Tendances en matière de rémunération des hauts dirigeants en 2013 (Aon Hewitt)


Voici une présentation PTT issue d’un rapport de recherche de la firme Aon Hewitt partagé par Richard Leblanc dans LinkedIn. Ce document très important fait le point sur les réalisations de l’annéee 2011-2013 en matière de rémunération aux É.U. et présente les tendances anticipées pour 2013.

Bougainvillea
Bougainvillea (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

La présentation couvre essentiellement les sujets suivants : (1) Un état global de la situation (big picture), (2) Une mise à jour de la règlementation et des règles de gouvernance, (3) Les tendances en matière de rémunération, (4) Un aperçu des programmes de rémunération incitative à long terme. Bonne lecture !

 

 

http://www.aon.com/attachments/human-capital-consulting/2012_Executive_Compensation_Trends_July11Webinar_FINAL.pdf

Il y a un problème lorsqu’un haut dirigeant est irremplaçable !


Très bon article publié dans le New York Times hier qui montre l’importance cruciale pour un Board de se préoccuper du processus de planification de la relève du PDG. L’article décrit la saga de la mise à pied de Robert Diamond Jr en tant que CEO de la Barclays

 
Barclay!
Barclay! (Photo credit: J Dueck)

« Was Robert E. Diamond Jr. really irreplaceable? The Barclays board operated for 15 years on the assumption that he was. As a result, the British bank’s chief executive became more powerful — and ever harder to replace. Now that he has been kicked out in the wake of the scandal over the rigging of a key interest rate, Barclays is struggling to find new leadership.

And the moral of the story? Boards must always counterbalance strong chief executives with strong chairmen and have good succession plans in place. Most importantly, they should never treat anybody as indispensable — in case that is what they become ».

L’IFA publie un document phare sur la gouvernance des sociétés cotées en France


L’IFA publie un document phare sur la gouvernance des sociétés cotées dont l’objectif est d’attirer en France les investisseurs étrangers en les informant des atouts de l’hexagone.

 La gouvernance des sociétés cotées à l’usage des investisseurs 

Voici comment on présente l’ouvrage.

La qualité de la gouvernance des sociétés françaises constitue indiscutablement une valeur ajoutée et un renforcement de la sécurité économique et juridique. Afin de faire connaître ces pratiques en dehors de nos frontières, l’Institut Français des Administrateurs et Paris Ile-de-France Capitale Economique, en partenariat avec le Conseil Supérieur de l’Ordre des Experts-Comptables et la Compagnie Nationale des Commissaires aux Comptes, publient « La gouvernance des sociétés cotées à l’usage des investisseurs ».

Cette synthèse sur les pratiques sociétales de gouvernance en France a été réalisée à partir de l’expertise d’un groupe de travail piloté par la Commission Internationale de l’IFA présidée par Marie-Ange Andrieux et regroupant des institutions du monde économique et financier. Elle se veut, à la fois, un outil d’information des investisseurs étrangers et un document de valorisation de la gouvernance de nos sociétés.

« L’étude réalisée montre, en effet, que les pratiques de gouvernance françaises des sociétés cotées se situent déjà au niveau des meilleurs standards européens et internationaux, indique ainsi Daniel Lebègue, Président de l’IFA. Ces pratiques devraient poursuivre leur dynamique de progression, dans les grands groupes comme dans les entreprises moyennes, et même s’étendre aux entreprises non cotées. Équilibre des pouvoirs, performance des instances de gouvernance, à travers, entre autres, les différents comités, et transparence sont des qualités dont peuvent se prévaloir aujourd’hui nombre de Conseils d’administration ; Qualités indiscutablement séduisantes pour des investisseurs internationaux… Et qu’il s’agit donc de leur faire connaître ! »

Paris
Paris (Photo credit: citronate)

« La qualité de la gouvernance des entreprises est devenue un facteur significatif d’attractivité et de confiance; il contribue à améliorer la réputation d’un pays ou d’une région économique vis-à-vis de ses partenaires industriels et financiers, souligne Pierre Simon, Président de Paris IDF Capitale Economique. Dans un contexte de concurrence mondiale, c’est un vrai atout. Nous l’avons en France. »

