Categories
BoardOps Savings

Unlock Efficiency: Streamline Your Law Department for Budget Success

June & July is budget season. Has your firm been asked to reduce legal costs in next year’s budget?  You’re not alone.

In today’s increasingly cost-conscious business landscape, legal departments are facing the pressure to do more with less. If you’ve been tasked with reducing costs in your law department’s budget for the upcoming year, rest assured that you’re not alone. Many organizations are seeking innovative ways to optimize their legal operations without compromising quality or compliance. As a result many are turning to Foresight® software to help streamline corporate governance processes, maximize efficiency, and meet budget goals. By harnessing the power of automation, Foresight®, frees up valuable resources so you can focus on more critical tasks, postpone new hiring and reduce outside legal fees.

1.            Postpone the New Hire:

While expanding your team may seem like the logical solution to handle increasing workloads, consider postponing new hires as a cost-saving measure. Instead, leverage Foresight®, boardroom decision-support software, and explore alternative solutions to optimize board meeting productivity. By implementing efficient processes, you can accomplish more with your current staff.

2.            Reduce Outside Legal Fees:

Collaborating with external law firms can quickly drive-up costs. To minimize these expenses, evaluate your legal needs and determine which tasks can be handled automatically by corporate governance software. For certain matters, such as agenda setting, compliance checks, minutes and secure doc sharing implementing Foresight® offers a cost-effective solution all in one package. By prioritizing internal expertise and leveraging external resources strategically, you can effectively reduce outside legal fees.

3.            Free Yourself for More Important Tasks:

Repetitive and mundane tasks can consume significant amounts of time and energy. Embrace automation to streamline processes and free up your valuable resources for more important responsibilities. Here are some specific areas where automation can make a significant impact:

•             Quicker board planning and speedier collaboration: Foresight® guides how agenda’s are set by assigning them priorities based on each companies unique requirements.

•             Easier compliance tracking, plus updates done for you: Automate compliance tracking (e.g., DE law, NYSE/NASDQ listing rules, SEC regulations.) ensuring your organization stays in line with regulatory requirements.

•             Faster meeting minutes: Replace manual note-taking with tools embedded in the process that suggests a starting language that includes attendees and automatically, saving time and improving accuracy.

•             Easier proxy statement prep: Streamline the preparation of proxy statements with board tenure & demographic analytics.

•             D&O Questionnaires in a snap: Simplify the distribution, collection, and analysis of Director and Officer questionnaires using Foresight® automate the process.

•             More targeted board recruiting: Leverage technology to streamline the board recruitment process with custom skills matrix, helping you find the most qualified candidates efficiently.

•             Easier implementation of board evaluation feedback: Collect feedback from the board on every agenda item to easily track and implement necessary improvements.

By embracing automation in these areas, you can significantly enhance efficiency and redirect your focus to strategic initiatives that add value to your organization.

Reducing costs in your law department’s budget doesn’t have to mean sacrificing quality or compromising compliance. By implementing Foresight®, you can optimize your operations, streamline processes, and free up valuable resources to focus on more critical tasks. Embrace automation, leverage existing expertise, and explore alternative solutions to unlock efficiency and achieve budget success.

Remember, you’re not alone in this endeavor. Many organizations are proactively seeking innovative ways to maximize their legal department’s efficiency. Stay proactive, explore new technologies, and adapt to the changing landscape to ensure your law department remains a valuable and cost-effective asset within your organization.

Schedule a demo of Foresight® today!

Categories
BoardOps

Board Agendas & Human Capital

How Board Agendas Tie to Human Capital

Often, words make a difference. Some are not fans of “corporate speak” but are coming around to the idea that nomenclature matters. Consider this food for thought:

Review workforce compensation strategy (“Total Rewards”)” as an agenda topic recognizes that compensation is more than salary! It encourages boards to think more broadly about compensation. 

Review human capital management programs including succession planning (below C-suite)”as an agenda topic encourages boards to go below the C-Suite to see how the company is developing its talent as they work their way up the corporate ladder or grow in place. This type of report could include training programs that keep employees current with tech changes as an alternative to eliminating employees who do not have skills needed to use this new tech. 

Review executive talent development and succession planning” is a key board responsibility. We have seen some companies weather sudden CEO deaths or disabilities because the board had done the necessary but challenging work in this area. Companies that have not done this work are often thrown into chaos. 

Review human resources strategy”is about making sure that the board and  management have an understanding of potential changes to the company’s workforce as a result of changes to the company’s business as well as emerging technologies and other workforce changes. It goes beyond considering potential changes in the next year to looking forward at least five years to try to project the company’s workforce needs and opportunities. Institutional investors are also beginning to focus not just on executive compensation programs and strategy, but on the company’s approach to recruiting and retaining talent company-wide. This includes whether the company’s workforce relies on full-time, part-time, temporary, or outsourced labor.

How Board Agendas Can Help a “Human Capital” Strategy

In many cases, old-fashioned agenda topics don’t effectively frame current human capital management topics. That’s understandable given that human capital management is broader & deeper than “old-fashioned” topics like executive compensation and succession planning for the C-Suite.

Using more current & dynamic agenda topics – like those suggested by the “SASB Materiality Map” – a board (or its responsible committee) can more effectively delve into topics that address “the management of a company’s human resources (employees and individual contractors) as key assets to delivering long-term value. It includes issues that affect the productivity of employees, management of labor relations, and management of the health and safety of employees and the ability to create a safety culture.” 

