Advice that is both wise and practical from the foreword by Jack Krol, former chairman and CEO, DuPont RAM CHARAN New York Times bestselling coauthor of Execution OWNING UP THE 14 QUESTIONS Every Board Member Needs to Ask
Owning Up
Owning Up The 14 Questions Every Board Member Needs to Ask Ram Charan
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Contents Foreword by Jack Krol What Boards Need Now 1. Question 1. Is Our Board Composition Right for the Challenge? 1 2. Question 2. Are We Addressing the Risks That Could Send Our Company over the Cliff? 19 3. Question 3. Are We Prepared to Do Our Job Well When a Crisis Erupts? 33 4. Question 4. Are We Well Prepared to Name Our Next CEO? 41 5. Question 5. Does Our Board Really Own the Company s Strategy? 57 6. Question 6. How Can We Get the Information We Need to Govern Well? 73 7. Question 7. How Can Our Board Get CEO Compensation Right? 85 8. Question 8. Why Do We Need a Lead Director Anyway? 101 9. Question 9. Is Our Governance Committee Best of Breed? 117 vii ix v
vi CONTENTS 10. Question 10. How Do We Get the Most Value out of Our Limited Time? 127 11. Question 11. How Can Executive Sessions Help the Board Own Up? 137 12. Question 12. How Can Our Board Self-Evaluation Improve Our Functioning and Our Output? 149 13. Question 13. How Do We Stop from Micromanaging? 163 14. Question 14. How Prepared Are We to Work with Activist Shareholders and Their Proxies? 173 About the Author 187 Acknowledgments 189 Index 191
Foreword Societal demands and expectations have caused a tectonic shift in the role of the board. The fi rst shock was felt in 1993 when the board of General Motors broke the mold and forced out a CEO who was not performing. Since then, boards in the U.S. and U.K. have been prodded and pleaded with to take a more active role, and in recent years, indeed they have. Expectations for boards were raised further with the passage of Sarbanes - Oxley in 2002, which erased any doubt that boards must ensure that their companies fi scal houses are in order. Now boards fi nd themselves thrust into the spotlight yet again and challenged to do even more. In the midst of the near total breakdown of the global fi nancial system, shareholders and other constituencies are looking to boards to help their companies fi nd a safe place to land. Even good companies with AAA ratings have been swept up in the tsunami. Surely the board can pick up and patch up what the CEO cannot, the thinking goes. Directors have scrambled to meet this newest demand and fi ll the void, adjusting their schedules and their priorities and approaching their board work with increased rigor. With this immense pressure and the sudden surge of engagement by some boards, the break from the past is now complete. Boards are no longer waiting for issues to come their way. They are trying to identify them early and to get ahead of them. This new set of circumstances creates new dynamics between the board and management, between the board and external constituencies, and among the independent directors. vii
viii FOREWORD No wonder questions are arising in boardrooms nationwide. As if the business issues were not challenging enough, boards are also trying to reinvent their work on the fl y. Fortunately, there are answers. In this succinct and timely book, Ram Charan takes on the questions that are top of mind among directors. A life - long student of corporate governance, advisor to CEOs and corporate boards, and director serving on three boards himself, Ram has an unparalleled experience base from which to provide the answers. He has observed many boards in action and won the confi dence of many highly respected directors. He has watched as boards have worked to adjust to the new developments in corporate governance. What he has found, and catalogues so well in this book, is a number of cutting edge practices that are exactly right for the times. In his inimitable style, Ram provides advice that is both wise and practical. He takes into account the realities of human behavior and group dynamics as well as the ambiguities of running a business in today s environment. He sees issues in their entirety yet clarifi es the way forward. And he does not mask his views about where boards need to take a stronger stance. Directors, CEOs, senior executives, and anyone else who has a stake in the quality of corporate governance will be interested in the sound advice and insights found here. I encourage you to keep reading, and learning, and making a positive difference to the companies on whose boards you serve. Jack Krol Former chairman and CEO, DuPont Director, Tyco International, Ltd. January 2009
What Boards Need Now The meltdown in the global fi nancial system in 2007 8 followed by a deep and probably long economic downturn sent a wake - up call to corporate boards. Directors are energized to roll up their sleeves and get to work, yet they have more questions and anxiety than ever. Their companies are facing unprecedented challenges. Cash vulnerabilities at many companies are revealed daily, and lack of liquidity is in some cases turning into insolvency. In many industries demand has fallen off a cliff. For example, demand for automobiles and parts plunged by more than 30 percent in fewer than 90 days. As recently as late last year analysts and investors were recommending that companies should use cash to buy back shares, and some directors wholeheartedly agreed, even encouraging management to do so more aggressively. One director, chairman of his board s fi nance committee, recently remarked, Why didn t I move faster to suggest that management ignore the analysts and reverse that decision? Urgency has taken hold. In September October 2008, some boards met more than six times on very short notice and with full attendance. The business landscape has changed. The game has changed. What boards do needs to change as well. The change is this: Boards need to own up to their accountability for the performance of the corporation. In the past, employees, shareholders, and the press looked to the CEO to ensure that the corporation performed well. Now they have also begun to look to you, the board, to be the leader. You need to own up to this accountability ix
x OWNING UP for the business. As one director put it, Boards can make a company or break a company. The fi nancial meltdown has revealed how boards of Wall Street fi rms and some fi nancial institutions outside the United States have failed in their accountability. Boards are institutions with public constituencies. The public and the watchdogs can differentiate a legitimate explanation (no one could have seen the fi nancial tsunami coming, and besides, everyone is in the same boat) from poor performance. Most directors care about their reputation. It is no fun to be forced to resign from the board through the pressure of public exposure, even though you did nothing illegal. The role of the board has changed forever. Governance now means leadership, not just over-the-shoulder monitoring and passive approvals. Boards must fi ercely guard their companies against threats of rapid decline and sudden demise, while at the same time helping management seize the opportunities that tumultuous change presents but are hard to see in the daily fray of running the business. The board that does both turns governance into a competitive advantage. In my research for this book I have talked one on one with many directors and closely observed almost fi fty in the boardroom. I found a very positive and healthy dose of realism. They have begun to search for what works and what does not work. They want to do what is right, but they know they cannot sustain the pace of six short - notice meetings in sixty days and expect full attendance. Directors need to reinvent the content of their work and their modus operandi. They need answers to their many questions. My observation of boards and interviews with many of you inspired this book. I have designed it to directly and concisely address the burning contemporary issues directors and their boards are wrestling with. The fourteen questions that follow are the ones that I hear from directors most often. My responses to them draw on my forty years of experience advising boards
WHAT BOARDS NEED NOW xi as well as observations of best practices I have seen emerging in recent months and even weeks. The three boards I serve on have also allowed me to see what works and does not work. The recommendations in this book are meant to be practical and to get to the heart of the unique issues boards are facing now. I recommend that every director, particularly new directors, read the book in its entirety to fully grasp how boards can own up. But I ve also organized the book so you can quickly access the particular questions or issues that are most urgent for you. It s my hope that you and your colleagues will use the content of this book to help your board truly own up to the new role society is demanding of you. As the business environment continues to be volatile, the specifi c challenges may shift, but there will be no return to board seats as comfortable, prestigious positions to retire to. Directors must face the challenges head on and see to it that their managements do the same. What is here is a work in progress; it will never be complete. I welcome the chance to learn from you as I continue to gather the messy real - life data that is the foundation of my observational research. Your reading may stimulate more questions. I d be honored to hear them from you. I ll do my best to return an e - mail from every director and CEO who contacts me at www.ram-charan.com.
Owning Up