Les atouts de la gouvernance des sociétés cotées françaises sont multiples et détaillées dans la synthèse :

– Le poids prépondérant de la « soft law » par rapport à la réglementation, au regard des sources de la gouvernance,
– La composition des Conseils (indépendance, diversité, mixité, compétences…) et l’efficacité de leur fonctionnement (comités, secrétariat général…),
– La qualité de la transparence de l’information tant financière qu’extra financière,
– La clarté de la communication sur la rémunération des mandataires sociaux,
– Le bon équilibre des pouvoirs entre les actionnaires et le Conseil d’Administration, 
– Le respect du droit des actionnaires et les outils mis à disposition des non-résidents au service de l’engagement actionnarial,
– Une bonne gestion des risques, facilitée par le rôle efficient des organismes de vérification et de contrôle.

Avantages à la dissociation des rôles de Président du Conseil (PCA) et de Président et chef de la direction (PCD)


Voici un excellent article paru dans 24/7 WALL St qui montre clairement le besoin de séparer les fonctions de PCA et de PCD. Les études montrent que la rémunération globale des deux postes séparés est significativement moindre que la rémunération d’un PCA/PCD.

Breaking Up Chairman and CEO Roles

New York Stock Exchange
New York Stock Exchange (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

« CEOs do not like it. More and more often, it seems, the roles of  chairman and CEO become separate from one another. And the arrangement  usually is forced on the chief executive. A major problem at a big corporation  is often the catalyst of these actions. That certainly happened at many of the  nation’s banks after the financial crisis. Troubled Chesapeake Energy (NYSE:  CHK) ripped the chairman’s role from CEO Aubrey Mc Clendon when  it became clear that he took advantage of his position to financially enrich  himself… It turns out that there may be reasons other than good corporate governance  practices to separate the two jobs. A new  study by GMI Ratings, a corporate governance research firm, claims that  the decision to separate the roles also saves a public company, and thus, its  shareholders, money. In a new piece of research GMI found :

The cost of employing a combined CEO/chair is 151 percent of what it  costs to employ a separate CEO and chairman.

Specifically, the data show :

– Executives with a combined CEO and chair role earn a median total summary  compensation of just over $16 million.

– CEOs who do not serve as chair earn $9.8 million in median total summary  compensation.

– A separate CEO and chairman earn a combined $11 million ».

The Director’s Dilemma – Juillet 2012


Voici un cas présenté par Julie Garland McLelland www.mclellan.com.au. À chaque mois Julie présente un cas qui est analysé par trois experts. Vous pouvez vous abonner à la série Director’s Dilemma.

Welcome to the July 2012 edition of The Director’s Dilemma.

This newsletter provides case studies that have been written to help you to develop your judgement as a company director. The case studies are based upon real life; they focus on complex and challenging boardroom issues which can be resolved in a variety of ways. There is often no one ‘correct’ answer; just an answer that is more likely to work given the circumstances and personalities of the case.

These are real life cases; the names and some circumstances have been altered to ensure anonymity. Each potential solution to the case study has different pros and cons for the individuals and companies concerned. Every month this newsletter presents an issue and several responses.

Consider: Which response would you choose and why?

Miriam is the Regional Managing Director for a large multi-national company. She oversees a group of companies that manufacture and sell products across the region and also export from it. One of the subsidiaries in her group is in a country that has a small market for the products and is fundamentally unprofitable. She has recommended on several occasions that the board allow her to close this subsidiary and supply that market by importing product from other group companies. She has backed her recommendations with detailed market analyses and projections as well as implementation plans.

Each time the board has denied her request and she is forced to continue to see the subsidiary drain her region’s profits and the shareholders’ returns. Last time the board met in her region she made the usual request and was denied again. She lost her temper and said some fairly harsh words in an unprofessional tone.

Miriam is a professional manager and has produced good results so her transgression was forgiven. However the board is, once again, meeting in her region and she has another invitation to present her recommended strategy to them.

What should Miriam do?

