Focus: Decision Coherence, Cross‑Entity Governance, Execution Integrity
A government‑backed digital learning platform was launched to support distance education, workforce upskilling, and national human‑capital initiatives across multiple regions.
While the platform gained rapid adoption, senior leadership struggled to ensure consistent decision‑making across ministries, regulators, platform operators, and content partners.
Devan & Company was engaged to address structural decision and governance breakdowns that were undermining execution at national scale — not to redesign technology or delivery teams.
Multiple ministries and agencies aligned under a shared decision framework
Overlapping steering and review bodies consolidated
Clear authority and escalation logic established across policy and delivery layers
Reduced execution delays during subsequent programme phases
The Chalange
Despite strong political mandate and funding, execution became increasingly uneven.
Key challenges included:
- Ambiguous decision authority between policy owners, platform operators, and regional entities
- Governance forums focused on coordination and reporting rather than decision resolution
- Parallel initiatives advancing without shared prioritisation or sequencing
- Escalations delayed due to unclear accountability and sensitivity of public outcomes
The result was fragmentation across a programme intended to operate as a single national platform.
Leadership described the issue as “everyone aligned in intent, but no structure holding decisions together.”
What Did Devan &
Company Do
Devan & Company worked above the platform, vendors, and delivery partners, focusing on how decisions were structured, governed, and sustained across the system.
Decision Architecture Design
- Clarified which decisions sat at national, programme, and regional levels
- Defined thresholds requiring central alignment versus local discretion
- Introduced explicit escalation triggers tied to cost, impact, and public risk
Governance Redesign
- Consolidated fragmented committees into decision‑enabled forums
- Re‑designed governance sessions to resolve trade‑offs, not only surface issues
- Embedded clear decision outcomes, owners, and follow‑through mechanisms
Cross‑Entity Coordination
- Aligned ministries, regulators, and operators under a shared decision logic
- Reduced reliance on informal alignment and ad‑hoc intervention
- Ensured platform evolution remained consistent with national intent
No platforms were replaced.
No delivery contracts were changed.
The Results
Following the engagement, leadership observed tangible improvements:
- Faster resolution of cross‑entity decisions
- Greater consistency in execution across regions
- Reduced friction between policy intent and operational delivery
- Improved confidence that national objectives would hold over time
Most importantly, execution became structurally governable, rather than dependent on constant senior intervention.
What Supported the Outcome
Ready to sustain execution at national scale?
If your organisation operates large‑scale, multi‑stakeholder programmes and still struggles to hold decisions together, the issue is structural.


