At some point, many agencies start thinking about pods. Not because things are failing, and usually not because leadership is deliberately trying to redesign delivery. More often, it happens after a period of growth where the work is good, the team is capable, and clients are happy, but delivery begins to feel heavier than it used to.
Projects start overlapping more often, and leaders find themselves pulled into multiple streams of work at the same time. Planning takes longer than expected, even when the work itself is familiar. Clients begin to sense uncertainty earlier in projects, not because the team lacks capability, but because coordination has become harder.
The agency is growing. The delivery model hasn’t caught up yet.
That is when pods begin to feel like the natural next step. Splitting the team into smaller groups promises clearer ownership, parallel delivery, and less coordination overhead. The idea is simple enough to feel low risk, particularly when the intent is not transformation but relief.
And often, it works.
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