Eli’s Answer

Before addressing the board again, Miriam needs to find out why its members have so far refused to close the subsidiary. There may be a surface agenda as well as a hidden agenda, and she needs to uncover both. Once she finds out what the real concerns are, she needs to factor them into any proposed solution, which may be something other than her first choice.

When proposing the eventual solution, Miriam should first acknowledge respectfully the concerns about the proposed closing, and then explain the challenge she has in balancing these concerns with the need to be fiscally viable. The fact that she acknowledges the board’s concerns with utmost respect will likely make it easier for the board to listen to her proposed solution. Again, the proposed solution would probably not be an outright shutdown, but one that would somehow optimize the positive outcomes and minimize the risks.

Of course, there is a possibility that Miriam will discover that the board’s resistance to a shutdown is not legitimate but is emotionally or personally-based (e.g., the board Chair is the one who orchestrated the start-up of this subsidiary and takes personal offence to any suggestion of a shut down). If this is the case, Miriam may consider whether she can tolerate working in this setting. If her professionalism is substantially compromised, she should consider resigning.

One other issue to consider is whether the board should even be involved in decisions to start-up or wind-down a subsidiary, or whether such decisions should be delegated to the CEO who would make them on strictly professional considerations. However, such a change would require a revision of board policy to delegate more authority to management and remain focused primarily on strategic priorities, fiduciary duties, and organizational policies.

Eli Mina is a consultant on board effectiveness, shared decision making, and meeting procedures. He is the author of « 101 Boardroom Problems and How to Solve Them » and is based in Vancouver, Canada.

Julie’s Answer

Miriam must set the correct strategic context for a board discussion. She should investigate and understand the reasons the subsidiary was established and the assumptions presented to the board when they approved establishment. She should ask:

  1. Were the assumptions wrong?
  2. Were the assumptions right but the world has now changed?
  3. Have the reasons for setting up in such a small market ceased to exist?
  4. Can the aims of the subsidiary be addressed by another strategy?

Loss of temper (or any emotional control) is not acceptable behaviour for a senior executive. Miriam is lucky to have a second chance. She must make the most of this by establishing a strong shared understanding of strategy for the subsidiary. She needs to present the facts and align herself with the board by building agreement about what the subsidiary was set up to accomplish before she asks the board to endorse a change of strategy.

She then needs to demonstrate that the board can rely on her leadership to implement the strategy she is recommending. This is not just a question of financial logic and brief implementation plans; she must address risks including legal issues around staff redundancies and closure of facilities. The board needs to satisfy itself that the strategy recommended will be satisfactorily implemented under her leadership.

Board time is precious and Miriam should write a good board paper so that all directors are able to engage in a productive discussion and confidently make a decision.

If the board is still unwilling to close the subsidiary she will just have to carry on running it. By engaging in a proper high level discussion Miriam should gain an insight into the reasons for retaining a loss-making subsidiary. She may even find that she agrees with the directors.

Miriam needs to relax. It is the board’s decision, not hers. She has done her duty by providing the information required to facilitating a proper debate and decision.

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

Michelle’s Answer

Miriam is forgetting that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over again and expecting different results! If the board is saying ‘no’ – then it’s ‘no’! The good news for Miriam is that ‘no’ is just feedback that she didn’t properly understand her audience’s attitude. Miriam simply hasn’t reflected to the board that she understands their perspective before seeking approval. ‘No’ means try again, just do something different!

To date Miriam has presented her logic, data and analysis and only covered what she wanted to say, and it’s not working. Miriam should remember, ‘it’s not about me, it’s all about the audience’. I suggest Miriam think about the issues from the board member’s (not her own) perspective. She should ask herself, ‘what is this audience thinking, feeling and doing in relation to this issue?’ She could phone each board member prior to the board meeting and elicit their concerns. She could seek feedback from her direct reports as they are possibly more connected to the issues at the coal face. I expect Miriam would find that her previous approach was misdirected. Instead of focusing on profitability (her main concern) there’s probably a different matter getting in the way of their approval, such as a prior commitment to the staff in the unprofitable subsidiary or to the wider financial market regarding the closure of the subsidiary.

