
Ce que les dirigeants devraient savoir sur les perspectives du « commerce mobile »



Voici un rapport américain très intéressant, publié par Pearl Meyer & Partners et partagé par Richard Leblanc, qui présente les dix items les plus importants des ordres du jour des comités de ressources humaines (CRH) en 2012. Le document expose en détail chacune des priorités des CRH pour cette année. Voici un bref extrait du rapport.
Top 10 Compensation Committee Agenda Items for 2012
« Compensation Committees in 2012 will need to focus continued attention to the design details of executive pay programs, along with how they are administered and communicated to all stakeholders, including investors. With that in mind, Pearl Meyer & Partners’ annual look at the Top 10 issues facing Compensation Committees focuses on how Boards can effectively address the key elements – and the sometimes overlooked nuances – of a robust and effective pay-for-performance orientation.With that in mind, Pearl Meyer & Partners’ annual look at the Top 10 issues facing Compensation Committees focuses on how Boards can effectively address the key elements – and the sometimes overlooked nuances – of a robust and effective pay-for-performance orientation ».
Les 10 items les plus importants sont les suivants :
1. Understand Your Company’s Pay-for-Performance Linkage
2. Understand Total Executive Compensation
3. Reassess Executive Compensation Benchmarking
4. Balance Short-Term and Long-Term Incentive Programs
5. Don’t Follow the Leader – Shareholders, Not ISS, Are Your Target Audience
6. Use a Persuasive Executive Summary in the CD&A
7. Continuously Assess Your Succession Planning Strategy
8. Test Your Pay Philosophy Against its Stated Objectives
9. Assess Executive Rewards Within Your Executive Talent Management Strategy
10. Revisit Consultant Independence and Selection Under Dodd-Frank
There were three main findings. Firstly, close ties within a board can adversely affect company performance. While his study was not designed to explain why this is the case, Dr Nguyen believes opposing forces are at play: the positive effects of connectedness on information asymmetry as well as the board’s advisory role versus its willingness to be tough on a CEO when circumstances demand.
Secondly, social networks seem to impact board effectiveness in its role of hiring and firing CEOs, a key duty for the board to enable them to protect shareholder value. It appears well connected CEOs are less likely to be ousted for poor performance than non-connected CEOs. For the same poor performance, the connected CEO is almost three-times less likely to be fired.

The third key finding is that a connected CEO ousted for poor performance is much more likely to find a better job, more quickly, than an unconnected CEO.
Il y a toujours eu beaucoup de discussions sur le sujet de la taille optimale des Boards d’OBNL. Mais que montrent les études et qu’en disent les experts à ce sujet ? Selon Richard Leblanc, on trouvera la réponse en analysant la mission et les fonctions de l’organisation et en étudiant le leadership du C.A. Voici un article intéressant à consulter si vous songez à modifier la taille de votre conseil.
« A 2011 study by Bain Capital reported in The Nonprofit Times asserts that the optimal board size for effective decision making is seven people. According to Bain, “every person added after that decreases decision-making ability by 10 percent.” So for boards with the median of 17 people, Bain would put their decision-making ability at zero.
While a smaller board size does reflect new thinking about board functioning, I’ve seen too many boards that work extremely well with 17-22 people to buy into Bain’s assertion. Some boards grow quite large to enable greater engagement of key community leaders or to expand its fundraising capability. United Way is an excellent example of this done very effectively. »
Voici le billet qui a attiré l’attention du plus grand nombre de lecteurs sur mon blogue depuis le début. Celui-ci a été publié le 30 octobre 2011. Je l’ai mis à jour afin que les nombreuses personnes intéressés par la gouvernance des OBNL puissent être mieux informées. L’Institut canadien des comptables agréés (ICCA) a produit des documents pratiques, pertinents, synthétiques et accessibles sur presque toutes les questions de gouvernance. Il est également important de noter que l’ICCA accorde une attention toute particulière aux pratiques de gouvernance des organismes sans but lucratif (OSBL = OBNL).
Ainsi, l’ICCA met à la disposition de ces organisations la collection 20 Questions pour les OSBL qui comprend des questions que les administrateurs d’organismes sans but lucratif (OSBL=OBNL) devraient se poser concernant des enjeux importants pour la gouvernance de ce type d’organismes. Ces documents sont révisés régulièrement afin qu’ils demeurent actuels et pertinents. Si vous avez des questions dans le domaine de la gouvernance des OBNL, vous y trouverez certainement des réponses satisfaisantes.Si vous souhaitez avoir une idée du type de document à votre disposition, vous pouvez télécharger le PDF suivant:
Vous pouvez choisir le document pertinent (voir la liste ci-dessous) et le commander à la boutique CA.
Boutique CA de ICCA – SÉRIE ORGANISMES SANS BUT LUCRATIF OSBL/OBNL
SÉRIE ORGANISMES SANS BUT LUCRATIF |
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C’est très difficile d’évaluer la contribution effective d’un conseil d’administration, composé d’as de la gouvernance. Le C.A. est, à mon avis, l’un des actifs intangibles les plus précieux et il faut accorder une attention très particulière au choix, à la formation, à l’information et à la conduite d’un groupe de personnes aussi talentueuses. Surtout, il faut que le président du C.A. (PCA) et le président et chef de la direction (PCD) sachent comment faire le meilleur emploi de ces talents. L’article publié par David Rehr de la George Washington University propose 7 actions que la direction des entreprises doit entreprendre afin de profiter au maximum de la synergie d’un C.A. (Board) de qualité exceptionnelle.
Creating a Great Board of Directors
« Having a strong board of directors has never been more important in today’s environment. The economy remains problematic. Competition is fierce. The media is filled with stories of unethical behavior or abuse of organizational stewardship. Whether you are involved in a corporation or a non-profit organization, you need a cohesive and focused group of advisers who can help the CEO and senior management move through these turbulent times.
But in our drive for success, we sometimes forget that our board should be composed of extremely talented individuals who run incredible enterprises. Their time is often divided among many activities. At a minimum, we should never waste their time, which is a precious commodity.
When we have a great board, it makes the mission (whether it is making great products, providing outstanding services, curing AIDS, or ending malaria in Africa) easier to achieve. So how can a CEO use his/her board members to maximize the enterprise’s success? Here are seven initiatives from top organizations I have worked with which achieved their organizational goals and had great success ».
L’article présente 7 initiatives très importantes pour valoriser le C.A. Cliquez sur le lien !

