experiment with new manoeuvres (Dasher has become a drone enthusiast). But when December arrives, it’s all hooves on deck. Santa’s philosophy: rested resources are ready resources.

This strategy extends to his elves, who work on reduced hours from January to August, focusing on professional development, like “Ribbon curling mastery” or “Advanced toy engineering.”

Post-season adaptability: Tuning the sleigh for next year

After Christmas Eve, Father Christmas doesn’t just kick back with milk and cookies. The team dives into a lessons-learned peppermint huddle. What went well? Where did things snowball? Did the Naughty / Nice algorithm need recalibrating?

Based on these insights, Santa’s team tweaks workflows and introduces new tools, like AI-powered gift prediction systems and sleigh-route optimisation software.

A model worth celebrating

Father Christmas, in collaboration with the helpers at LACE, has cracked the code to creating an effective, adaptable, operating model (here’s one we prepared earlier…): blend clear structures with the flexibility to handle the unexpected. Whether it’s peak season madness or the quiet hum of the off-season, his team is always ready to sleigh the day.

If Santa can manage the world’s most complex supply chain with a twinkle in his eye, maybe we can rethink our own operating models – with a little less stress and a lot more magic.

Want to talk to us about optimising your operating model for success? Fill in the form and let’s have a chat over some mulled wine (or hot chocolate).

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