Operating Model Governance for Multi-Entity Organizations
Multi-entity governance works when it gives the organization enough common architecture to move and enough local truth to stay executable.
The multi-entity problem
Complex organizations do not fail because one entity is difficult. They fail because every entity has a local reality, while the group expects common outcomes. Procurement, finance, operations, IT, and shared services each see different constraints. Governance becomes the place where those constraints collide.
Why governance slows down
Governance slows down when it is designed as alignment theatre. Everyone is represented, but nobody knows who can decide. Meetings protect comfort, not movement. Escalation becomes the operating model. Local exceptions are either ignored or allowed to dissolve the standard.
The design principles
Good governance clarifies decision rights, escalation thresholds, entity responsibilities, group standards, exception rules, evidence requirements, operating cadence, and value ownership. It does not try to centralize everything. It decides what must be common, what can be local, and who resolves tension when the two collide.
The executive question
The question is not whether the governance chart looks complete. The question is whether the next cross-entity decision can move without political translation. If every decision needs a senior rescue, the governance model is not governing. It is waiting.
The 30-day move
Pick one recurring cross-entity issue and define the decision owner, escalation threshold, evidence required, exception path, and cadence. Then remove one meeting that does not change the decision. Governance should make execution lighter, not heavier.