We are more likely to be influenced by our emotions first and then substantiate our views with logic and data. It’s important that Miriam dedicates some time in the opening of her upcoming board presentation to re-establish rapport with her board. Only then is she in a position to deliver the relevant facts and data based on her assessment of their perspective.

This matter is important, so I encourage her to allocate the time important matters deserve. Miriam must plan her approach and rehearse until she is confident. A professional presentation skills coach can help dramatically with the necessary preparation for this type of business presentation.

Michelle Bowden, CSP is a Master of Influence and presentations coach. She is the author of « Don’t Picture me Naked » – how to present your ideas and influence people using techniques that actually work. She is based in Sydney, Australia.

Disclaimer

The opinions expressed above are general in nature and are designed to help you to develop your judgement as a director. They are not a definitive legal ruling. Names and some circumstances in the case study have been changed to ensure anonymity. Contributors to this newsletter comment in the context of their own jurisdiction; readers should check their local laws and regulations as they may be very different.

This newsletter – If you have any ideas for improving the newsletter please let me know. If you are reading a forwarded copy please visit my website and sign up for your own subscription.

www.mclellan.com.au | PO Box 97 Killara NSW 2071 email julie@mclellan.com.au | phone +61 2 9499 8700 | mobile +61 411 262 470 | fax +61 2 9499 8711

En rappel : Un nouveau modèle de gouvernance de sociétés


Voici, en rappel, un excellent billet de Richard Leblanc qui a fait un travail colossal de synthèse afin de dégager les bases d’un modèle de gouvernance, bâti à partir des nombreuses et riches discussions dans le groupe Boards & Advisers de LinkedIn. Richard a développé un modèle vraiment très pertinent que vous pouvez télécharger à partir de son blogue. Je vous encourage à lire ce document synthèse qui est le fruit de centaines d’échanges sur LinkedIn. Par la même occasion, je vous invite à vous inscrire à son blogue et à suivre son groupe Boards & Advisers sur LinkedIn.

Shareholder Spring and A New Model of Corporate Governance

« Shareholder activism at CP Rail, Yahoo, Research in Motion, Chesapeake Energy and BMC Software continues, trying to prevent the destruction of billions of dollars of shareholder value. Shareholders rejected Citigroup’s, Aviva’s, Knight Capital’s, FirstMerit’s and Cairn Energy’s executive pay packages. Activists and hedge funds such as Bill Ackman at Pershing Square, Dan Loeb of Third Point Capital, Vic Alboini at Jaguar Financial Corp., Paul Singer at Elliot Management and Carl Icahn reveal defects in the current corporate governance system. What do they all have in common? And are boards listening ? »

Comment un PDG peut-il mieux communiquer avec son C.A. ?


Voici un article paru dans blog.openviewpartners.com qui montre la nécessité d’établir une bonne communication entre le PDG et le C.A. Si les réunions avec le C.A. sont un cauchemar pour vous, dépêchez-vous de lire cet article !

How to Take Advantage of Your Board of Directors

« It’s no secret a lot of CEOs aren’t big fans of their boards of directors. They derive very little value from them and in some cases find the board to be an utter distraction. Even seasoned CEOs who have managed to assemble a valuable team of advisors and mentors sometimes struggle with board management. They’re not sure how often to communicate with them, how involved they should allow board members to be, or in which areas the board could provide the most value…

The most common Board of Directors (BOD) challenges are often functions of these three issues:

  1. You don’t communicate with your BOD: If the only time you talk with your board is during quarterly meetings, an information gap will inevitably exist. That can cause a huge operational disconnect that results in ineffective and inefficient meetings. Too much of the BOD meetings are spent getting caught up, versus having a meaningful dialogue about the key issues.
  2. You don’t want to show your weaknesses: CEOs are very often hesitant to open up and reveal their weaknesses. This may be born out of a bad experience in the past or just pure ego. They worry that if they’re candid about the challenges the business is facing, they’ll be viewed as incompetent.
  3. You don’t want to bother them: Entrepreneurs too often assume that their board members are too busy to be bothered with seemingly menial issues, and they feel like a nuisance if they ask for help ». 