Je crois qu’il est important d’avoir une perspective globale de la gouvernance et, pour ce faire, il est nécessaire d’explorer le phénomène sous un angle international. Comment se pratique la gouvernance ailleurs dans le monde, en Europe, en Asie et en Australie par exemple ? Et comment la situation se compare-t-elle aux États-Unis, notamment en ce qui a trait aux femmes siégeant sur des conseils d’administration ? Voilà ce que l’étude de D. M. Branson de l’Université de Pittsburgh aborde. Vous pouvez téléchager le document au complet. En voici quelques extraits :
« In the United States, the representation of women on corporate boards of directors has been flat for 6 years now. By contrast, elsewhere around the world the topic is a hot button issue. This includes Australia where the proportion of board seats held by women has suddenly jumped from 8% in 2010 to nearly 14% today. The Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) has adopted a “comply or explain” diversity disclosure requirement (for emphasis termed an “if not, why not” disclosure requirement), which emphasizes gender diversity. The requirement is even more stringent than the London Stock Exchange (LSX) comply or explain regulation adopted after the Lord Mervyn Davies Report on women in corporate governance appeared in February 2011. The Australian Institute of Company Directors also has instituted a mentoring/sponsorship program, the first of its kind in the world, designed to obtain board seats for women. This article reviews these Australian as well as global developments, including enactment of quota laws (especially Norway and France), certificate and pledge programs (“Rooney Rules”), and hard law disclosure requirements (United States) ».
La présidente du Cercle des administrateurs de sociétés, Mme Louise Champoux-Paillé, partage avec nous cet excellent document émanant du CFA Institute « prodiguant des conseils afin d’éviter le piège des orientations à court terme ». Le rapport présente également les résultats d’un « sondage sur les pratiques de gouvernance en matière de communication avec les actionnaires, de rémunération, de gestion des risques, de sélection des administrateurs et de l’importance accordée aux discussions stratégiques au sein des C.A. »
Visionary Board Leadership | Stewardship for the Long Term
Voici un aperçu de la table des matières :
« Visionary Boards—Areas of Focus That Can Influence
Long-Term Value
Quarterly Earnings Practices
Shareowner Communications
Strategic Direction
Risk Oversight
Executive Compensation
Culture (Board Culture/Company Culture)
Conclusion »
Une étude de Heidrick & Struggles du Center for Effective Organizations de University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business montre que les perceptions qu’ont les présidents | chefs de la direction (PCD ou CEO) de l’efficacité du conseil d’administration (C.A., Board) sont significativement différentes de celles qu’ont les membres du conseil (C.A.) de leur propre utilité et efficacité ! Les auteurs proposent plusieurs moyens pour améliorer la dynamique entre le C.A et le management des sociétés. Vous pouvez lire l’article au complet sur le site de la NACD (nacdonline.org).
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Achieving the Perfect CEO-Board Dynamic – Resources – NACD
« Nine out of 10 directors think their boards are doing a good job. Their CEOs think only one director in five is effective. Who is right?
A study conducted by Heidrick & Struggles with the Center for Effective Organizations at the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business surveyed 768 directors, nearly 75 percent of whom are outside directors, at 660 of the 2,000 largest publicly traded companies in the United States. CEOs confide that they have at most one or two effective directors who provide wise counsel, offer advice on key issues. But 95 percent of directors rate their boards as either effective or very effective overall ».
When CEOs see only about 10 to 20 percent of directors as effective and their top management teams often regard working with the board as a demotivating experience, what are the issues? The good news is that the causes of the demotivating disconnect are clear and there are readily available remedies to address them ».
Ci-dessous un extrait de cet article :
« The emphasis on compliance and regulation de-emphasizes the basic building block of good business and good relationships: trust.
Simply put, values-based corporate governance has been referred to as the “institutionalization of ethics” into the conduct of the board and management. The belief is that the overwhelming majority of people behave in ethical ways, prefer the moral high ground and understand the short- and long-term benefits of doing the right thing by customers, suppliers, employees, communities and shareholders. The rules are still there, of course, but they are broadly written, serving to show where mismanagement, malfeasance and criminal behavior are present and also indicating the extent of negative consequences for behaving badly.![]()
Rules-based corporate governance starts with an entirely different assumption. It assumes temptation and the desire for personal gain is rife in corporate life; therefore monitoring, reporting, strict guidelines and detailed restrictions on behavior are the avenue to achieving ethical and right behavior from management and boards. Clearly the cycles of dishonest, improper and criminal behavior in some companies over the past decade followed by increased legislation and regulation have squarely placed directors in a rules-based environment. Yet rules alone are not enough. They cannot easily adapt or allow for nuance and so, because of this, a rules-based system of governance alone is incapable of addressing the complexity and mutability of the global economy ».
Vous trouvez, ci-dessous, un excellent rapport publié par le CED (Committee for Economic Development) et partagé par Louise Champoux-Paillé avec les commentaires suivants :
«Corporate leaders must actively commit to make advancement decisions that take advantage of the power of diverse views from leaders who don’t think, act or look like themselves. That will require diligently breaking old habits of selection that still favor those similar to existing leadership at the top. Nominating committees need to re-examine the narrow selection criteria that often exclude those who have not served in a CEO role. For example, it has been reported that of the 78 women currently serving as CFOs of Fortune 1000 companies, 53 are not currently serving on any outside board»

