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Home›Blog›Applying BG5 Decision Making in Business Strategy
Applying BG5 Decision Making in Business Strategy
LifestyleDecember 15, 2024·4 min read·HD Matrix Editorial Team

Applying BG5 Decision Making in Business Strategy

When a team is trying to decide whether to launch a new product, enter a new market, or restructure a department, the conversation often drifts into the most fa

Applying BG5 Decision Making in Business Strategy

When a team is trying to decide whether to launch a new product, enter a new market, or restructure a department, the conversation often drifts into the most familiar channels: the loudest opinion, the most senior title, or the strongest personality. Human Design for business — specifically the BG5 system developed by Chetan Parkyn — offers a different way. It treats decision making as a mechanical, observable process, not a personality contest. At the center of this is the Penta, a five-person structure designed to surface the correct answer through differentiated roles, and the OC16, the business incarnation chart that frames when and how to act.

What BG5 Brings to Business

BG5 is the professional application of Human Design. Where the birth chart shows how an individual is wired to operate in the world, BG5 extends that into how groups of people can make aligned, high-quality decisions together. It is built on the same mechanics — Type, Strategy, Authority, Centers, Channels, Gates — but it reorients them toward organizational life, strategy, and execution.

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The practical breakthrough of BG5 is its decision-making protocol. Rather than relying on consensus, debate, or hierarchy, it recognizes that not all decisions require the same depth of processing. Some decisions are best made in an instant. Others require a structured process. And a few require leadership override. Knowing which is which changes the quality of business strategy entirely.

The Three Types of Business Decisions

BG5 identifies three distinct types of decisions a business must make, and each has a different protocol.

TADA decisions are the small, immediate ones. Should we ship the patch today or tomorrow? Should we take this meeting? These are spontaneous calls that do not benefit from a lengthy process. The moment passes if you wait. They are made by the person closest to the action, using their natural decision-making authority.

PIPED decisions are the larger, more complex ones. Should we enter a new geography? Should we hire this executive? Should we change our pricing model? These carry significant consequences and require input from multiple perspectives. They go through the full Penta process.

INITIATED decisions are those that cannot be made through consensus. A founder or senior leader must step in and declare the direction, taking full ownership. These are not failures of the Penta — they are appropriate uses of executive authority when collective processing cannot reach clarity.

Misclassifying a decision is one of the most expensive mistakes in business. Treating a PIPED decision like a TADA produces a premature commitment. Treating a TADA like a PIPED paralyzes the team.

The Penta: A Structure for Clear Answers

The Penta is a five-person decision-making body. It is not a committee. It is not a brainstorming group. It is a structure of differentiated roles, each with a specific job, designed to reveal the answer that is already present in the room.

The five positions are:

1. The Proposer — the person who brings the decision to the table. They own the proposal and its framing.

2. The Challenger — the person who pressure-tests the proposal. They are not there to argue for the sake of it but to surface risks, blind spots, and weak assumptions.

3. The Supporter — the person who explores the potential of the decision. Where the Challenger looks for what could go wrong, the Supporter looks for what could go right.

4. The Sustainor — the person who holds the long view. They ask: what does this look like in one year, three years, a decade? Does this decision sustain the business, the team, the vision?

5. The Observer — the person who watches the process itself. They do not advocate for any position. They call out what they see, including the moment when the group has reached a clear answer.

Each role is filled by someone whose Human Design chart is well-suited to the function. The Challenger is not a generic skeptic — they are a specific type of person with the chart configuration that thrives in opposition. The Observer is someone whose design allows them to witness the field without being pulled into it. When the right people sit in the right seats, the Penta produces decisions that the whole group can align with, even if not everyone initially agreed.

The OC16 and Strategic Timing

The OC16 is the business incarnation chart in BG5. It overlays a 64-gate structure — drawn from the I Ching — onto the calendar, giving businesses a way to read the energetic climate of any given period. Strategic decisions do not happen in a vacuum. The OC16 reveals when conditions support launching, restructuring, expanding, or consolidating. Aligning a major PIPED decision with the correct OC16 window is part of what makes BG5 strategy practical rather than purely philosophical.

Putting It Together in Business Strategy

Applying BG5 in a business context means training the leadership team to ask two questions before any significant decision: what type of decision is this, and who needs to be in the room? It means building Pentas for the major inflection points — funding rounds, market entries, leadership changes, product pivots — and trusting TADA for the small calls that keep the business moving. It means accepting that some decisions belong to the leader alone, and giving those leaders the clarity to make them without apology.

When the mechanics are honored, strategy stops being a battle of opinions. It becomes an experiment in collective intelligence, guided by the design of the people doing the work. That is the real promise of BG5: not a better argument, but a truer answer.

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