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Cedar on BSC Strategy Execution Excellence
Cedar on BSC Strategy Execution Excellence
Author: Cedar Management Consulting International
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© 2026 Cedar on BSC Strategy Execution Excellence
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Cedar on BSC Strategy Execution Excellence, draws on Cedar's expertise, turning strategy into results through disciplined execution. Focusing on the Balanced Scorecard and Enterprise Performance Management, this series of podcasts explores strategy mapping, KPIs, governance, and execution frameworks that help organizations align vision, operations, and outcomes. Practical insights, real-world examples, and leadership perspectives take center stage.
52 Episodes
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In this episode, we explore how geopolitical tensions in West Asia are reshaping the operating environment for banks across the region. Energy shocks, trade disruptions, and rising logistics costs are already affecting liquidity, funding, and credit flows, while sectors such as shipping, aviation, retail, and real estate face immediate pressure - creating ripple effects across bank balance sheets. We unpack how stress is emerging on both sides of banking operations: asset quality is impacted ...
Two pillars consistently determine the success of change initiatives: Impact Assessment and Communication Strategy. Clarity begins with impact. Through structured workshops with departments and process owners, we define what will change, how responsibilities will evolve, and which personas will be affected. This results in a formal Impact Assessment Report outlining key changes and training priorities. Communication must then be intentional, not reactive. Messages should be crafted with preci...
Training strategy and data-driven reporting must operate as an integrated system in effective change management. Training cannot be generic — it needs clear ownership, structure and alignment to impact. We define accountability carefully, with Learning & Development leading process training and software suppliers delivering technical capability. The approach is tailored based on impact assessments, user personas and rollout timelines, ensuring clarity and execution discipline. However, tr...
Reporting is what converts change from intention into measurable outcomes. Training alone does not ensure adoption — it must be tracked, validated and analysed. We focus on two essential reporting streams. Training Surveys measure understanding, attendance and pain points, helping determine whether learning has genuinely landed. The Solution Adoption Report goes further, tracking behavioural data such as system usage hours, transaction volumes and engagement levels. These insights give leader...
Communication in change management must be treated as a strategic lever, not a one-time announcement. The goal is to move people from awareness to adoption — and that demands sustained, deliberate messaging. We work across two layers. General communication keeps the entire organisation aligned on objectives, milestones and progress through town halls, leadership updates and formal channels. Targeted communication, often led by Change Agents, focuses on specific user groups directly affected —...
Measuring readiness throughout the change journey is essential. We use what we call ADKAR Temperature Checks — a practical mechanism to assess emotional and behavioural progress at defined milestones, rather than waiting until go-live to uncover issues. At each phase, the focus evolves. In the early stages, we assess Awareness and Desire. During testing, we evaluate Knowledge and Ability. After go-live, attention shifts to Reinforcement. These temperature checks create a continuous feedback l...
Effective change requires disciplined stakeholder engagement. Not all stakeholders demand the same intensity of focus — engagement must be deliberate and prioritised. We categorise stakeholders into four groups. Q1 stakeholders are both highly influential and significantly impacted; they require early and sustained engagement. Q2 stakeholders are impacted but less influential, calling for proactive communication and reassurance. Q3 stakeholders have minimal influence and impact, where broad u...
Training is what ultimately converts change into capability. Creating awareness is only the first step; people must feel confident operating in the new environment if transformation is to succeed. We distinguish between two critical forms of training. Functional training focuses on how to use the system and is often delivered by the software provider. Process training, led by Learning & Development, clarifies how workflows, responsibilities and controls will evolve. Both dimensions are es...
Impact assessment is, in our view, one of the most critical disciplines in effective change management. It is the point where strategy meets operational reality. Before any rollout, we must clearly understand how a new system or process will affect specific users and business units. We evaluate impact across three dimensions: the type of change, the training required, and the level of impact — high, medium or low. High-impact areas require structured training and frequent communication, while...
At Cedar Management Consulting International, we approach Change Management as a coordinated, multi-stakeholder discipline — never the responsibility of a single department. At the centre is the CM team, accountable for planning, sequencing and tracking the entire change journey. But structure alone does not drive adoption. We place strong emphasis on Change Agents embedded within the organisation, bridging strategy and frontline reality. Marketing plays a vital role in delivering clear, cons...