Administrateurs de sociétés | Tendances, défis et opportunités


Excellent article de Susan Shultz du The Board Institute Inc. Vous trouverez, dans le document ci-dessous, 11 éléments-clés qui confrontent les administrateurs de sociétés aujourd’hui. À lire.

English: Frame of reference for research of in...
English: Frame of reference for research of integrateg Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Administrateurs de sociétés | Tendances, défis et opportunités

« Boards of directors matter — and now they matter more than ever. The market continues to demand increased transparency and accountability. New compliance mandates, regulation and shareholder activism are the drivers. Boards and their constituencies are clamoring for more strategic engagement and value-add by the directors. Yet this trend seems to be in stark contrast to the drumbeat for compliance and regulation. How can boards balance the pressures from their attorneys, auditors and regulators to be risk averse (Read: safe) with Wall Street calling for creativity, innovation and job creation? Challenges and opportunities for boards have never been greater, and good governance is more than just compliance ».

Les administrateurs doivent exercer un jugement sûr : Quelques éléments fondamentaux à considérer


The logo of KPMG.
The logo of KPMG. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Vous trouverez, ci-dessous, quelques conseils que les administrateurs de sociétés devraient suivre afin de s’assurer d’avoir un jugement robuste dans le cadre de la prise de décision. Cet article paru dans NACD Directorship le 24 juin 2012 met l’accent sur le texte « Enhancing Board Oversight: Avoiding Judgment Traps and Biases », un document du COSO (Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission) dont les auteurs sont KPMG et les professeurs Steven M. Glover and Douglas F. Prawitt de Brigham Young University.

Good Judgment Requires Discipline, Awareness of Traps and Biases

It used to be that exercising good judgment largely meant “using common sense.” But today, while common sense is still essential, exercising good judgment—consistently— in a business environment that is increasingly complex and dynamic, volatile and uncertain, and under high pressure requires a disciplined process. It also requires an understanding of common traps and biases that can undermine the judgments of even seasoned professionals and boards.

Voici quelques considérations importantes à connaître. Il faut lire l’article au complet lequel réfère au document du COSO.

A good judgment process followed consistently can help improve decision-making and oversight, but “traps and biases” can undermine the process.

Our “intuitive” judgment can betray us.

Beware of three particularly common judgment traps How you “frame” an issue largely determines how you see it (or don’t see it).

Beware of four common biases that can undermine good judgment (unwittingly).

Réforme majeure de la rémunération des dirigeants au Royaume-Uni


Le Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (UK) a récemment rendu public un projet de réforme visant à renforcer la gouvernance et les droits des actionnaires.

English: Corporate Governance
English: Corporate Governance (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Government announces far-reaching reform of directors’ pay

The Business Secretary, Vince Cable today announced the most comprehensive reforms of the framework for directors’ remuneration in a decade. This package of measures will address failures in corporate governance by empowering shareholders to engage effectively with companies on pay. It will:

· Give shareholders binding votes on pay policy and exit payments, so they can hold companies to account and prevent rewards for failure;

· Boost transparency so that what people are paid is easily understood and the link between pay and performance is clearly drawn; and

· Ensure that reform has a lasting impact by empowering business and investors to maintain recent activism.

Directors’ pay: guide to Government reforms

Over the past decade, directors’ pay in the UK’s largest listed companies has quadrupled with no clear link to company performance.

« In the way we pay ourselves…now is the time to be more transparent, more responsible and more accountable. High pay must be for exceptional performance, not mere attendance. »

 

L’évaluation du conseil d’administration : Une pratique exemplaire


Cet article publié sur le Board Blog de Boardmember.com, présente les raisons pour lesquelles le processus d’évaluation des conseils d’administration est devenu, au fil des ans, une quasi-exigence.

En effet, une étude de PwC montre que 94 % des sociétés publiques ont mis en place des processus d’évaluation des membres de C.A. et de l’efficacité des C.A. Je vous encourage à lire cet article; il est cependant requis que vous vous inscriviez, mais vous trouverez plusieurs avantages à consulter ce site.

