Large organizations often struggle to improve workflows because each business unit sees only its own part of the process. A team may understand its daily responsibilities, but it may not see how its work affects the next department. That limited view can create gaps between teams even when everyone works hard and follows internal expectations.
The Perigon Method helps organizations structure work across those boundaries. Instead of treating each unit as a separate problem, the method helps teams understand how work moves from one group to another. That shared view matters because cross-unit processes often break down at the points where responsibility shifts. Stronger alignment starts with applying the Perigon method across multiple business units.
Set One Standard for How Each Unit Maps Work
Each business unit may complete different work, but leaders still need a consistent way to compare how that work moves through the organization. When one team maps every handoff while another only summarizes major steps, the results become uneven. Leaders may see activity on each map, but they cannot tell where the workflows align, where they conflict, or where one unit’s process affects another.
A shared mapping standard solves that problem by giving each team the same way to explain its work. Each unit can still show the details that make its process unique, but the map's structure should remain consistent. That structure helps leaders compare handoffs, decision points, and dependencies without having to guess what each team meant.
Consistency also makes the review easier to manage. When every map follows the same logic, leaders can trace how work moves from one unit to the next and see where the larger process loses clarity.
Keep the Focus on Cross-Unit Workflows
Multi-unit process work should start with the workflow that connects the departments involved. A single department may have problems worth improving, but those issues can distract from the larger question: how does work move from one unit to the next? The Perigon Method creates more value when leaders use it to study those connections because cross-unit breakdowns often happen where ownership, timing, or information changes hands.
A defined workflow keeps the conversation grounded. Instead of reviewing every issue inside each department, teams can focus on the points where their work intersects. That makes it easier to see how one unit’s delay creates pressure for the next unit or how missing information early in the process affects decisions later. The mapping effort becomes more useful because it shows how the organization’s work functions as a connected system rather than as separate departmental activities.
Preserve Each Unit’s Context

Consistency gives leaders a reliable way to compare process maps, but each map still needs to reflect how the unit works. Different departments often play varying roles in the same workflow. One unit may make a key decision, while another may prepare the information on which the decision depends. When the map hides those differences, leaders may end up with a clean diagram that misses how the work really moves.
The Perigon Method works best when each unit can show its role in context. A consistent structure helps leaders understand where each department fits, how its work affects the next step, and why certain handoffs need more attention. That balance gives leaders a clearer view of the full workflow without forcing every unit into the same shape.
Compare Findings Across Business Units
Applying the Perigon method across multiple business units is especially valuable when evaluating how processes impact each area. After each unit maps its part of the process, leaders can compare the findings to see how the full workflow functions across departments. A single department’s map may show where work slows down within that team, but the comparison reveals whether similar problems appear elsewhere in the process.
For example, two units may struggle with handoffs in different ways. One team may receive incomplete information before it can continue the work, while another may wait for a decision without knowing who owns it. Comparing the findings helps leaders connect those issues to a single root problem.
Use Patterns To Prioritize Improvements
Multi-unit mapping can uncover more problems than leaders can address at once. To keep the work focused, leaders should sort issues by their effect on the larger workflow. Patterns that appear across more than one unit usually deserve attention first because they often point to process design problems, not isolated mistakes.
For example, a recurring handoff problem may indicate that teams lack a shared standard for which information should move forward. Likewise, repeated delays on the same decision may indicate that authority lies in the wrong place or remains unclear. When leaders focus on these patterns, they can direct improvement efforts toward changes that strengthen workflow across units rather than fixing the same problem in each department individually.
Create Accountability Between Units

Cross-unit workflows need accountability at the points where work moves from one department to another. A business unit may complete its assigned task, but the larger process can still break down if the next team receives incomplete information or unclear direction. Leaders need to define what each unit must provide before the work moves forward.
The Perigon Method helps make those expectations easier to see. It shows where a team owns a specific step and where that team’s work affects the next part of the process. Finishing an internal task does not always mean the workflow is moving successfully. A unit delivers stronger process performance when its work supports the next team and keeps the full workflow moving without avoidable delays.
Teams should clarify accountability directly before they begin making changes. The following points can guide that discussion:
- Define what each unit must provide before work moves forward
- Identify who owns each decision point in the shared process
- Confirm how teams will handle gaps after mapping ends
- Assign follow-through to specific leaders within the workflow
- Review whether changes improved the cross-unit process
Maintain a Shared Method Over Time
The Perigon Method creates more value when organizations use it beyond a single project. In large companies, workflows shift as teams take on new responsibilities, adjust decision points, or respond to different business demands. A shared mapping method gives leaders a practical way to review those shifts before small points of friction turn into larger process problems.
Continued use also gives the organization a clearer history of how work has changed. When each unit follows the same framework over time, leaders can compare current maps with earlier versions and see whether improvements have held. They can also spot when old handoff problems or unclear responsibilities creep back in.
Work with Our Experts
Applying the Perigon Method across several business units requires more than asking each team to map its own workflow. Leaders need a shared standard that maintains consistency while still respecting each unit’s role.
Business Enterprise Mapping offers business services mapping to companies of varying sizes. Our experts can help your teams see how their work connects to the larger workflow and help leaders address process issues that affect multiple departments. The strongest results come when teams compare findings across units and use those patterns to guide improvement.