At Cedar Management Consulting International, we see change management as fundamentally a leadership responsibility — not a technical task. New systems can be implemented efficiently, but real success depends on whether people truly adopt them. We draw on the ADKAR framework — Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability and Reinforcement — as a practical lens to understand how individuals experience change. If people do not understand why change is necessary, feel motivated to support it, and are e...
Sanjiv Anand, Chairman, Cedar Management Consulting International Sustained profitability is difficult in the low-margin, highly competitive US restaurant industry, yet opportunities exist for suppliers with strong market insight. Tabletop products cutlery, dinnerware, drinkware and related items are essential to dining experiences but are often commoditized, with suppliers competing mainly on price, shape, and color. Operators focus on cost control, simplicity, and operational ease, while di...
Technology outsourcing, business process outsourcing (BPO) and shared services are entering a new growth phase driven by factors beyond cost arbitrage. As technology adoption accelerates and skill requirements diversify, organizations increasingly rely on best-in-class vendors rather than building all capabilities in-house. While BPO suits large-scale operations, shared services help organizations eliminate duplicated support functions, a model already adopted by over 80% of Fortune 500 compa...
China and India present highly attractive telecommunications investment opportunities, driven by strong global industry growth and rapid wireless adoption. While voice services still account for over 70% of revenues, wireless is overtaking fixed-line due to expanding coverage and falling prices. Asia is the fastest-growing telecom region, led primarily by China’s scale and India’s growth potential. China’s telecom expansion has been propelled by strong state direction, evolving from a monopol...
Sanjiv Anand, Chairman, Cedar Management Consulting International The article challenges Gordon Chang’s view that China under Xi Jinping seeks to dismantle the Westphalian system of sovereign states and that Trump’s “America First” stance is a principled defense of sovereignty. It argues China does not aim to export ideology or replace the global order, but pragmatically pursues its interests using “sharp power” to extract value and influence, especially from smaller neighbors. While Beijing ...
Sanjiv Anand, Chairman, Cedar Management Consulting International The US is a major electricity consumer, with coal generating nearly half its power and contributing significantly to greenhouse gas emissions. Renewable energy has become a national priority, driven by policy support, environmental awareness, and stricter emissions regulations. Renewables accounted for 9.4% of US electricity by 2009, though excluding hydro this falls to about 4%, highlighting an early-stage but growing market. ...
The GCC is experiencing a major property development boom led by the UAE and extending across Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman. Planned investments over the next 10–15 years exceed US$344 billion, with the UAE accounting for nearly half. Commercial properties dominate more than 70% of developments, including major financial centers and business districts. Legal reforms allowing expatriates to own freehold property have unleashed strong pent-up demand, driving rapid sales and shar...
India is witnessing a rapid mall boom, with significant investments but rising warning signs such as falling rentals and tenant exits. High construction costs and long break-even periods mean malls must be planned for long-term sustainability. Success depends on five strategic imperatives. First, strong design and aesthetics are critical; excessive focus on maximizing leasable area often harms openness, accessibility and customer experience, leading to vacancies. Second, malls need a clear po...
China’s recent slowdown has unsettled global markets, especially commodities, but fears of an economic collapse are overstated. The sharp equity sell-off reflects an overdue correction in an inflated market that is largely disconnected from the real economy, with limited household exposure and manageable systemic risk. RMB depreciation is driven by fundamentals and reform goals, particularly advancing reserve-currency status, and is likely to remain controlled within about 10%. China’s growth...
Petroleum retailing in Asia and the Middle East faces margin pressure from deregulation, low differentiation and rising competition. In India, pricing deregulation and new entrants are expanding station numbers, reducing throughput and fuel margins. In the UAE and Singapore, regulated prices, high crude costs, limited geography and stagnant demand constrain profitability. As fuel becomes a commodity, retailers must shift from a product-led to a customer-centric, service-oriented model. Growth...