Ci-dessous, quelques extraits de cet article.

Boardmember.com

Board Evaluations: Honor Spoken Rules of Engagement

« I have always been a big fan of the benefits that can be afforded a company’s board after it undergoes a prudent board evaluation.  Next to executive board sessions, I believe a well-structured board evaluation is one of the best corporate governance practices of the last 10 years and it appears the practice is quite prevalent.  PwC’s 2011 Annual Corporate Directors Study found 94% of public companies conduct some level of board evaluation.  Obviously, that finding partly reflects the requirement by the NYSE for all its listed companies to conduct a board evaluation.  NASDAQ doesn’t require an evaluation as part of its listing requirements but has repeatedly promoted those benefits, as well.

Who should facilitate your board evaluation:  Let me start by saying who I think shouldn’t be the facilitator (the person who directly receives and analyzes the results):  The lead director, chairman, or the chair of the nominating/governance (or similarly named) committee.  And here is the logical reason: How can you evaluate the entire board and all its members if one of those members is conducting the evaluation, especially if the board member facilitator is part of the problem?  Will other board members feel comfortable criticizing the facilitator when that insider will then know what each board member’s comments were?  Now, I recognize that some boards are so collegial and candid with one another that this self evaluation can work, but I still don’t think that having an existing board member, regardless of title, creates the right environment for candid feedback.  Now, again, before I get swamped with readers who think the chairman or the nominating/governance chair should own this process, I don’t disagree.  I just don’t think that it makes sense for them to be the facilitator of the evaluation ».

Comment l’attention accordée aux stakeholders contribue-t-elle au développement durable et la création de valeur à long terme ?


Voici un rapport de Deloitte sur l’importance à accorder aux parties prenantes (stakeholders), dont les actionnaires (shareholders), dans la réalisation du développement durable et la création de valeur à long terme.

Vous pouvez télécharger le document en version PDF

How stakeholders view a company, what they expect of the company, and how they understand the company’s impact on society and the environment, in addition to its financial results, can affect business value. Determining the impact on value of environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues to multiple stakeholders is becoming central to how many companies craft their sustainability strategy and report on their sustainability performance. This opens the door to a new vision of the business objective: enlightened value maximization, which seeks greater alignment between various stakeholders to generate long-term business value.

This paper describes:

  1. The impact shareholders and other stakeholders can have on corporate valuations by identifying and reacting to ESG risks
  2. How stakeholder perception of the company and its actions are likely to drive the corporate agenda, including ESG performance goal setting
  3. Strategic steps that can help a company mitigate the impact of stakeholder action on its bottom line, cost of capital and risk, and leverage new opportunities to generate business value.

Un conseil de plus petite taille : Une règle de bonne gouvernance selon Pozen


Un conseil de taille limitée, se rencontrant plus souvent, est plus efficace et, selon Robert Pozen, c’est aussi une règle de bonne gouvernance. Voir l’article ci-dessous qui résume bien les propos qu’il a tenu lors d’une conférence à Toronto le 29 mai 2012.

Why good governance can come from smaller boards

Boards should be smaller, meet more often, and be populated by those with greater industry expertise, says a Harvard Business School lecturer and former general counsel for Fidelity Mutual Funds. Robert Pozen provided his recipe for board reform at the Canadian Coalition for Good Governance annual general meeting in Toronto May 29. He said it’s high-functioning boards, not legislation, that leads to better governance. He went on to note there are too many “social loafers” on boards who are investing too little time understanding the issues of the company they are supposed to be serving. “The problem with 14 or 18 directors is social loafing. If you’re part of that big of a board the thinking of many is, ‘well, someone else will take care of it.’ If you don’t feel that responsibility it is a very bad dynamic,” says Pozen.

Un nouveau modèle de gouvernance de sociétés


Voici un excellent billet de Richard Leblanc qui a fait un travail colossal de synthèse afin de dégager les bases d’un modèle de gouvernance, bâti à partir des nombreuses et riches discussions dans le groupe Boards & Advisers de LinkedIn. Richard a développé un modèle vraiment très pertinent que vous pouvez télécharger à partir de son blogue. Je vous encourage à lire ce document synthèse qui est le fruit de centaines d’échanges sur LinkedIn. Par la même occasion, je vous invite à vous inscrire à son blogue et à suivre son groupe Boards & Advisers sur LinkedIn.

