Perspectives relatives à la gouvernance et à la rémunération en 2013


Ce billet, paru dans le HLS Forum, présente le sommaire exécutif d’un rapport produit par la firme Equilar sur les perspectives relatives à la gouvernance et à la rémunération en 2013. La firme Equilar est l’une des plus importantes entreprises de recherche et de publication dans le domaine de la gouvernance. Le rapport complet que vous pourriez vous procurer en vous adressant directement à l’entreprise  se décline en trois catégories : (1) Conseil d’administration, (2) Rémunération de la direction et (3) Divulgation et gouvernance.

Vous trouverez, ci-dessous les principaux résultats de cette enquête (Key Findings). Bonne lecture.

2013 Compensation & Governance Outlook Report 

« Each year, Equilar looks to highlight critical areas that can potentially affect those dealing with compensation and governance issues in the upcoming year. The 2013 Compensation & Governance Outlook Report aims to cover a variety of emerging trends in the fields of executive and director pay, equity trends, and corporate governance, while also providing an array of disclosure examples to illustrate unique approaches to strategic matters. The majority of firms will not encounter all, or even most, of the trends in this report in the New Year; it is primarily intended as a starting point for discussions that will take place over the course of 2013.P1020267

… Discussions between companies and shareholders will continue to drive changes as firms ensure the story they want told is communicated through a variety of mediums and methods. Concerns surrounding fairness in a number of areas including stock structure and pay will cause struggles between conflicting parties as focus continues to shift towards the decisions in the boardroom. Topics including shareholder engagement, board dynamics, Say on Pay, and pay for performance dominate this year’s report.

As with other Equilar publications, this report relies on a variety of actual disclosure examples, chosen to highlight current trends. We organized each issue into one of three broader categories: Board of Directors, Executive Pay, and Disclosure & Governance. We organized the issues into sections to help the reader navigate the report. To avoid emphasizing any single issue, the issues in each category are organized in alphabetical order under each category ».

Key Findings

« Most companies no longer award meeting fees to directors: The prevalence of S&P 1550 companies that provide director’s regular board meeting fees decreased from 59.8 percent to 44.3 percent between 2007 and 2011. Fixed annual retainers increased from 94.6 percent to 99.7 percent over the same period.

Female representation on boards increasing: In 2011, 76 percent of companies in the S&P 1500 had one or more female board member. The percentage of boards with no female directors fell from 29 percent to 24 percent between 2009 and 2011.

Boards continue move toward single classes: 59 percent of S&P 1500 companies had declassified boards in 2011, up from 49 percent in 2007.

Equity vehicle mix shifts to include performance shares: The number of companies providing performance-based equity to chief executives increased from 42.2 percent to 54.5 percent between 2007 and 2011.

Future of multi-class share structures remains unclear: Several high-profile public offerings in 2012 brought renewed attention to multi-class share structures increased the number of companies in the S&P 1500 with multiple classes of stock to 82.

Alternative pay tables becoming more common: While not widespread, in order to better illustrate pay stories, a number of companies are providing alternative pay tables and graphs, including pay-for-performance alignment and target versus realized pay.

Compensation Discussion & Analysis length trending upward: The average CD&A word count for S&P 1500 companies increased nearly 14 percent to 7,340 words between 2009 and 2011. CD&A word length ranged from 519 (Berkshire Hathaway) to 20,022 words (Telephone & Data Systems).

Internal pay equity closer for small and mid-cap companies: CEOs make 2 times more than the next ranked NEO in small and mid-cap companies, and 2.3 times more in large cap companies.

Increase in disclosures of realized and realizable pay: Although methods of calculating realized and realizable pay are not yet consistent among public companies, many companies are employing the use of realized or realizable pay in order to better explain compensation figures.

Proxy advisors using new methods for peer group selection: Proxy advisors Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis will both use new methods for peer groupselection in 2013. While it is unclear how this will affect advisory votes on pay, it is still important for companies themselves to give clear disclosure surrounding the peer groups created.

Earnings and revenue continue to be most commonly used performance metrics: In 2011, earnings were used as a metric in 49.8 percent of all awards, while 36.5 percent of all awards used revenue.

Initially exempt companies to have first Say on Pay vote in 2013: Firms with public floats of less than $75 million will hold their first votes for Say on Pay in 2013. It remains to be seen whether the trends for larger firms, which included less than 2 percent of firms failing a Say on Pay vote, will extend down to the smaller firms.

Shareholder outreach and engagement growing: The number of companies within the S&P 500 filing amended proxies in response to negative recommendations increased from 29 in 2011 to 42 in 2012".

Pratiques exemplaires en matière de divulgation d’information concernant les administrateurs | CCGG (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Rémunérations des administrateurs et pratiques de gouvernance | Survey du Conference Board 2013 (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Swiss vote to limit executive pay (thelocal.ch)

Executive Pay Votes May Be Harming Shareholders (dealbook.nytimes.com)

Nouveaux principes de rémunération selon les investisseurs institutionnels britanniques


Vous trouverez ci-dessous un document publié par l’ICSA Software, une société de l’Institute of Chartered Secretaries & Administrators (ICSA) de Londres qui produit des logiciels à l’intention des entités de gestion globale et de gouvernance corporative, notamment pour les besoins des secrétaires corporatifs.

Ce document est très intéressant parce qu’il présente la position des plus gros investisseurs institutionnels britanniques, tels Hermes, NAPF, BT Pension Scheme, Railpen et USS en matière de rémunération. Le rapport élabore quatre principes qui devraient gouverner les décisions des comités de RH (et rémunération). Pour cette coalition d’investisseurs institutionnels, il s’agit d’une nouvelle façon de concevoir la rémunération, et donc un aperçu des changements à survenir.

English: shows the steps taken in determining ...
English: shows the steps taken in determining bae remuneration (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
  1. Les membres de la direction devrait détenir des actions à long terme dans leur entreprise;
  2. La rémunération devrait être alignée sur les stratégies à long terme et sur la culture organisationnelle
  3. Les systèmes de rémunération devraient être simples et faciles à comprendre;
  4. Les comités de RH et de rémunération devraient expliquer et justifier comment leurs décisions sont basées sur la réussite à long terme.

Nouveaux principes de rémunération selon les investisseurs institutionnels britanniques (Résumé)

Remuneration principles for building and reinforcing long-term business success (Rapport complet)

« Criticism of perceived inappropriate and excessive remuneration at board level has been widespread in the UK, EU and elsewhere in the last few years. In the UK a new right for shareholders to approve future pay policy and new ways of reporting on pay are being introduced from October this year. This paper is therefore timely as it will be a useful contribution to the debate »

Rémunérations des administrateurs et pratiques de gouvernance | Survey du Conference Board 2013 (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Swiss aim to tackle high pay through shareholder democracy (newstatesman.com)

Now, Switzerland moves to curb excessive executive pay packets (frontpage24x7.wordpress.com)

Que conseillez-vous à Sam ? | une analyse de cas


Voici le billet de Julie Garland McLelland publié dans l’édition de mars 2013 du Director’s Dilemma.

Que conseillez-vous à Sam ? | une analyse de cas

« Sam is an experienced manager and has worked for over twenty years in his industry. He has also sat on two not-for-profit boards and enjoys the governance role. Now he has an opportunity to buy an equity stake in a small business that has a product and service for which market demand is growing.

The business has not been growing quickly due to flat market conditions and revenue has not increased substantially as a consequence. The current owners are a husband and wife team and are tired; they have run the business for many years and want to retire.

The proposal is that Sam should purchase 40% of the company and take a seat on the board. The existing owners would retain 30% equity each and a shareholder’s agreement would stipulate that board decisions would require a 70% majority to be agreed. The current board has three members consisting of the owners and an ‘independent’ chairman who is the lawyer and a long-standing friend of the owners. The proposal is that he should remain as “he adds a lot of value and sees things we would miss”.

Sam intends not to work in the company but to be merely a shareholder and director. He has ideas for improving the growth and increasing the value of the company but wants to retain his full time employment in a larger corporation as a security measure. His employer is happy for him to take on a board seat and there is no direct competition between the two companies so Sam would have no conflict of interest; however, Sam’s boss, who is a friend and mentor to Sam, is uneasy and has suggested that Sam could find himself outmanoeuvred in the boardroom and overcharged for his equity. Sam is appreciative of the counsel but believes the shareholder agreement protects his interests. He would like to discuss board dynamics with the current owners but they seem not to be interested as they say the Chairman handles all the compliance and they just run the business so there is nothing to worry about ».

 

Quels conseil donneriez-vous à Sam ? Esquissez une réponse avant de consulter les avis des experts sur le sujet ci-dessous !

