What is the hub-and-spoke model?
The hub-and-spoke model is a way of organising systems around one central point, the hub, connected to multiple smaller units called spokes. Most coordination, resources, and decision-making flow through the hub, while the spokes execute locally within that framework.
The metaphor is simple: a bicycle wheel. The hub provides structure and direction, while the spokes extend reach and stability. Remove the hub and the system loses coherence. Weaken the spokes and the organisation loses local connection.
In HR, this translates into a central HR function managing strategy, systems, policies and governance, while regional or local HR teams handle implementation and employee needs on the ground.
Where did the idea come from?
The model gained prominence in the airline industry during the 1970s.
Instead of operating direct flights between every possible destination, airlines began routing passengers through central hubs. This dramatically reduced costs, improved efficiency, and expanded network reach without requiring endless point-to-point connections.
Other industries soon adopted the same logic. Logistics companies used central distribution centres. Information technology (IT) networks relied on central servers connected to distributed systems. As businesses expanded globally, HR functions began using hub-and-spoke structures to manage people consistently across multiple markets.
The appeal was obvious: scale without fragmentation, and consistency without complete rigidity. At least in theory.
Why is it relevant for HR?
The model addresses one of HR’s most persistent challenges in multinational organisations: maintaining global consistency while remaining locally relevant.
The hub typically manages organisation-wide policies, HR technology, compliance standards, talent frameworks, and reporting systems. Shared systems reduce duplication and create operational efficiency across locations.
The spokes bring contextual understanding. Local HR teams adapt global frameworks to local labour laws, cultural realities, and workforce expectations. A recognition programme designed centrally may require different execution across markets. A performance framework built around direct feedback may need adjustment in cultures where communication is more indirect.
For growing organisations, the structure offers scalability. New markets can be added without rebuilding the entire HR system. The hub provides strategic coherence, while the spokes provide local intelligence.
The uncomfortable reality: the hub usually accumulates power
The challenge is that the balance rarely remains equal.
In practice, the hub often evolves from coordinator to controller. Headquarters define the frameworks, own the technology, manage the budgets, and measure performance. Local HR teams may appear autonomous, but often function primarily as implementation arms for headquarters.
This creates predictable tensions.
Local teams closest to employees frequently lack authority to act quickly on local realities. Decisions requiring contextual judgement become escalated upward to leaders far removed from the situation. By the time approvals return, the opportunity for meaningful intervention may already have passed.
Communication typically flows upward to the hub and back downward again, but rarely across the spokes themselves. Local HR teams often cannot learn from one another directly without routing everything through headquarters. The model optimises for control more than collaboration.
There is also the risk of over-standardisation. Global HR frameworks often reflect the assumptions of the headquarters culture, even when presented as universal best practice. Leadership models, communication styles, engagement programmes, and performance systems designed in one geography may not translate effectively elsewhere.
For Indian HR teams in multinational companies, this dynamic is familiar. Global frameworks frequently reflect Western assumptions around feedback, career growth, work-life balance, and leadership behaviour. Local teams understand where these frameworks do not fully align with Indian workplace realities, but often lack sufficient authority to adapt them meaningfully.
The result is compliance without conviction, policies followed on paper while employees and local HR teams quietly work around them.
What makes the model work?
The hub-and-spoke model succeeds only when the balance between coordination and autonomy is managed deliberately.
Certain elements genuinely require global consistency: compliance standards, employee rights, governance frameworks, and core organisational values. Others benefit from local flexibility: communication styles, engagement practices, recognition programmes, and aspects of leadership development.
The problem is that organisations often centralise far more than necessary.
Effective hub-and-spoke structures also create strong lateral connections. Local teams should learn from one another directly rather than routing knowledge-sharing through headquarters.
Most importantly, the hub must trust local expertise. Local HR teams are not merely operational extensions of headquarters. They are often closest to employee sentiment, cultural nuance, and organisational risk.
The takeaway
The hub-and-spoke model offers a practical solution to one of HR’s most difficult organisational problems: managing people consistently across distributed and culturally diverse workplaces.
However, the model only works when local teams are genuinely empowered rather than symbolically included.
For HR, the real question is not whether the organisation has a hub-and-spoke structure.
Most multinational companies already do.
The question is whether the hub is willing to trust the spokes enough to share meaningful authority.
Because when every important decision remains at the centre, the spokes stop being strategic partners. They become delivery mechanisms.



