Getting Familiar with Balanced Scorecard: A Management Invention to Strategic Action Modern business—characterized by volatility, rapid technological shifts, and intensifying global competition—organizations can no longer rely solely on traditional financial metrics to guide decision-making. Financial statements, while essential, function as retrospective mirrors; they reveal where a company has been, not where it is going. To navigate forward with precision and strategic clarity, businesses require a multidimensional framework that integrates both tangible and intangible drivers of performance. It is within this context that the Balanced Scorecard emerges—a value measurement tool and a comprehensive management philosophy. Developed in the early 1990s by Robert Kaplan and David Norton , the Balanced Scorecard was designed to address a fundamental flaw in corporate performance management : the overdependence on financial indicators. Kaplan and Norton recognized that while ...
Introduction In economics, management, politics, and everyday life, people often continue investing in something long after it has stopped producing value. The reason is rarely logic. More often, it is emotional attachment to what has already been sacrificed. This phenomenon is known as sunk cost . A sunk cost is any resource already consumed that cannot be retrieved. The resource may be money, time, labor, emotion, reputation, political capital, or opportunity. Once spent, it belongs to the past. Rationally, future decisions should depend only on future benefits and future costs. Yet human beings frequently allow previous sacrifices to dominate present judgment. The danger appears when individuals or organizations refuse to abandon failing paths because they have “already invested too much.” Economists describe this as the sunk cost fallacy —the irrational continuation of an activity because of prior commitment rather than future value . A strategic make sense captures this p...