 

Doug’s Answer

Owning part of an SME is much more than an equity purchase and a board position. High level strategic and governance oversight is not enough; it takes a more ‘hands-on’ involvement.

The owners have realised they have had enough. Under the current proposal there is little in the way of resolving the typical SME succession dilemma; specifically:

  1.   Who has the skill and energy to ultimately take control and drive the business?
  2.   How to extract full value for the business which substantially funds retirement?

The board risks stalemate and conflict in decisions with a Chair aligned with current owners. Not a good outcome for the business, Sam or the current owners.

For this to be a win / win for everyone, an agreed succession plan should be part of Sam’s due diligence process along the following lines:

  1.   Sam’s intentions, post current-owners succession, should be clarified and agreed
  2.   The appointment of an independent chair and an independent director experienced in the same industry should be agreed
  3.   Untapped management talent existing within the business and a skilling, education and promotion program outlined
  4.   Recruitment program for management where gaps are identified
  5.   Current owners agree to an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) where appropriate
  6.   Key client and supplier relationships transition to the wider management team.

Sam should further protect his minority interests by holding pre-emptive rights to purchase the remaining shares should they be on offer, notwithstanding the ESOP mentioned above.

By clarifying all the stakeholders’ intentions and aspirations, the business presents a unified front with management, the board and shareholders “singing from the same songbook”.

Doug Jardine provides consulting services to owner operated businesses and boards and is based in Sydney.

Julie’s Answer

There is more to a board than compliance. Managers accustomed to running things as they see fit whilst relying on a lawyer to put together a semblance of compliance at board level are not going to make good board colleagues. Sam has some good ideas but unless they are also in the shareholder agreement (with dates and budgets) they will likely never get implemented.

Already the board is set for deadlock whenever the existing directors disagree with Sam. The 70% required for decision-making is a nonsense as Sam will find he either has to conform to the wishes of a husband and wife team or try to split them. They might as well stipulate 100% consensus as that is all that will work in the circumstances. It is also a pretty good way to run a board.

I usually hate quasi-equity as it tends to complicate matters but Sam could look into having a preference share which is repayable as debt and converts to equity only when the strategy reaches certain milestones.

What he most needs to do is sit down with the current owners and talk, long, hard and deep, about what this company is really supposed to achieve. It looks as if it has always been supposed to provide a certain lifestyle and income for the owners. But what   about the future? What do they now want the company to be?

If they can agree on a vision and set aside enough of Sam’s investment to fund the new actions that must be taken to achieve the vision, then they may be able to grow the company to a stage where a profitable exit is achievable. If they can’t agree on exactly what the vision is and how they will work to achieve it – Now – In   detail – Sam should not invest.

Julie Garland McLellan is a practising non-executive director and board consultant based in Sydney, Australia.

Simon’s Answer

Sam takes an equity share   to help grow the company (future nest egg). The owners (husband and wife) want to retire and secure as much money as possible from the asset sale (nest egg right now). Neither party wants any ongoing operational involvement – what is this deal really about? Are the owners serious in selling or grabbing equity dollars?

The 70% rule subjugates Sam’s rights and restricts the potential for business improvements but also terrifyingly entrenches the owners’ current policies, practices and procedures. A resolution to change anything requires the support of Sam, the Chairman (even if he/she places director duties ahead of friendship) and one of the owners – good luck with that.

There needs to be far more discussion by all parties about the fundamentals of this deal before it proceeds any further.

Sam is a minority shareholder with a Shareholders’ Agreement (SA) that lacks rigour, inclusion of, and agreement on, significant matters. The SA affords Sam no rights protection, no restriction on changes in each owner’s equity or share ownership, no restraint of trade restriction on the owners once retired and no provisions for breaking deadlocks e.g. mediation which will be inevitable   given the 70% rule.

There is no guarantee that the owners will be unified on either the quantum or timeframe for retirement and the SA needs to reconcile that fact. The owners (or one of them) could just sell the remaining 60% (30%) to another party or give the shareholding to their beneficiaries. What is the agreed owner exit strategy and succession plan? There is no first right of refusal (including terms) for Sam to buyout one or both owners.

What happens if one or both owners prematurely die/separate or become incapacitated? What happens if Sam dies or is incapacitated or simply wants to get out? These all need to be included in the SA with trigger events established, agreed timeframes and pre-calculated quantum.

Now is the time to construct a rigorous SA, if any party baulks now, better to establish that at the outset before the dollars are committed. If Sam acts in haste, he/she can repent at leisure.

Simon Pinnock is a professional and practising non-executive director and Board consultant. He is based in Melbourne, Australia.

Communications entre le C.A et les actionnaires | Prise de position de Richard Leblanc


Dans un article à être publié bientôt, Richard Leblanc* répond à certaines questions concernant les meilleures pratiques de gouvernance eu égard à la communications entre le C.A. et les actionnaires. Voici trois points de vue de l’auteur publiés dans le groupe de discussion Board & Advisors de LinkedIn :

(1) “Management needs to be instructed by the Chairman not to interfere with shareholder engagement performed by directors. Directors are the agents of shareholders and shareholders want to talk to their elected representatives about governance matters. This is not the day-to-day business of the company.

communication
communication (Photo credit: flavijus)

Management speaks for the company; directors speak for the shareholders and management should not be involved in, nor causing undo influence over, that relationship. The Chair of the SEC was abundantly clear, that reg. FD is not a barrier to board-shareholder communication and fair disclosure speaks to matters of material information, not governance matters.”

(2) « Boards should retain their own counsel, independent of that of management, when seeking counsel on what they should and should not say in their outreach to shareholders.”

(3) “Not only do directors need to step up in this responsibility for open communication, but also shareholders need to step up and meet with directors and be transparent in those communications.”

____________________________________

* Richard W. Leblanc, Associate Professor, Law, Governance & Ethics, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, York University. Dr Leblanc has served as an external advisor to boards that have won national awards and peer endorsement from institutional shareholders for their corporate governance practices and has also acted as a corporate governance expert witness in recent years. He has conducted over two hundred director interviews and has studied, advised and/or assessed dozens of boards in action. This work has spanned audit, compensation, nominating and governance committees, chairs of boards, chairs of board committees and CEOs. Click here for more.

Que font les « bons » administrateurs pour faciliter le succès des organisations ? (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Pratiques exemplaires en matière de divulgation d’information concernant les administrateurs | CCGG (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Quelles sont les attentes du C.A. envers la direction, et vice-versa ? (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Engagement accru des investisseurs institutionnels avec les C.A. et les directions en 2012 (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Un manque de vision transdisciplinaire des administrateurs !


Le billet d’aujourd’hui nous a été soumis par Patrice Bloch, ASC,  fondateur du cabinet français Conseil Independia. L’article met l’accent sur l’une des principales lacunes du travail des conseils d’administration : le manque de vision transdisciplinaire.

Voici donc l’article en question, reproduit ici avec la permission de l’auteur. Vos commentaires sont appréciés. Bonne lecture.

Transversalité intellectuelle appliquée à la gouvernance

Par Patrice Bloch*

Cet article vise à montrer que les C.A. n’ont pas toujours la curiosité, l’originalité et l’ouverture intellectuelle requises pour bien accomplir leur rôle. Les apparences sont souvent trompeuses…

En prenant comme point de comparaison, la composition des conseils d’administration (C.A.) des sociétés cotées en bourse (indépendamment du pays, de la nature des activités et de la taille), nous constatons qu’il existe un pattern assez commun dans la composition des C.A. :

  1. Formation : études supérieures, université, grandes écoles…
  2. Parcours professionnel : postes de PDG et de direction générale (finance, RH, production, etc)
  3. Réseau : ancien élève de grandes écoles ou universités, fondations diverses, associations…

Ce constat sur les points communs a déjà été établi de longue date. Cependant, les publications qui en découlent s’attardent surtout sur le caractère consanguin  du C.A. et sur ses effets pervers : conflit d’intérêts, absence de réelle défense des actionnaires, C.A., limité à une « salle d’enregistrement ».

Notre expérience de la dynamique des conseils d’administration nous amène à mettre de l’avant non pas les travers décrits ci-dessus, inhérents à une telle composition de C.A., mais sa limite intellectuelle objective.

Ainsi, un membre du comité des ressources humaines pense ressources humaines, un membre du comité d’audit raisonne contrôle financier et risques, etc. Pris dans un rôle à tenir, chacun s’efforce, avec la meilleure volonté, de remplir sa tâche en faisant appel à son propre intellect et à sa propre culture. Il s’ensuit de brefs échanges au sein du conseil, et, in fine, les membres s’en tiennent à l’avis de l’expert désigné. La limite intellectuelle objective est alors atteinte.English: Here is the logo of l 'émission of W9...