Je vous encourage à lire au moins le sommaire exécutif (pages 7 à 9)
Richard Leblanc, dans un article publié dans Canadian Business, présente une solide analyse de la composition du conseil d’administration de RIM . À partir des discussions publiées dans le groupe Boards and Advisors de LinkedIn, il a identifié les changements requis afin de renouveler le « Board » de RIM. Bonne lecture !
Échec de la gouvernance à RIM | Un coup d’oeil au C.A. !
« It took RIM until 2012 to accede to having an independent board chair, a practice recommended almost 20 years ago. At this week’s annual general meeting, the minimalist shuffle toward corporate governance continued. Chair Barbara Stymiest, a former banker and regulator, acknowledged there were gaps in board skills.

“Gaps” is an understatement. This board does not have the industry track record, or clout to push back against management ».
The eight traps of boardroom diversity

« There are myths and vested interests in the movement toward boardroom diversity now underway in several countries. In this post, I’ll consider the “traps” and embedded myths, and in a later post propose solutions.
1. The “Defining diversity downward” trap
2. The “Business case” trap
3. The “Be careful” trap
4. The “Entrenchment” trap
5. The “We want a CEO” trap
6. The “It’s whom you know” trap
7. The “Prior experience” trap
8. The “Pipeline” or “Shallow pool” trap »

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 ! »

« 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.
European Confederation of Directors’ Associations
ecoDa, the European Confederation of Directors’ Associations, is a not-for-profit association acting as the “European voice of directors ”, active since March 2005 and based in Brussels .
Through its national institutes of directors (the main national institutes existing in Europe ), ecoDa represents around fifty-five thousand board directors from across the EU. ecoDa’s member organisations represent board directors from the largest public companies to the smallest private firms, both listed and unlisted.
ecoDa’s mission is to promote Corporate Governance at large, to promote the role of directors towards shareholders and corporate stakeholders, and to promote the success of its national institutes.
CSR Asia – Corporate Social Responsibility in Asia

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:
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
Excellent document de Santiago Chaher et James David Spellman paru dans Global Corporate Governance Forum Publication. La publication présente plusieurs facteurs qui devraient inciter les conseils d’administration à se préoccuper sérieusement des médias sociaux. À lire.

« In short, today’s corporate directors have the ‘necessary’ skills in terms of compliance and financial performance, but not the ‘sufficient’ skills in terms of strategic or technological know how, » says Barry Libert, chief executive officer of OpenMatters, a consultancy for boards. « Why? Because for years, astute corporate directors believed the tools that companies like Facebook and Twitter offered weren’t essential. In their view, these new means of communications were for kids, had little, if any, business value, and created minimal strategic, operational or financial risks. Wow, were they wrong. »
This circumstance will change as business and personal needs require more extensive use of social media.For a 2011 Deloitte questionnaire, 79 percent of all public company respondents reported that their board’s use of technology is increasing.
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 ? »