Pershing Square
Pershing Square (Photo credit: Ava Weintraub Photography)

Shareholder Spring and A New Model of Corporate Governance

« Shareholder activism at CP Rail, Yahoo, Research in Motion, Chesapeake Energy and BMC Software continues, trying to prevent the destruction of billions of dollars of shareholder value. Shareholders rejected Citigroup’s, Aviva’s, Knight Capital’s, FirstMerit’s and Cairn Energy’s executive pay packages. Activists and hedge funds such as Bill Ackman at Pershing Square, Dan Loeb of Third Point Capital, Vic Alboini at Jaguar Financial Corp., Paul Singer at Elliot Management and Carl Icahn reveal defects in the current corporate governance system. What do they all have in common? And are boards listening?

Prise de position de l’IGOPP sur la rémunération des hauts dirigeants – Payer pour la valeur ajoutée !


 L’IGOPP a récemment publié une prise de position sur la rémunération des hauts dirigeants : Payer pour la valeur ajoutée : Trancher le noeud gordien de la rémunération des dirigeants

Payer pour la valeur ajoutée

Voici un extrait des conclusions de l’étude. Je vous encourage à lire le document au complet car il recèle de statistiques vraiment pertinentes sur la rémunération des dirigeants au Canada.

Recommandation 1

Réduire graduellement la place des options d’achat d’actions comme mode de rémunération des membres de la haute direction, avec l’objectif ultime d’éliminer complètement cette forme de rémunération.

Recommandation 2

Les gouvernements devraient éliminer tous les avantages fiscaux (personnels et corporatifs) qui favorisent l’utilisation des options d’achat d’actions comme mode de rémunération.

Recommandation 3

Les conseils d’administration des sociétés cotées en bourse devraient établir un rapport juste et productif entre la rémunération totale des dirigeants et le revenu médian des salariés de l’entreprise 

Recommandation 4

Les conseils d’administration doivent demeurer entièrement responsables et imputables de l’établissement des programmes et niveaux de rémunération des dirigeants. Les conseils d’administration doivent être assez crédibles, et avoir assez de courage pour tenir compte de facteurs qualitatifs tout autant que quantitatifs dans l’établissement de cett e rémunération.

Recommandation 5

Les conseils d’administration devraient être guidés par des principes de la nature suivante :

  1. CONCEVOIR LA RÉMUNÉRATION SELON LES CIRCONSTANCES PARTICULIÈRES DE CHAQUE SOCIÉTÉ
  2. REVOIR ET REMETTRE EN QUESTION LES APPROCHES STANDARD DE LA RÉMUNÉRATION
  3. ASSURER ÉQUITÉ ET ÉQUILIBRE DANS LA RÉMUNÉRATION 

Lire l’article au complet :Payer pour la valeur ajoutée

Documentation de l’ICCA en gouvernance des sociétés publiques, privées et OBNL


L’Institut canadien des comptables agréés (ICCA) a produit des documents pratiques, pertinents, synthétiques et accessibles sur presque tous les sujets reliés à la gouvernance. En fait, l’ICCA a été un pionnier dans l’élaboration de publications répondant aux questions fondamentales que se posent les administrateurs sur l’ensemble des thèmes se rapportant à la gouvernance.

Toute formation en gouvernance des sociétés réfère à cette documentation de base. Ainsi, le Collège des administrateurs des sociétés (CAS) et son partenaire canadien, le Directors College (DC), puisent abondamment dans les ressources documentaires de l’ICCA dont tous les grands cabinets sont membres. Ceux-ci sont également de précieux collaborateurs des programmes de formation au Canada. Ces documents sont révisés régulièrement afin qu’ils demeurent actuels et pertinents.

Participez au sondage !