Forts de leurs analyses et de leurs compétences, « les experts » prennent les décisions qu’ils croient être les meilleures. Souvent, avec le temps, il s’avère que ces décisions, en microanalyse, n’étaient pas les meilleures, encore moins les plus optimales. L’activité de la firme génère d’innombrables flux (financiers, informationnels, etc.) et dilue généralement ces lacunes ou ces erreurs de décision. De plus, ces erreurs ne sont pas révélées mais soigneusement ou implicitement tues.

Cependant le marché est lui aussi objectif quand il sanctionne une erreur stratégique (Pixmania revoit sa stratégie européenne, février 2013), une erreur de nomination (renvoi du PDG de Groupon, février 2013), une erreur de gestion du risque (comptes truqués, validés par le comité d’audit qui a manqué de vigilance; ex. scandale Olympus au Japon en 2011), etc.

La limite intellectuelle objective prend sa source dans le cloisonnement intellectuel de chacun, lié à sa formation, sa culture, son environnement … et dans le cantonnement d’individus à des fonctions préétablies (stratégie, RH, audit).

Le président du C.A. doit s’assurer que chaque responsable de domaine décloisonne son mental et pense à l’impensable. Les membres du conseil doivent s’efforcer d’acquérir une vision d’ensemble des questions de gouvernance en se mettant à la place des autres experts … et ce afin d’aboutir à une transversalité intellectuelle propice à la recherche de la valeur ajoutée.

La transversalité appliquée au conseil d’administration répond aux besoins de la firme confrontée à une perpétuelle remise en question et à la maîtrise de compétences fluctuantes et très diverses.

_____________________________________

*Patrice Bloch est fondateur et PDG du cabinet de conseil INDEPENDIA, une société française indépendante, fondée en 2000. Près de 30 années d’expérience ont amené Patrice Bloch à concilier l’approche opérationnelle et conceptuelle dans différents domaines économiques à très haut niveau auprès de dirigeants, états-majors et conseils d’administration de sociétés cotées (notamment, CAC 40 ), et de PME de tailles importantes. De formation finance (Institut de Haute Finance de Paris – Master), ancien auditeur IHEDN (Institut des Hautes Études de la Défense Nationale – Intelligence Économique), Patrice Bloch a effectué des recherches doctorales sur la gouvernance. Il est diplômé du Collège des Administrateurs de l’Université Laval de Québec (Canada) et détient le titre d’ASC (Administrateur de Société Certifié).

Comment les C.A peuvent-ils s’acquitter de leurs tâches de responsabilité sociale et de développement durable ?


En 2012, un important rapport de recherche sur les pratiques de responsabilité sociale a été publié conjointement par Doughty Centre for Corporate Responsibility, Cranfield School of Management et Business in the Community (BITC). Ce rapport qui fait état d’une enquête effectuée auprès d’un échantillon de grandes entreprises du FTSE 100 de la G.B. montre que celles-ci ont mises en place des mécanismes de surveillance s’adressant à la responsabilité sociale et au développement durable (CSR – Corporate social responsibility and sustainability).

L’étude examine plusieurs modèles de CSR et de pratiques de gouvernance en découlant; elle met l’accent sur les changements de mentalité que les membres du conseil d’administration doivent opérer pour bien s’acquitter de cette responsabilité. Le document présente également plusieurs outils pour aider les administrateurs : une matrice des compétences des administrateurs (Board Skills Matrix), un « checklist » pour évaluer la qualité des pratiques de gouvernance, une liste de suggestions pour les secrétaires corporatifs.

Voici donc un document de grande valeur pour les administrateurs préoccupés par le développement durable, les responsabilités sociales et l’adoption de perspectives à long terme.

How Boards Organise Oversight and Governance of Corporate Responsibility

« It is both a summary of quantitative and qualitative research undertaken during 2012 into how boards organise oversight and governance of Corporate Responsibility; and a think-piece commentary inviting discussion and debate within and amongst corporate boards about how to improve oversight and governance in future …

English: The "three pillars" of sust...
English: The « three pillars » of sustainability bounded by the environment (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Given the current stage of Corporate Responsibility (CR) maturity generally, however, it seems that some specific oversight mechanism beyond discussion at the main board is needed now and for the foreseeable future. In addition, there are implications for the work of existing board committees such as Audit & Risk and Remuneration … Our qualitative research suggests that corporate responsibility and sustainability leadership and stewardship currently tends to come from the chairman or CEO or another board member, rather than yet being a collective mind-set of the board as a whole.

The central recommendation of the report is, therefore, that individual boards need to assess whether they have a Sustainability Mindset and, if not, identify how to create one. Further recommendations cover periodic reviews of governance models used; the Board Skills Matrix; incorporating sustainability in search briefs for new board members, induction, Continuous Professional Development and board appraisals; and contributing to follow-up studies to elicit further and more in-depth good practice examples ».

Articles reliés :

Is corporate social responsibility profitable for companies? (devex.com)

Pratiques exemplaires en matière de divulgation d’information concernant les administrateurs | CCGG (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Corporate Responsibility is a Myth (themarlincompany.com)

Un « sain skepticisme » requis des administrateurs | Faire confiance mais vérifier !


Je vous invite à lire un article du blogue de Triple Ethos rédigé par Richard Lawton* portant sur le rôle crucial du conseil d’administration en matière de comportement éthique et responsable au sein de la direction des entreprises. L’article met l’accent sur l’approche d’un sain skepticisme de la part des membres de C.A. qui s’applique non seulement aux aspects financiers mais aussi à la performance sociale et environnementale de l’entreprise.

Faire confiance mais vérifier doit être l’attitude à adopter dans notre rôle d’administrateur. Il est important que les comportements de l’entreprise soient en ligne avec la mission et les valeurs publiquement affichées. L’auteur présente un cas patent, celui de l’industrie pharmaceuthique aux É.U.

Why Board Skepticism Needs to Extend Beyond Financial Statements

« The cover feature of NACD Directorship magazine is on “Honing Skepticism – Trust, but verify is the skeptics mantra.  Why professional skepticism is one of the most important skills for directors – and how to develop a questioning mind-set.” The article’s focus is primarily centered on the economic aspect – avoiding financial statement fraud. And while this is certainly critical given the well-publicized failures of fiduciary oversight in the past decade, I’d like to suggest that the scope of board skepticism should include a company’s social and environmental performance.

Skepticism
Skepticism (Photo credit: jonanamary)

The Business Roundtable notes in its 2012 Principles of Corporate Governance that “effective directors maintain an attitude of constructive skepticism; they ask incisive, probing questions and require accurate, honest answers.”  This attitude should not only apply to financial statements, it should also apply to advertising, public relations, sustainability and corporate responsibility reports with the company’s mission and values used as touchstones ».

______________________________

*Richard Lawton founded Triple Ethos in 2012 after earning an MBA in Sustainability from Antioch University New England and being named a Governance Fellow with the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD).  He currently serves on the Boards of two non-profits with mission-driven earned revenue models, and recently earned his “Applying the Principles of Servant Leadership” certification from the Greenleaf Center for Servant Leadership. He has served in executive-level positions with Time Inc., Barnes & Noble, and Comag Marketing Group (a joint venture between Hearst and Conde Nast) where his management responsibilities included a wide range of corporate functions including sales, marketing, marketing analysis, information systems, supply chain management, human resources, and corporate communications. Recognized by Folio magazine as “being one of the magazine industry’s top 40 influencers and innovators”, Richard led initiatives to make the retail supply chain more efficient and profitable while reducing its environmental impact.  He has presented at numerous industry conferences, published articles on improving supply chain efficiency, and served on the Magazine Publishers Association’s Environmental Task Force and Walmart’s magazine sustainability committee.

GreenBiz Forum: Sustainability is Missing a Good Story and the Right Metrics (triplepundit.com)

What Is Skepticism, Anyway? (richarddawkins.net)

Rémunérations des administrateurs et pratiques de gouvernance | Survey du Conference Board 2013


Voici le condensé d’un rapport sur les rémunérations des administrateurs de sociétés et sur les pratiques de gouvernance (aux É.U.), publié conjointement par le Conference Board, le NASDAQ OMX et le NYSE Euronext. Ce résumé a été transmis par Matteo Tonello du Conference Board et publié sur le blogue du Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation.

This is « a benchmarking study with more than 150 corporate governance data points searchable by company size (measurable by revenue and asset value) and 20 industrial sectors. The report is based on a survey of public companies registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation, Stanford University’s Rock Center for Corporate Governance, the National Investor Relations Institute (NIRI), the Shareholder Forum and Compliance Week also endorsed the survey by distributing it to their members and readers ».

The 2013 Director Compensation and Board Practices Report

Voici un extrait des points se rapportant à la rémunération des administrateurs. Pour de plus amples informations, je vous invite à lire l’article du HB Law School Forum ou à communiquer avec M. Tonello du Conference Board pour le rapport intégral de 2013.

Seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commi...
Seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
  1. Directors are best compensated in the energy industry, but company size can make a huge difference. Computer services companies are the most generous with full value share awards, but equity-based compensation is widely used across industries and irrespective of company size.
  2. Stock options are not as favored as they used to be, except by the smallest companies increasing skepticism on the effectiveness of stock options and stock appreciation rights as long-term incentives has led to their decline, especially in the last few years.
  3. Additional cash retainer for board chairmen is seldom offered by larger companies, which are more likely to reward lead directors.
  4. A corporate program financing the matching of personal charitable contributions is the most common among the director perquisites reported by companies.
  5. While many nonexecutive directors have C-suite experience, former or current CFOs are less represented than expected in the board of financial services companies.

Engagement accru des investisseurs institutionnels avec les C.A. et les directions en 2012 (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Board of Directors: Key Agenda for 2013 (shilpithapar.com)

Corporate Governance, Rule 10C-1, and the SEC: Conclusion (Part 9) (theracetothebottom.org)

Que font les « bons » administrateurs pour faciliter le succès des organisations ? (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Faut-il revoir en profondeur les tâches des comités d’audit ?


Dans son dernier billet, Richard Leblanc pose une question fondamentale en matière de gestion des risques par le comité d’audit : Devez-vous revoir en profondeur les responsabilités du comité d’audit afin de mieux circonscrire la surveillance des risques ?

Au cours de la dernière décennie, on a assisté à plusieurs échecs, directement reliés aux défaillances des mécanismes de gestion des risques, notamment le manque de contrôle interne et l’absence d’une fonction d’auditeur interne. Traditionnellement, c’est le comité d’audit qui se voit confier la tâche de superviser les risques auxquels font face les entreprises. Mais, comme l’article le montre, il y a une multitude de risques à considérer, et ceux-ci ne sont pas tous d’ordre financier ! De plus, aucune règlementation ne spécifie que c’est le comité d’audit qui doit exercer cette activité. Si bien qu’il est fort possible que le comité ne soit pas toujours le mieux qualifié pour jouer ce rôle.

Dans son article, Richard Leblanc, identifie douze questions qu’un C.A. doit se poser à cet égard. Je vous invite donc à prendre connaissances de l’article paru sur son blogue le 24 février 2013. Qu’en pensez-vous ? Pose-t-on de trop grandes exigences aux comités d’audit ?

Does your Audit Committee Need a Reset?

« …Risk systems in many companies are immature. Look at BP, Wal-Mart, JP Morgan, HSBC, News of the World, Barclays, SNC Lavalin and MF Global. These are all risk management failures, which are turn are governance failures.

196028_388219694546440_755335974_n
196028_388219694546440_755335974_n (Photo credit: caclub.in)

There is good reason for risk management failure. Proper risk management requires internal controls to mitigate risk. (Internal controls are processes and procedures such as segregation of duties, documentation, authorization, supervision, physical safeguards, IT security and prevention of management override.) No one likes to be controlled. Risk management is not intrinsically profit-making. Therefore there is an inherent aversion to risk management by management. This is why regulators now are targeting boards with greater risk governance obligations because only the board has the authority to control management. Recent bank governance guidelines in Canada require much stronger risk oversight by boards and audit committees. Recent Ontario Securities Commission guidelines offer advice to boards and audit committees with operations in emerging markets, coming out of the Sino-Forest debacle ».

Articles reliés au sujet :

Le comité d’audit du C.A. | Une tâche exigeante que vous apprendrez à aimer (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Is the audit committee to blame for defects in internal audit? (normanmarks.wordpress.com)

According to a KPMG study, Audit Committees, Risk Management and Internal Audit need to Shape Up! (normanmarks.wordpress.com)

Internal audit risk (normanmarks.wordpress.com)

Knowledgeable Directors’ views on the Value of AUDIT (surenrajdotcom.wordpress.com)

Pratiques exemplaires en matière de divulgation d’information concernant les administrateurs | CCGG


“The Coalition has focussed on the importance of transparency and exemplary disclosure because this is the only window shareholders have into the boardroom. Shareholders have no choice but to assess the calibre of directors, the board and its governance regime based on the quality and clarity of its disclosure.”

Michael Wilson, Ex ambassadeur aux É.U et ex PCA de CCGG

L’objectif poursuivi par la publication de cet excellent document de la Canadian Coalition for Good Governance (CCGG) est de présenter des moyens et des exemples pour assurer une meilleure divulgation de l’information à propos des administrateurs, ceux-ci étant considérés comme le plus important maillon de la gouvernance.

Best Practices in Disclosure of Director Related Information | CCGG

« The single most important corporate governance requirement is the quality of directors. By quality we mean directors with the integrity, competencies, capabilities and motivation to carry out their fiduciary duties in the long term best interests of the corporation and all of its shareholders. The purpose of this document is to improve disclosure about directors. The Coalition believes that the most effective disclosure is: (1) easy to find, (2) easy to understand, (3) accurate and complete, (4) given in context so that the information has meaning ».

Network of Disclosure
Network of Disclosure (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Ce document est divisé en cinq parties; voici un résumé de chacune d’elles :

« Section A – Shareholder voting includes the method of voting for directors preferred by the Coalition, as well as a discussion about majority voting along with a listing of those issuers who have adopted a majority voting policy for their director elections. In addition, there is a discussion on the results from our annual study on voting methods (how shareholders cast their ballots – slate voting or individual voting?) and the disclosure of the voting results.

Section B – Director information offers guidance to companies that want to adopt exemplary disclosure practices in their annual proxy circular. The “best practices” provided are examples of how some companies have chosen to communicate information to their shareholders. Companies are encouraged to either adopt or adapt these disclosure practices. In addition, disclosure practices judged to be innovative have been incorporated into their relevant disclosure sections.

Section C – Proxy circular layout provides examples of efforts made by issuers to enhance the readability of the proxy circular.

Section D – Innovations shows what some companies have done to improve their disclosure practices over and above what was communicated in last year’s document.

Section E – A guide to providing “best practice” disclosure is a checklist issuers can use to compare their current disclosure practices against the Coalition’s “best practices” when crafting their 2010 proxy ».

Hapless BlackBerry board let Jim Balsillie get away easy (business.financialpost.com)

Say What? Smaller Reporting Companies Subject to Say-on-Pay in 2013. (securitiesnewswatch.com)

La professionnalisation des membres de C.A.


Voici un article publié par Robert C. Pozen*, paru HBR et reproduit dans LeadingCompany le 20 février 2013. L’article aborde un sujet d’actualité : le recrutement d’administrateurs professionnels (et indépendants). Pozen propose un modèle de conseil d’administration ayant une taille réduite et s’appuyant sur un engagement beaucoup plus important des membres.

Bien sûr, les recommandations sont valables pour les entreprises publiques cotées, mais elles peuvent aussi s’appliquer à plusieurs autres types d’organisations privées ou publiques de différentes tailles. Vous trouverez, ci-dessous un extrait de cet article. Celui-ci décrit le modèle proposé et présente plusieurs arguments qui militent en faveur d’un net changement dans la composition des C.A., répondant par la même occasion à certaines objections souvent évoquées.

The case for professional boards

« Boards are often too large to operate effectively as decision-making groups, with members relying on others to take the lead. Many of the financial institutions that had to be rescued from insolvency in 2008 had very large boards, and all had a substantial majority of independent directors. Citigroup, for example, had 18 directors, of whom 16 were independent. In groups this large, members engage in what psychologists call “social loafing”. They cease to take personal responsibility for the group’s actions and rely on others to take the lead. Large groups also inhibit consensus building, which is the way boards typically operate: the more members there are, the harder it is to reach agreement.

English: 500 Boylston St., Boston, MA 02116
English: 500 Boylston St., Boston, MA 02116 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I’ve been the president or chairman of two global financial firms, an independent director of several large industrial companies and a long-time scholar of corporate governance. During my career, I’ve seen several chronic deficiencies in corporate boards: boards are often too large to operate effectively as decision-making groups. Members frequently lack sufficient expertise in the relevant industry. And, most important, few members devote the time needed to fully understand the complexities of the company’s global operations.

I propose a model of professional directorship that directly responds to the three main factors behind ineffective decision-making. All boards would be limited to seven people. Management would be represented by the CEO – the other six directors would be independent. Most of the independent directors would be required to have extensive expertise in the company’s lines of business and they would spend at least two days a month on company business beyond the regular board meetings.

