Literature DB >> 17131569

How well-run boards make decisions.

Michael Useem1.   

Abstract

In the aftermath of seismic debacles like those that toppled Enron and WorldCom, corporate boards have been shaken up and made over. More directors are independent these days, for instance, and corporations now disclose directors' salaries and committee members' names. Research shows that most of the changes are having a positive effect on companies' performance. They are primarily structural, though, and don't go to the heart of a board's work: making the choices that shape a firm's future. Which decisions boards own and how those calls are made are largely hidden from the public. As a result, boards are often unable to learn from the best governance practices of their counterparts at other companies. This article pulls back the curtain and provides an inside look. Drawing on interviews with board members and executives at 31 companies, along with a close examination of three boardroom decisions, the author identifies several formal processes that can help companies improve their decision making: creating calendars that specify when the board and the standing committees will consider key items; drafting charters that define the decisions committees are responsible for; and developing decision protocols that divvy up responsibilities between directors and executives. The author also identifies a number of informal decision-making principles: Items that are strategically significant and touch on the firm's core values should go to the board. Large decisions should be divided into small pieces, so the board can devote sufficient attention to each one. Directors must remain vigilant to ensure that their decisions are effectively implemented. The CEO and either the nonexecutive chair or the lead director should engage in ongoing dialogue regarding which decisions to take to the full board and when. And directors should challenge assumptions before making yes-or-no decisions on management proposals.

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17131569

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Harv Bus Rev        ISSN: 0017-8012


  1 in total

1.  Board meeting frequency and firm performance: examining the nexus in Nigerian deposit money banks.

Authors:  Damilola Felix Eluyela; Olamide Oluwabusola Akintimehin; Wisdom Okere; Emmanuel Ozordi; Godswill Osagie Osuma; Simon Osiregbemhe Ilogho; Olufemi Adebayo Oladipo
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2018-10-11
  1 in total

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