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Generator

Department Planner

Plan the structure and staffing of any department. Pick from 12 departments across customer, operations, commercial, corporate and technology functions, add your industry, size and operating model, and get a recommended org structure with per-role headcount, FTE ranges, reporting lines, schedules and full job descriptions.

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Structure & staff any department

The Department Planner designs the shape of a team before you hire into it. Tell it which department you are building, your industry, your size and how you operate, and it returns a recommended organisational structure — roles, per-role headcount, full-time-equivalent ranges, reporting lines, working schedules and ready-to-use job descriptions — across lean, recommended and aggressive scenarios. It is the difference between standing up a department deliberately and assembling one role by role and hoping it coheres.

What you get
  • 12 departments, 28 industries, 5 org sizes
  • Min / recommended / max staffing scenarios
  • Per-role headcount, FTE & reporting lines
  • Auto-generated job descriptions & methodology

Free to use. Sign in to your Renascence portal to save results and revisit them anytime.

How it works

From your inputs to a result you can act on

1
Set the context

Choose your industry from twenty-eight options and your organisation size, then describe how the department will operate. This context shapes every recommendation that follows.

2
Pick the department

Select from twelve departments spanning customer, operations, commercial, corporate and technology functions. Each comes with its typical roles, functions and the metrics that define success.

3
Add the operating detail

Specify objectives, expected volume, operating hours and any budget constraints, so the plan reflects how you will actually run — nine-to-five, extended, or around the clock.

4
Generate the structure

Receive a complete plan: an org structure with reporting lines, per-role headcount and FTE, coverage schedules, and full job descriptions — across minimum, recommended and maximum staffing scenarios.

What it produces

Standing up or restructuring a department is a high-stakes design problem that most organisations approach informally — a rough sense of the roles needed, a headcount pulled from a comparable company, and reporting lines improvised as people arrive. The Department Planner replaces that with a considered blueprint. It produces the roles the department needs, how many of each, who reports to whom, how many organisational layers that implies, and the span of control at each level — the structural decisions that quietly determine whether a team scales gracefully or collapses into confusion.

Alongside the structure it generates the operational detail that plans usually omit: coverage schedules matched to your operating model, full-time-equivalent ranges rather than single points, and complete job descriptions for every role. And because the right answer depends on appetite and budget, it presents three scenarios — lean, recommended and aggressive — so you can see the trade-off between cost and capability rather than committing to a single guess.

The approach behind it

The planner combines two bodies of knowledge. The first is a structured model of how departments are actually composed — the canonical roles, functions and success metrics for twelve common departments, drawn from how well-run organisations organise these teams. The second is the same workforce-planning logic that underpins the FTE Calculator: headcount is derived from the work and the operating model, adjusted for productivity, shrinkage and coverage requirements, rather than copied from a template.

This is why context matters so much to the output. A customer-service function running standard hours in a small business needs a fundamentally different shape from one running twenty-four-seven at enterprise scale, and industry changes the picture again. The planner scales roles by organisation size, applies an industry staffing factor, and adjusts coverage for your operating hours — so the structure it recommends is fitted to your situation, not a generic org chart with your logo on it.

Reporting lines and layers are inferred with deliberate restraint, following the principle that structure should be as flat as the work allows. Managers are proposed where span of control genuinely requires them, not by reflex, because every unnecessary layer slows decisions and adds cost. The accompanying methodology makes these choices explicit, so you can see why the structure looks the way it does.

How it helps you

It compresses weeks of design work into minutes. Producing a considered department structure with roles, headcount, reporting lines, schedules and job descriptions normally means either an expensive consulting engagement or a lot of internal guesswork. The planner gives you a strong first draft immediately, which you can then refine — a far better starting point than a blank page.

It also makes trade-offs visible. The lean, recommended and aggressive scenarios turn an abstract budgeting argument into a concrete choice: here is what you can deliver with fewer people and where the risk sits, versus what a fuller structure buys you. That clarity leads to better-informed decisions and fewer regretted ones.

And it produces artefacts you can use immediately. The job descriptions can seed real recruitment, the org structure can anchor a leadership discussion, and the methodology gives you the rationale to defend the plan to whoever controls the budget. It is not just advice; it is a set of working documents.

Who it is for

It is made for leaders building a new department or function, for organisations restructuring an existing team, for HR and operations partners designing operating models, and for consultants and founders who need a credible structure quickly without commissioning a full engagement.

Whether you are launching a customer-service operation, scaling a commercial team or reshaping a corporate function, it gives you a defensible starting structure grounded in how similar teams are actually built.

Questions

Frequently asked

What do the three scenarios mean?

Lean is the minimum viable structure, recommended is the balanced default, and aggressive is a fuller build for faster scaling or higher service levels. Comparing them makes the cost-versus-capability trade-off explicit.

Does it account for 24/7 operations?

Yes. Operating hours are a direct input, and the planner adjusts coverage and headcount accordingly — standard, extended and around-the-clock models produce different structures.

Are the job descriptions usable as-is?

They are written to be a strong starting point for real recruitment. You will typically tailor them to your specifics, but they save you drafting from scratch.

Ready when you are

Open Department Planner

No setup required — start now and save your work to the portal.

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