Groups of six or seven are the most effective at decision-making. They’re small enough for all members to take personal responsibility for the group’s actions and they can usually reach a consensus in a reasonably short time. The six independent directors called for in the new model are sufficient to populate the three key committees: audit, compensation and nominating. Three different directors would serve solely as chairs of each of those committees, and the other three directors would each serve on two of them ».

Voir aussi le billet que j’ai publié le 5 juin 2012 : Un conseil de plus petite taille : Une règle de bonne gouvernance selon Pozen

___________________________________

*Robert C Pozen is a senior lecturer of business administration at Harvard Business School and the chairman emeritus of MFS Investment Management, an investment company in Boston.

How to be a good independent director: Separating the issue from the individual is the key – The Economic Times (csuitementor.wordpress.com)

Un argumentaire en faveur du choix d’administrateurs externes au C.A. (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Que font les « bons » administrateurs pour faciliter le succès des organisations ? (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

5 huge mistakes startups make when choosing board members (venturebeat.com)

À propos des administrateurs dysfonctionnels !


Avez-vous déjà siégé sur des conseils d’administration avec des membres qui ne s’engagent pas vraiment et qui ne contribuent en rien à la valeur du groupe ? Si oui, vous n’êtes pas les seuls ! Cependant, en tant que membres de C.A., je crois que vous devez vous inquiéter si vous constatez certains comportements déficients tels ceux identifiés dans le billet de Jack and Suzy Welch, publié dans Bloomberg | BusinessWeek. Ces administrateurs sont souvent élus, années après années !Réfléchissons un peu; que pouvons-nous faire ?

L’article des Welch vous permettra d’identifier les cas problèmes afin de mieux évaluer la situation. Les auteurs nous rappellent que les C.A sont responsables de gérer leur efficacité ! « But imagine how much better it would be if nominating committees, usually just focused on vetting potential members, dealt with the hard cases right in front of them. After all, nothing can keep a board on its best behavior but itself ».

Voici quelques comportements dysfonctionnels d’administrateurs tels qu’identifiés par les auteurs :

          1. Ceux qui ne font rien de rien  (The Do-Nothing)
          2. Ceux qui manquent de courage (The White Flag)
          3. Ceux qui agissent à l’extérieur du C.A. en tentant de faire valoir leurs points de vue (The Cabalists)
          4. Ceux qui font du micro-management (The Meddlers)
          5. Ceux qui pontifient (The Pontificators)

Je vous invite à lire l’article pour plus de détails. Qu’en pensez-vous ? Que pouvez-vous faire ?

Directors Who Don’t Deliver

Cover of BusinessWeek
Cover of BusinessWeek (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

« I sit on a board with two members who, for the past year, have said and done little. Both were just reelected unanimously with the support of the nominating committee. What’s your take? — Anonymous, New York. So, two seat-warmers on your board were just reelected unanimously, you say? Doesn’t that mean you voted for them too? If so, don’t worry. You’re not the only director in history to endure an ineffective or otherwise dysfunctional peer. Not to slam boards; on the whole, they add real value. But boards frequently tolerate troublesome performance from one or two of their own. It’s simply too time-consuming or impolitic to eradicate. And that is why too many boards, in both the public and private sectors, don’t make the contribution they should. To be clear, we’re not talking about board behavior that is criminal. With a few famous exceptions, boards will remove anyone who breaks the law. No, we’re referring to boardroom behaviors that are perfectly legal but perfectly destructive as well ».

Articles reliés :

Que font les « bons » administrateurs pour faciliter le succès des organisations ? (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

5 huge mistakes startups make when choosing board members (venturebeat.com)

Comment: Self-appointed boards can’t serve the public well (timescolonist.com)

La compréhension de la gouvernance est largement fonction du poste occupé au C.A. !


Voici une lecture très intéressante publiée dans McKinsey Quaterly par William George*, professeur à la Harvard Business School et membre des conseils suivants : ExxonMobil, Goldman Sachs et Mayo Clinic. L’article est basé sur l’expérience de l’auteur en tant que membre d’une grande variété de C.A.

M. George tente de montrer que l’on ne peut comprendre la gouvernance d’une entreprise et le comportement des membres du conseil qu’en considérant les rôles qui y sont exercés :

(1) administrateur indépendant;

(2) président du C.A. (PCA) et président et chef de la direction (PCD);

(3) uniquement PCD et

(4) uniquement PCA.

English: Inside a Harvard Business School clas...
English: Inside a Harvard Business School classroom (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Selon le rôle occupé sur le C.A., l’auteur tire des conclusions sur le bon fonctionnement des mécanismes de gouvernance. Voici donc une lecture qui remet en question plusieurs principes de saine gouvernance (comme la séparation des rôles de PCD et PCA) en s’appuyant sur l’expérience de diverses positions au sein du conseil d’administration. Ainsi, l’efficacité du conseil dépend de la manière dont on comprend son rôle. L’auteur propose trois suggestions pour améliorer la gouvernance. Je vous invite à lire cet article. Quel est votre point de vue ?

Pour lire l’article au complet, vous devrez vous inscrire, mais c’est sûrement une belle occasion de recevoir les dernières communications de McKinsey. Vous trouverez, ci-dessous, un extrait du document.

Board governance depends on where you sit  !

« Board governance is frequently discussed and often misunderstood. In this article, I offer an insider’s perspective on the topic. Over the years, I have had the privilege of serving on ten corporate boards, as well as being chairman and CEO of Medtronic, chairman only, and CEO only. I have also observed dozens of boards from outside the boardroom and engaged in numerous confidential conversations with members of these boards about the challenges they faced and how they handled them.

What I have learned from these experiences is that one’s perspective about a board’s governance is strongly influenced by the seat one holds—independent director, chair and CEO, CEO only, or chair only. That’s why it is essential to look at corporate governance through the eyes of each of these positions.

In surveying governance through the lens of different roles, I hope to address a problem in the prevailing dialogue: many of the governance experts exerting power over boards through shareholder proposals, media articles, and legislative actions have never participated in an executive session of a major board. It’s no surprise, therefore, that their proposals deal almost entirely with formal board processes and “check the box” criteria that generally have little to do with the substance of how boards operate.

I worry, in fact, that many of these proposals could weaken the performance of boards by burdening them with an excessive amount of ministerial details. That would be a shame, because corporate boards have made progress since the scandals of recent years, with a new generation of CEOs sharing with boards more openly, listening to them more closely, and working to achieve a healthier balance of power with independent directors ».

_________________________________________

* William George, a professor of management practice at the Harvard Business School, is a board member of ExxonMobil, Goldman Sachs, and the Mayo Clinic and previously served on the boards of Novartis AG and Target, among others. From 1991 to 2001, he was the CEO of Medtronic, whose board he chaired from 1996 to 2002. This article is an adaptation of a chapter George contributed to The Future of Boards: Meeting the Governance Challenges of the Twenty-First Century, edited by Jay W. Lorsch (Harvard Business School Publishing, July 2012).

Six raisons qui militent en faveur du choix d’administrateurs externes au C.A. (jacquesgrisegouvernance.com)

Mieux comprendre le rôle d’ambassadeur au sein des C.A. d’OBNL


Voici un article très intéressant sur l’importance d’utiliser certains membres de conseils d’OBNL comme « ambassadeurs » auprès de la communauté. Cet article, publié par R. Armstrong et S. Trillo de VISION Management Services, est basé sur une entrevue avec Lyn Baptist, présidente de la Fondation J.W. McConnell Family et experte dans la gestion des OBNL. L’article présente une typologie des rôles d’ambassadeurs sur des C.A. On y explique clairement ce que font les ambassadeurs et on y présente certains moyens à prendre pour rallumer la flamme de la passion.

Cet article sera assurément d’un grand intérêt pour les présidents de C.A. et les leaders dans le domaine de la gouvernance des OBNL.

Governing Beyond the Boardroom  |  Reigniting the Ambassadorial Role

2011 Board of Directors Retreat
2011 Board of Directors Retreat (Photo credit: sfbike)

« We interviewed Lyn about her ambassadorial approach to governance because of the impact she’s had. While the ambassadorial role is not new, it seems to have waned, despite the fact that many boards are populated by would-be ambassadors who are passionate, skilled and networked. Few organizations today seem to encourage or support board members to take on this valuable role.

In the start-up phase of an organization, many board members naturally assume an ambassadorial role. They reach out to friends, family, neighbours, and colleagues, driven by a passionate belief in a cause and a desire to act. Start-up phases are often characterized by few or no staff, and so board members do whatever it takes to build the organization. Not surprisingly, roles and responsibilities are rarely defined; and in the absence of an Executive Director (ED), board members connect to external stakeholders as a critical part of establishing and growing the organization.

