Cedar on Banking

Defining and adopting an IT Scorecard

Cedar Management Consulting International

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Banks face five core IT challenges: making IT strategically relevant and customer-centric, improving returns on IT spend, enabling next-generation banking, aligning applications and infrastructure with enterprise vision, and building strong IT capabilities. However, IT strategy succeeds only through disciplined execution. The Balanced Scorecard (BSC) provides a practical framework to translate IT strategy into action by linking financial and non-financial objectives with measurable outcomes.

An effective IT scorecard is built in four steps. First, articulate 20–25 clear IT objectives across customer, financial, process, and learning & growth perspectives, forming a coherent strategy map. Second, define meaningful lead and lag measures with well-calibrated targets to manage and communicate performance. Third, align and prioritize IT projects so that every initiative directly supports a strategic objective, with clear quality, time, and cost metrics. Finally, assign singular ownership and align individual performance measures with enterprise goals.

When reviewed monthly and actively used by leadership, the IT Balanced Scorecard drives accountability, sharper execution, and sustained IT performance.