Haldenbrook Advisory works with CEOs, boards, and institutional leaders on the three places where decision quality is won or lost — leadership effectiveness, organizational design, and the systems that turn human capability into performance. Our work is grounded in doctoral research on decision-making during disruption, and in twenty-five years of enterprise practice across Asia, Africa, and Europe.
Three practices, one thesis: organizations don't outperform their decisions.
How leaders decide under disruption determines what organizations become. We help CEOs, leadership teams, and boards examine and strengthen their decision-making — diagnosing decision styles, surfacing the blind spots that pressure produces, and building the discipline to revise judgment without losing conviction. Grounded directly in the founder's doctoral research on decision-making styles and leadership effectiveness during organizational disruption.
Operating models age faster than the documents that describe them. We redesign organizations for the work they actually face — structure, talent architecture, succession, workforce cost, and culture.
Explore →Educational institutions face the same leadership and design questions as enterprises, with less margin for error. We advise on leadership development, governance, and process efficiency.
Explore →“Most organisations are better managed than they are led. The costs of that gap are quiet — and they compound.”
— Vikram Jit Singh, The Quiet Waste
Vikram Jit Singh is Founder & Managing Partner of Haldenbrook Advisory. A former Regional CHRO with 25 years across McKinsey, PwC, and Li & Fung, he is a Harvard Business School alumnus, a doctoral researcher on leadership and decision-making in disruptive times, and the author of The Quiet Waste.
Why the ability to revise judgment without losing conviction may be the most underrated leadership skill of this decade.
The role description didn't change. What the role actually requires did — and most of the shift was never formally acknowledged.
Organizations can report efficiency with remarkable precision. What they often cannot say is whether the right things are happening.