Once the board succeeds in establishing the organization, they hire an ED to lead it. The ED takes on many of the roles formerly assumed by the board; and the ‘line’ between operations and governance is drawn. In the process, the board’s role is contained and its scope narrowed. While this has reduced the time commitment for busy board members, it has led to disengagement and dissatisfaction. Many board members comment that the governance work they’re asked to do does not leverage their skills and talents or engage their passion for the cause ».

5 huge mistakes startups make when choosing board members (venturebeat.com)

La séparation des pouvoirs PCA (Chair) et PCD (CEO) | Avis des experts en gouvernance


J’ai récemment suivi les échanges sur le groupe de discussion LinkedIn –  Boards & Advisors portant sur l’à-propos de la séparation des pouvoirs des PCA (Chairperson) et des PCD (CEO).  Le sujet est certainement l’un des plus cruciaux … et des plus controversés en gouvernance car, à mon avis, tout commence par l’établissement d’un principe de base prônant la souveraineté du C.A. sur la gouvernance des organisations. Le reste devrait suivre naturellement…

Vous trouverez, ci-dessous, un solide échantillon des points de vue des experts en gouvernance. Je vous invite à lire les commentaires issus de cette riche conversation. Vous comprendrez aisément qu’il y a des différences significatives entre les positions des experts en gouvernance, la plupart optant pour une séparation des rôles. Notons cependant que les pratiques en vigueur aux É.U. se démarquent de toutes celles des pays occidendaux car environ 60 % des conseils de sociétés cotées sont présidées par le PCD (CEO) ! Également, il est important de considérer que l’article le plus souvent cité sur le sujet (voir le billet du 3 septembre 2011  –   Séparation ou combinaison des rôles – Président du Conseil et CEO ?), est très nuancé eu égard aux avantages et aux inconvénients de cette pratique.

English: Eric E. Schmidt, Chairman and CEO of ...
English: Eric E. Schmidt, Chairman and CEO of Google Inc and a member of the Board of Directors of Apple Computer. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Bien qu’un PCA indépendant ne garantisse pas l’exercice d’un leadership exemplaire et bien que le poste puisse aussi être occupé par un « Lead Director » indépendant, je crois personnellement que la gouvernance des organisations est mieux servie par l’emploi d’un président du Conseil totalement indépendant du management et que, conséquemment, les deux rôles de PCA et de PCD devraient être séparés.

Dans ce débat, l’opinion de Al Errington reflète en bonne partie mon point de vue :

« … a chair being a CEO is a conflict of interest. The fundamental responsibility of a board of directors is to hire, set objectives and direction, and evaluate performance of the CEO. The chair’s fundamental responsibility is facilitate and focus the board in doings it’s work of hiring, setting objectives and direction, and evaluating performance of the CEO. If the chair is also the CEO they are focusing and facilitating the setting of their own objectives and performance evaluations. Even if performance is good, accountability is very weak which may have long-term issues… Chairs who are CEOs, or dependent on CEOs, are bad governance. Lead directors are an attempt to have your cake and eat it too, a workaround bad governance but still retains bad governance. The board of directors is supposed to be the CEO’s boss. If the roles and relationship is not separated and defined, the relationship is murky along with accountability. Many organizations either don’t want change or are afraid of the unknown. Good governance, I am sorry to say is largely unknown, in our culture and economy ».

La séparation des pouvoirs PCA (Chair) et PCD (CEO)  |  Avis

des experts en gouvernance

Henry D. Wolfe

Henry D. Wolfe  – I support the split of the Chairman and CEO roles but where is the focus and emphasis on 1)The importance of the chairman’s role in setting the tone and expectations for the performance of the company and 2) The qualifications that are needed in a non-executive chairman? « Independendence is not enough,,,purpose and competence needs to be included in the mix.

James McRitchie

James McRitchie  – I don’t think there is much doubt that, in general, it is better that the roles be split. http://www.commpro.biz/ir-therefore-i-am/governance-and-compliance/splitting-the-chairman-ceo-titles-practice-good-corporate-governance-while-saving-money/#.UQwWlqU7Mmk

Carl Hagberg

Carl Hagberg – I feel strongly that having a totally independent Lead Director – one with a clear and robust Charter – is far superior to the idea of having a totally independent Chairman. For starters; « No man can serve two masters » – and that is often what one ends up getting with such deals. Secondly; in difficult times – and certainly when there is a business crisis – it is usually a major strategic blunder to divide one’s forces among two « leaders. » My biggest fear – and we have seen this play out recently at several large companies – is to end up with a trigger-happy « Imperial Chairman » – who turns out to be at least as bad – and often worse – than the old-time Imperial CEO. So called « Independent Unlike a « Lead Director », who must have, and continue to maintain the support of the Board as a whole – so called « Independent Chairmen » often seem to think they are free to have a « Charter » of their own making – that is often subject to change at their own whim. Yes; sometimes an Independent Chairman can be a good thing…But at other times, the need for a single strong leader – who can speak and act with one voice is an overriding concern. (And just as an aside; of late, we see CEOs getting ousted far more often in such situations than we see the « Independent Chair » being shown the door…which may, or may not be the best thing in the end.) A strong Lead Director – with a strong Charter – and with strong Board support – is a far better and safer way to go in my book.

Richard Leblanc

Richard Leblanc  – Carl you raise good points. The quality and leadership of the person, and relationships and context, are important. Both models can work and both cannot, depending. Most Anglo American companies other than the US choose the separate chair, where the US prefers the Lead Director. Both models can work. The disadvantage I see is the LD does not chair meetings. But then again I have seen separate chairs not effective at chairing meetings. I saw one where the Chair did not say a single word all meeting… And there is no causal relationship academics have found between separate chairs and shareholder performance, chiefly because independence is being measured not effectiveness.

Henry D. Wolfe

Henry D. Wolfe  – I would suggest that the lack of the causal relationship is due to the complete lack of understanding of what is required in a high peformance non-executive chairman. The focus is too tilted toward independence alone rather than delving into the understanding of what is required of the leader who should be setting the standards for the group (board) that is in place to ensure the maximization of company performance.

Michael Wildenauer

Michael Wildenauer  – I’m sure that not many in the US would agree that the separation of powers in the system of government be abolished; splitting the chair/CEO roles serves the same purpose (albeit not quite so large in scope, importance etc.). Sure having the « single strong leader – who can speak and act with one voice  » can be useful in times of trouble, but it seems likely to get companies into trouble just as often. Its about checks and balances. As with government, its an imperfect system, but possibly less imperfect than others… Just my opinion, obviously.

Richard Leblanc

Richard Leblanc  – Henry, I think if you asked many academics what they would need to actually measure what you write above, they wouldn’t have the foggiest. Indeed the case for execution of this heightened role beyond independence may also be true for some boards or chairs. I think the role and importance of the chair is the most misunderstood, opaque, understudied yet vitally important board positions.

Michael, there is a strong cultural, military and entrepreneurial tradition in the US of unity in command or one person in charge. So I agree. But the flip side is power unchecked. Proponents of the lead director position would say that there are adequate protections such as an independent board leader, a majority of independent directors, executive sessions, and exclusively independent committees. But you really need an effective lead director who can push back against a combined Chair and CEO, with authority of both offices, if or when needed.
Michael Wildenauer

Michael Wildenauer  – Richard, to counter your first point may initial analogy of the US not vesting all power in the President, but also in Congress and the judicial system, seems appropriate. The Chair has one very important source of power, the power to explicitly or implicitly set the agenda. If that Chair is also the CEO, the ability of the board to even consider the wisdom of certain strategies, let alone how they are being executed for example may be curtailed. Or not, depending on the character/abilities/integrity of the individual who holds the position.
I’m sure that Lead Directors work fine in most situations, but its not a very lean solution to add something new rather than fix something that’s already there. It seems to me that the LD argument seems to be wanting to have it both ways: we need a strong unified CEO/Chair voice & the LD will ensure that one voice won’t speak over the top of others. As usual, just my opinion.

Richard Leblanc

Richard Leblanc  – You know Michael after I wrote my response I thought of yours, and the very good point you are making is that there are strong balance (one could argue too stong) of powers in the US political context (legislative, executive, judicial), but not as much in the corporate sector (a company can still have a chair, ceo and president AND controlling shareholder). And I agree with your second paragraph. It is not just agenda setting but the meting itself and who says what, when. A CEO and chair combined is proposing and assessing. The LD role has been criticized for not having the authority of the office. A good chair can speak over the head of the CEO but I don’t know that a LD has the same klout. I am not sure the US will ever truly adopt a NEC model, but there is constant movement in this direction I find.

Jason Masters

Jason Masters  – In corporate Australia we have a preference (strong) for the separation of the Chair and the CEO, with the Chair obviously having a key role in the Board room, and with the REM committee the performance of the CEO. The Chairs also provide a mentoring, support role for the CEO which can be incredibly useful for CEO’s. There have been some recent examples where this has not been followed, and generally the market has been supportive usually given the particular enterprise and the particular CEO.

