How to improve your board’s performance ̶ and why you should bother
Monday, 14 November 2022
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By Parmi Natesan and Prof Prieur du Plessis
It does seem as though a board’s performance correlates with the organisation’s financial performance, not forgetting overall performance as the Zondo Commission has so graphically illustrated.
Global research conducted in 2018 by McKinsey & Company suggests that there is indeed a correlation between board performance and directors’ effectiveness at core board activities and that this correlates directly with financial outperformance
relative to peers.
Just one of the findings says it all: “Nearly 60% of directors at boards in the top quartile for effectiveness say their respective organisations have significantly outperformed peers”.
Fast forward four years,
and we have the Zondo Commission’s Reports, which set out the consequences of poor board performance.
It’s therefore quite logical that organisations and their boards should focus on improving board performance. Based on the research from
McKinsey as well as other research by management consultancy Russell Reynolds Associates, there are a number of areas associated with top-quartile board performance. These areas complement the board’s traditional oversight role and show just how much
the board’s remit has expanded.
Strategy implementation and monitoring: High-performing boards are 10% more likely to list strategic planning or review as a top agenda item. While the management team leads the formulation
of strategy, boards have a real responsibility to monitor it as strategies typically fail not because they are flawed but because they are poorly implemented.
Monitoring of financial, legal and ethical performance: Boards’ monitoring role
must extend to the financial, legal and ethical areas – detecting early warning signals before they become major problems is key. Directors must also spend time agreeing on what measures they will use and must ensure they get information from multiple
sources.
Nurturing the CEO and executive team: CEOs are key drivers of an organisation’s performance, and nobody is better placed than the board – and particularly the chair, who should act as a mentor to the CEO – to guide
the CEO’s ongoing development. By the same token, overseeing the development of top executives is also important. Boards have a particular responsibility to ensure succession plans for the top management are in place and reviewed regularly. Top boards
are 6% more likely to list CEO and management succession planning as focus areas.
Risk planning: Top-performing boards engage in reviewing enterprise risks, but it is not clear whether directors who sit on the risk committee
have the appropriate expert knowledge. The risk landscape is constantly shifting both in line with geopolitical events and also industry/business model changes, often driven by technology. The close companion of risk is crisis management, and here
too top-performing boards are more likely to engage in crisis management planning.
Seeing the board as a whole: The McKinsey research clearly shows that while boards generally have good dynamics these days, many still struggle
to establish good board processes. These include the chair running the meeting efficiently and effectively, regular formal evaluations, appropriate induction and training for new directors, ongoing opportunities for board members’ development and
training, and a long-term succession plan for the board as a whole.
Boards should also take a broad view of how they operate. Important issues to consider include whether there are enough independents and whether the board as a whole has
the requisite mix of skills. Board size is also an issue – having the right mix of skills has to be balanced against not having too unwieldy a board.
Most important of all, the board needs to accept that meeting attendance is no longer
enough given the board’s expanding role. Is enough being done to ensure everybody speaks up, that alternate sources of intelligence are identified, and that the independents are given an opportunity to meet without executives being present?
Evaluation is a critical tool to help governing bodies become more effective. Boards should ensure they commission a regular, independent evaluation of their performance, and put processes in place to act on the results. Salient details of the evaluation
need to be included in the integrated report.
The King IV Report on Corporate Governance makes it clear that the governing body is the apex of the governance structure and, as the Zondo Commission showed, lack of governance has catastrophic
consequences. Putting in the work to make sure your board performs well is now a key responsibility.
Parmi Natesan and Dr Prieur du Plessis are respectively CEO and facilitator of the Institute of Directors (IoDSA); email: info@boardgovernance.co.za
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Parmi Natesan
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Dr Prieur du Plessis
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