 

boutiqueCA

Documentation en gouvernance de l’ICCA : collection de 20 questions

Vous trouverez ci-dessous une mise à jour de la collection de « 20 questions » à l’intention des administrateurs de sociétés. Si vous avez des questions dans le domaine de la gouvernance, vous y trouverez certainement des réponses satisfaisantes. Je vous encourage donc fortement à consulter ces publications. Vous pouvez les commander ou les télécharger.

Documentation en gouvernance de l’ICCA : collection de 20 questions

Les C.A. doivent croire en la valeur ajoutée de la DIVERSITÉ !


Le point de vue de , fondatrice du Canadian Board Diversity Council, dans le Financial Post, sur les effets positifs de la diversité. Il y a encore beaucoup de chemin à faire pour que le message passe clairement aux Boards des grandes sociétés cotées en bourse… mais plusieurs commencent à comprendre que la diversité est une importante valeur ajoutée dans l’efficacité des Boards.

Changing the face of boards

Why in 2012, is the federal government trying to nudge corporate Canada into changing the makeup of its boardrooms to include more women?

The answer is simple: Inclusivity is good for business. Yet, while Canada enjoys an incredibly diverse, multicultural talent pool of men and women, nominating committees continue to seek out the usual candidates: Caucasian men. But the cost to opportunity of maintaining the status quo instead of seeking out the best and brightest in a much larger talent pool is too great. Recognizing this, the federal government’s Economic Action Plan 2012 created an advisory council of leaders from the private and public sectors to promote the participation of women on corporate boards.

Research shows that everybody wins when there are more perspectives around the table. The government understands this. Business has been slow to come…

Documentation en gouvernance de l’ICCA : collection de 20 questions


L’Institut canadien des comptables agréés (ICCA) a produit des documents pratiques, pertinents, synthétiques et accessibles sur presque tous les sujets reliés à la gouvernance. En fait, l’ICCA a été un pionnier dans l’élaboration de publications répondant aux questions fondamentales que se posent les administrateurs sur l’ensemble des thèmes se rapportant à la gouvernance.

Toute formation en gouvernance des sociétés réfère à cette documentation de base. Ainsi, le Collège des administrateurs des sociétés (CAS) et son partenaire canadien, le Directors College (DC), puisent abondamment dans les ressources documentaires de l’ICCA dont tous les grands cabinets sont membres. Ceux-ci sont également de précieux collaborateurs des programmes de formation au Canada. Ces documents sont révisés régulièrement afin qu’ils demeurent actuels et pertinents.

boutiqueCA

Vous trouverez ci-dessous une mise à jour de la collection de « 20 questions » à l’intention des administrateurs de sociétés. Si vous avez des questions dans le domaine de la gouvernance, vous y trouverez certainement des réponses satisfaisantes. Je vous encourage donc fortement à consulter ces publications. Vous pouvez les commander ou les télécharger.

Documentation en gouvernance de l’ICCA : collection de 20 questions

 

La juste rémunération des hauts dirigeants d’une OBNL : une tâche délicate !


Article très intéressant d’Alice Korngold dans Huff Post – Canada, sur un sujet brûlant ! L’auteure montre les facettes positives et négatives de l’établissement d’une rémunération « juste et raisonnable » dans le contexte des OBNL américaines. Elle propose une démarche logique pour assurer l’intégrité du processus.

Executive Compensation in the Nonprofit Sector: Getting It Right

« In fact, one of the most important things that nonprofit boards can do to strengthen the organizations that they govern is to get the salaries right for the CEOs of their nonprofits.
What does it mean to get compensation right? And why does it matter so much?

Getting it right is called « fair and reasonable » by the IRS. It’s what the law requires, it’s what any CEO wants, and it’s what any donor and member of the public expects ».

The Power of Millennial Zuckerberg : Good governance !


Food for Thought ! 

How being a Millennial has shaped how Mark Zuckerberg runs Facebook.

Voici 2 articles vraiment intéressants, le premier de Forbes et le deuxième de Fox Business.

Mark Zuckerberg Speaks at Harvard (Facebook)

Can The Millennial Zuckerberg Be A Great Leader?

Voir aussi :

At Facebook, Zuckerberg Poised for Corporate Governance Crash Course