Henry D. Wolfe

Henry D. Wolfe  – Re your point above re academics, I think the same goes for the governance community in general. I would suggest that this is due to a continuation of viewing governance through the lens of compliance, oversight and related frameworks rather than seeing the board as the entity with the primary responsibility to ensure that the company’s performance is maxmizied. When viewed through the latter lens, a entire series of different questions arise in regard to what is needed in a non-executive chairman.

Richard Leblanc

Richard Leblanc  – Jason it is similar for Canada – there is a strong emphasis on independent chairs, of all public companies, but there in it stops. I recommended a position description to our regulator and they went with it, but in retrospect that was a mistake. The management lawyers draft the chair role to be NOT what Henry describes above, but to keep the board and chair at bay. You get what you regulate. If you want an independent chair and are silent on mindset, strategic role, performance and value creation, then you get an independent chair, only. I am not suggesting regulation, but I am suggesting more guidance in terms of the qualities and attributes required of the chair, and directors, and their responsibilities beyond compliance. My interviews I am undergoing are very revealing. It frustrates activists what is happening and how chairs and directors are chosen, and that indeed many are not independent as believed or intended. Shareholders clearly understand what is needed, and have the experience and track record. I interviewed someone Friday who has been involved in 50 activist situations.

Steven Wood

Steven Wood  – Great discussion. I am a clear advocate of separation of powers of Chair from the CEO. I remember the advantages of Procter & Gamble separating these more than 50 years ago. It was principally based on separate of powers argument. Over time more of the strategy review and general performance of the company has come under the perview of the independent Chairman. Agree that this situation is an exception in US corporations, but one that can be found in more than P&G. In China there is usually no spliting of Chairman and CEO role, which I think causes many of the governance issues that are coming out frequently in the press globally about Chinese companies under investigation for false representation of their business. Of course, you could say that corruption is endemic in China and this is just another reflection of this. I think that an independent Chairman could help in bringing better governance. HK is considering such a measure. On the other hand in Israel, the Chairman and CEO are usually split. It is traditional with little law in this area. It is clear that an independent Chair would be better at representing the interest of the owners/shareholders. The Chairs in Israel usually come from the industry (retired) or in advisory capacity in the industry, so know it well. Their is a bias to focus on company performance.

Brenda Kelleher-Flight

Brenda Kelleher-Flight  – Which model works depends on the ability of the chair to i) facilitate meetings without imposing his/her views, ii) accept differences of opinion and weigh the benefits associated with each perspective, iii) ensure the board is a team (rather than just a group), iv) ensure all data is on the table and refrain from assuming that the information provided by the CEO is all inclusive, v) view the work of the board from a longitudinal perspective (rather than a one-meeting at a time), vi) maintain focus on the mandate of the entity, vii) ensure the effectiveness of the board is evaluated, and viii) ensure that the board does not see its role as being synonymoous with pleasing the CEO or backing away when the CEO uses any strong-armed tactics.

Al Errington

Al Errington  – My opinion is that a chair being a CEO is a conflict of interest. The fundamental responsibility of a board of directors is to hire, set objectives and direction, and evaluate performance of the CEO. The chair’s fundamental responsibility is facilitate and focus the board in doings it’s work of hiring, setting objectives and direction, and evaluating performance of the CEO. If the chair is also the CEO they are focusing and facilitating the setting of their own objectives and performance evaluations. Even if performance is good, accountability is very weak which may have long-term issues.

Carl Hagberg

Carl Hagberg – This is excellent, Brenda – and a close-to-perfect statement, in my opinion, of the kind of Charter there should be for the Lead Director…and yes, I guess for an « Independent Chair » as well. I think that EVERYONE agrees that there needs to be a strong system of « checkpoints » on the CEO – and a very strong process for making sure the CEO stays on task, uses the Board as it SHOULD be used, serves the needs of all shareholders and, above all, does not revert to the old « Imperial » Chair/CEO model…My big fear. as I noted earlier, is that many so-called « Independent Chairmen » unilaterally grant themselves too MUCH independence and, unless there is a strong Charter that is designed, managed and closely supervised by the Board as a whole, there is a very real and present danger of creating an « Imperial Chairman. » To me, the Lead Director, who is primarily a « creature of the Board » – and who, almost invariably is the choice of the Board rather than a nominee of the Chairman – and who operates under a strong but frequently reviewed Charter – is the way to go…

Brenda Kelleher-Flight

Brenda Kelleher-Flight  – Unfortunately, human nature intervenes. Often those in power (or think they should have the power) chose others who will agree with them and support their position. I agree that one way is to ensure the charter is supervised by the board. The question I often grapple with is how to get boards to see diversified opinions as positive rather than time wasters, especially when they have a blocked agenda and strict time limits.

James McRitchie

James McRitchie  – The move for years has been to have « independent » board members on the board and chairing important committees. That whole effort means little if the chair is not independent of the CEO. Lead directors are a poor substitute for the real thing.

Carl Hagberg

Carl Hagberg  – What in the world would make someone think that a « Lead Director » would not be an « Independent Director » who is « independent of the CEO »…much less a « poor substitute for the real thing »??? This, of course, is the whole point of having an official – and publicy available Charter – regardless of whether one calls the person who « leads the meeting » and sets the agenda an « Independent Chairman » or a « Lead Director. »

Richard Leblanc

Richard Leblanc  – My understanding (and observation) is that a Lead Director does not set the agenda nor lead the meeting, like a Chair does, but rather is consulted on the agenda and chairs the executive session when the Chair exits the meeting. In other words, Carl, what I hear from some folk in this stream is that, notwithstanding the Charter for a Lead Director, the issue is still that the Non Executive Chair still sets the agenda and runs the meeting, whereas the Lead Director does not. The NEC and LD roles are not synonymous. I hear (and agree with) that all else equal, the NEC is superior to the LD role. Of course it goes without saying that an effective LD is preferable to a non-effective NEC, but what Jim, Brenda and Henry and others above are saying (I think) is that the best [superior to a LD] is an « effective » NEC, accomplishing the role and responsibilities they set out above.

Lee Mathias

Lee Mathias  – Here in the Antipodes, NZ, the roles are split. The Chair’s role is to set the tone and guide the decisions on the strategic direction of the firm. That goes for Board meetings too i.e. to set/establish the context of the decision and, through canvassing the opinions of all directors, reach a decision. It is beneficial for the CEO to hear the Board reaching a decision. The CEO puts those decisions in action.

James McRitchie

James McRitchie  – I really think there is something in a name. Getting named a « lead director » will never be seen in the eyes of many the same as taking on the title of « board chair. » Why all the workarounds to make it appear that lead directors are equivalent. Is a civil union equivalent to marriage? I don’t think so. If lead directors are equivalent in every way, why the hesitation to call them board chairs?

Al Errington

Al Errington  – Chairs who are CEOs, or dependent on CEOs, are bad governance. Lead directors are an attempt to have your cake and eat it too, a workaround bad governance but still retains bad governance. The board of directors is supposed to be the CEO’s boss. If the roles and relationship is not separated and defined, the relationship is murky along with accountability. Many organizations either don’t want change or are afraid of the unknown. Good governance, I am sorry to say is largely unknown, in our culture and economy.

What is a non-executive chairman? (aviationblog.dallasnews.com)

L’importance des conseils d’administration | Vidéos de Lucy P. Marcus


Voici deux vidéos de Lucy P. Marcus* sur la gouvernance et la composition des conseils d’administration. Dans la première, elle explique les principales fonctions des C.A. et l’importance des conseils d’administration.

L’importance des conseils d’administration | Vidéo de Lucy P. Marcus

English: London Business School, UK
English: London Business School, UK (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Dans la deuxième vidéo, elle anime une discussion avec Lucy Dimes, PCD de Alcatel Lucent UK & Ireland, à propos des avantages et des désavantages pour un PCD de siéger sur des conseils d’administration.

 

Le PCD (CEO) doit-il siéger sur des C.A. ?

Bon visionnement !

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*Lucy P. Marcus is a board chair and non-executive director who is challenging conventional wisdom inside and outside the board room. She has emerged as the voice setting the agenda on future proofing boardrooms and companies around the world. The CEO of Marcus Venture Consulting, she is Professor of Leadership & Governance at IE Business School and she speaks and writes about boards and leadership. Lucy has been awarded the Thinkers 50 “Future Thinkers” Award.

Diverse Boardroom Cultures – Lucy P. Marcus Delivers an Insightful Boardroom Activism Keynote (TrendHunter.com) (trendhunter.com)

Que font les « bons » administrateurs pour faciliter le succès des organisations ?


