Focus: Decision Architecture, Cross‑Market Coordination, Execution Integrity
A fast‑growing consumer platform operating across multiple South East Asian markets had expanded rapidly through new product launches, partnerships, and local market adaptations.
While growth targets were being met, senior leadership struggled to maintain consistent decision quality and execution discipline across markets, functions, and product teams.
Devan & Company was engaged to address structural decision and coordination breakdowns emerging as scale and speed increased.
country operations aligned under a common decision framework
Multiple parallel product and growth initiatives brought under shared coordination logic
Clear escalation paths established for cross‑market trade‑offs
Reduced execution reversals during subsequent growth cycles
The Chalange
As the organisation scaled, decision‑making became increasingly fragmented.
Key challenges included:
- Inconsistent decision authority between regional leadership and local market teams
- Product, growth, and partnership decisions progressing in parallel without shared prioritisation
- Informal coordination substituting for clear governance as speed increased
- Late escalations when market‑level decisions conflicted with regional intent
While teams were highly capable and motivated, execution became uneven across markets.
Leadership described the issue as “moving fast, but not always in the same direction.”
What Did Devan &
Company Do
Devan & Company worked above individual teams and initiatives, focusing on how decisions were structured, coordinated, and sustained across markets.
Decision Architecture Design
- Clarified which decisions sat at regional versus local market level
- Defined decision thresholds requiring regional alignment
- Established explicit escalation logic for cross‑market conflicts
Coordination Logic Across Functions
- Mapped interactions between product, growth, partnerships, and operations
- Introduced shared coordination mechanisms to prevent initiative collisions
- Reduced reliance on informal alignment through clearer structural links
Execution Integrity
- Embedded decision ownership and follow‑through mechanisms
- Reduced re‑work caused by late‑stage reversals
- Ensured rapid execution did not come at the expense of coherence
No organisational restructuring was imposed.
No delivery methodologies were replaced.
The Results
Following the engagement, leadership observed clear improvements:
- More consistent execution across markets
- Reduced friction between regional and local teams
- Reduced friction between regional and local teams
- Greater confidence that growth decisions would hold over time
Most importantly, the organisation retained speed — while regaining structural control.
What Supported the Outcome
eady to scale without losing coherence?
If your organisation is growing rapidly across markets and still struggles to hold decisions together, the issue is structural.