Excellente vidéo* de Richard Leblanc et Robert Kueppers qui discutent des comportements efficaces des administrateurs pour assurer le succès des organisations. Très pertinent.

What Good Board Members Do to Help Organizations Succeed

« Since Dodd Frank and Sarbanes- Oxley, board members play a critical role in the success of their organizations. Yet, what constitutes a “good” board member? Dr. Leblanc, an award winning teacher and researcher says, he or she is one who oversees management and the interest of shareholders; oversees financial statements and risk, sets the strategy for the organization and assures compensation is appropriate. Bob Kueppers, cited by Directorship Magazine, as one of the top 100 most influential professionals in corporate governance, believes there are three activities that should take up most of a director’s time, energy and talent. The activities include: the strategy of the organization and where it is headed, making sure the right person is in charge, and how risk relates to strategy and how the organization can see what’s coming. He emphasizes that oversight is different from managing the business ».

De gauche à doite : Richard Leblanc et Robert J. Kueppers

« Too often strategy is underemphasized at the expense of risk and compliance. They advise growth, innovation and competiveness, a true creation of shareholder value- with a #1 value that of strategy and succession planning. Today, 39% of US companies do not have an immediate successor for their CEO! Another area that must be looked at is diversity. Too few boards represent their constituents and culture, with a challenge in the US and not Canada of too few women represented.

Good board members have skill sets and behaviors that include being a good communicator, listening, leadership and integrity. The softer skills- working as a team- are important. And- surprise, company CEO’s do not necessarily make the best directors, as they often have a dominant style and are overstretched! What is important and critical is good governance, meetings called with plenty of notice, preparation, agendas and information so the best decisions can be made. Good board members are chosen and cultivated. Yet, while behaviors can really change board dynamics, there is no one right way or magic bullet ».

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*Joining host, Dennis McCuistion, are:

Richard Leblanc, PhD: Co-author of Inside the Boardroom and an Associate Professor at York University in Toronto, Canada

Robert J. Kueppers: Deputy CEO of Regulation & Public Policy,Vice Chairman, Deloitte, LLC

Six raisons qui militent en faveur du choix d’administrateurs externes au C.A.


Ce court article, publié par , blogueur en gouvernance, présente un argumentaire assez convaincant sur l’avantage d’avoir des administrateurs externes sur les conseils. Plusieurs personnes m’ont fait part de leur intérêt pour ce sujet. Je me permets donc de le resoumettre. Une lecture intéressante !

Qu’en pensez-vous ? Comme PCA ? Comme PCD ? Comme administrateurs de sociétés (ASC) ?

6 Reasons Why Every Board Needs ‘Fresh Eyes’

Fresh Eyes

« There is the board principle I’ve always subscribed to: “eyes in, fingers out.” This means the board function is not to run the company, but to pick the management and set policy.

If the board is micro-managing the company, there is definitely a problem and either you need new management or outside directors with fresh eyes to help the company get back on track. The board’s job is to govern and management’s job is to manage. Here are the right ways outside directors can use their fresh eyes to a board’s advantage.

6 Reasons ‘Fresh Eyes’ Can Help Your Company

    1. They have different perspective on issues…
    2. They have experiences and views from other industries that may have already experienced and solved the problems or issues being discussed…
    3. They have a new network of resources for the board to consult…
    4. They will ask new and different questions to stimulate the board’s decision-making process…
    5. You need to bring in someone who is not a specialist, but someone who has been involved in all areas of running a business…
    6. They can bring a new understanding of a subject that the board does not have…

Outside directors bring incredible value with their “fresh eyes.” I believe boards that have not brought somebody new to the organization in the last one to two years run the risk of stalling the growth of the company ».

Women in Economic Decision-making | Panel of the World Economic Forum


Voici une vidéo vraiment exceptionnelle réalisée dans le cadre du World Economic Forum (WEF). Le panel est composée d’un groupe remarquable de femmes (et d’un homme), leaders engagées au plus haut niveau dans diverses organisations internationales.

« Several panellists shared their personal experiences about how they made their way to leadership positions and how they addressed stereotyping and implicit biases along the way. Too often women are held back by such barriers, which are frequently not recognized, discussed or addressed ».

Le visionnement de cette vidéo est un « must » si vous souhaitez avoir une bonne compréhension de l’expérience des femmes en situation de leadership. Un document essentiel pour tout administrateur et PCD !

Animatrice :

Herminia Ibarra,

The Cora Chaired Professor of Leadership and Learning and Professor of Organizational Behaviour, INSEAD, France

Panelistes :

Christine Lagarde

Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Washington DC

Drew Gilpin Faust

President, Harvard University, USA

Viviane Reding

Vice-President and Commissioner, Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship, European Commission, Brussels

Lubna S. Olayan

Deputy Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer, Olayan Financing Company, Saudi Arabia

Sheryl Sandberg

Chief Operating Officer and Member of the Board, Facebook, USA

Kevin Kelly

Chief Executive Officer, Heidrick & Struggles, USA

Women in Economic Decision-making: Overview

Women in Economic Decision-making | Panel of the World Economic Forum

« For the second consecutive year, the World Economic Forum held a plenary session on women*. This year, the session focused on women in high-level economic decision-making in both the private and public sector. There has been an explosion of research in the past several years, including the World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Report, which demonstrates a strong link between closing the gender gap and improving economic competitiveness and corporate performance.

The panel recognized that real progress has been made in increasing the number of women in top economic position, including more women on boards and in high-level management. However, statistics around the world indicate that we are still far from closing the economic gender gap and progress remains slow.

The panellists discussed quotas and other policy and organizational changes to accelerate progress. For example, Viviane Reding, Vice-President and Commissioner, Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship, European Commission, Brussels, described new European legislation setting a target of 40% for women on boards of European corporations. Another panellist noted that low turnover among existing board members slows the process of increasing gender diversity on corporate boards.

Several panellists shared their personal experiences about how they made their way to leadership positions and how they addressed stereotyping and implicit biases along the way. Too often women are held back by such barriers, which are frequently not recognized, discussed or addressed ».

Key Points

Gender parity is linked to global competitiveness and economic performance. In recent years, there has been an explosion of academic research confirming this link.

Real gains have been made in the number of women in top economic decision-making positions, but we are still far from closing the economic gender gap and progress is slow.

Stereotyping and implicit biases continue to impede the advancement of women to top leadership positions in economic decision-making. As more and more women rise to the top, they can “dare to embrace their diversity” and work with their organizations to address these barriers to ensure that diversity is a foundation of success.

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*Le bref compte rendu du forum a été réalisé par Laura D’Andrea Tyson, S. K.  Angela Chan Professor of Global Management, Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley, USA.

La gouvernance et le financement des universités | La position des présidents de C.A.


Depuis quelque temps, dans le débat entourant le financement des universités et la position des associations étudiantes, lesquelles réclament le gel des frais de scolarité, voire la gratuité scolaire, la gouvernance des universités est interpellée et mise à mal. La gouvernance des universités est un modèle de gouvernance en soi et il me semble important que tous les intervenants au débat soient familiers avec les problématiques de gouvernance d’organismes aussi complexes qui, au fil des ans, se sont dotés de pratiques de bonne gouvernance, souvent exemplaires, mais distinctives, en ce sens qu’elles tiennent compte des intérêts d’un grand nombre de parties prenantes.

Je vous propose la lecture de la position des présidentes et présidents des conseils d’administration des universités québécoises à la rencontre thématique préparatoire au Sommet sur l’enseignement supérieur portant sur la gouvernance et le financement des universités du 18 janvier 2013.

La gouvernance et le financement des universités

"Science Friday" Recommendations
« Science Friday » Recommendations (Photo credit: LollyKnit)

« Dans le cadre du débat de société en cours sur l’avenir de l’enseignement supérieur, il est important que la voix des membres des conseils d’administration1 (CA) des universités soit entendue. Ce sont des acteurs à part entière dont le rôle est primordial à la bonne gouvernance des universités. Ce rôle est distinct et complémentaire à celui des chefs d’établissement. C’est aussi l’occasion de mettre en valeur la participation de représentants de la communauté citoyenne à la gouvernance de « leur » université, et leur implication dans son développement.

Notre contribution poursuit plusieurs objectifs : d’abord, faire le point sur le rôle et les responsabilités des administrateurs et le fonctionnement des CA. Ensuite, démontrer que la diversité des profils et des compétences des membres des CA des universités enrichit les pratiques de bonne gouvernance. Nous exposerons certaines mesures prises par les CA pour assurer la bonne gouvernance et la saine gestion universitaires. Enfin, nous traiterons de l’imputabilité des universités et de la responsabilité du CA, ainsi que de l’importance de préserver le rôle décisionnel du CA dans la gouvernance de l’université ».