We suggest agenda topics like:

Review human capital management programs including succession planning (below C-suite) – The board or committee responsible for recruiting, retaining, evaluating and succession planning for non-C-Suite positions and the human capital management programs should ensure they align with the company’s values, culture and strategic direction (including the company’s compensation philosophy).

Review human resources strategy – The board or committee should understand potential future changes to the workforce as a result of the rise of emerging technologies and other workforce changes. The board and management should not only be considering potential changes in the current year, but should instead look forward to at least 3-5 years to attempt to predict the company’s needs. Institutional investors are beginning to focus not just on executive compensation programs and strategy, but also on the company’s approach to recruiting and retaining talent company-wide.

Review diversity & inclusion – A diverse and inclusive workforce culture is helpful in recruiting and keeping top talent. Customers value it as well. The board or committee should review the status of the company’s workforce diversity (gender & ethnicity) and inclusion efforts and results. Management’s reporting on this topic should provide an overview on the company’s recruitment programs as well as data on retention rates. 

How does your agenda compare? We’d love to hear from you. Email us at [email protected].

Get your agenda priorities straight!:

Categories
BoardOps

Who Sets the Board Agenda?

(A Post For Public Companies)

Setting the board agenda is a team sport. It involves lots of players. The team’s composition will not only vary depending on the circumstances in your particular company – but also will vary depending on the circumstances of what is happening in your company right now. Agendas need these varied inputs to ensure that boards and committees do not get too comfortable with how it is always been done, ensuring that agendas reflect the future of the company – not its past.

The general counsel (at some companies a corporate secretary – for convenience, we refer to the GC below) plays a key role being an effective facilitator and communicator. This can be challenging. There are times when you might have to redirect someone who doesn’t really belong in the process but wants to insert himself. Or more common, they want to place something on the agenda that shouldn’t be included. Being a gatekeeper isn’t fun. But someone has to do it.

These are the people who typically provide input into what should be on the agenda:

  • Full Board: Lead Director, committee chairs, CEO, CFO, COO/President, EVP HR, GC
  • Audit/Risk Committee: CEO, CFO, Controller/Chief Accounting Officer, Internal Auditor, Tax Exec, Securities Lawyer, IT Security, Risk Exec, IR
  • Compensation/Human Resources Committee: CEO, CFO, EVP HR, Compensation, Workforce Strategy, Diversity and Inclusion
  • Governance and Public Affairs: CEO, CFO, General Counsel, Head of Governance Relations, Head of Corporate Affairs/Media

The General Counsel’s Role in Setting the Board Agenda

It varies from company to company but its part compliance, part coaching and awareness-raising, part project management, part peace negotiator. Definitely part shrink. Its many hats.

At a basic level, the general counsel should always be involved in agenda planning discussions to ensure that items requiring board approval get put on the agenda. The general counsel should also ensure that all actions required by listing standards, state law, or securities regulations (or any other applicable industry regulations – banking, insurance, defense, nuclear, etc.) are addressed in the agenda. 

If the general counsel knows that a project or deal is coming down the road, they should be working with the executive in charge – and CEO – to establish a cadence leading to the ultimate board action. Introducing the project or deal, providing updates regarding analysis and negotiation, a discussion of the deal framework, obtaining independent opinions (legal & financial) and of course, ensuring that the board provides any required final approvals. 

The general counsel track best practices – both in governance and for the company’s industry in general – and advocating for the addition of any emerging agenda topics. A hot topic today is the numerous elements of ESG as they relate to the company’s business or industry. The general counsel can be invaluable in helping fit those into the agenda. 

What is the Role of a “Staff Officer” for Board Committees?

At most companies, each board committee has a “staff officer” who works with the general counsel to coordinate agenda and materials for the committee meetings. The “staff officer” has a background that matches the role of the committee – the controller or internal auditor for the audit committee, someone in HR for the compensation committee. Typically, the governance committee falls to the general counsel.

These staff officers are key teammates for general counsels – and are key to committee effectiveness. Working together, they can ensure that agenda are well-crafted.

They can also work together to see that committee briefing materials are well-prepared. They should acquaint preparers with meet any “norms” that have been set for board briefing materials (e.g., decks not memos, not more than 12 pages, text must be at least 14 pts, each page must have a clear purpose stated at the top). They should help colleagues know their “audience.” Preparing materials understand the role of the board is different from the role of management and, therefore, materials for the board serve a different purpose than a management briefing.

They can also leverage their experience and expertise to coach employees who are attending a committee meeting for the first time or will need to deal with a particularly contentious issue on the agenda. Some committees are looking for a “presentation,” but most are looking for “discussion.”

Helping those employees understand how to prepare for a discussion with the committee will make the employee more confident going into the committee meeting and the committee meeting more effective.

How does it work at your company? We’d love to hear from you. Let us know at [email protected].

Categories
BoardOps

The Year-Long Agenda

The Year-Long Agenda Plan for your Board

Foresight Dashboard
Foresight Dashboard

It’s a smart idea to assemble a year-long list of agenda items for the board and each committee before year-end. Calendar up a date for the start of this process so it doesn’t get overlooked.  The General Counsel, CEO and board chair or committee chairs should collaborate to decide the plan.

Before you start, complete the board and committee self-assessments and decide on priorities for the coming year. (For example, the compensation committee want to focus on executive compensation redesign this year.) That sequence allows the annual agenda to reflect those discussions and decisions. Otherwise, the agreed upon priorities can be overlooked.

Everyone knows that the details of each meeting’s agenda will need to deviate from the plan during the course of the year, but the discipline of an annual agenda plan increases the likelihood that the board and committees will address both their obligations (think of all of the “To Dos” captured in the committee charters!) as well as their identified priorities. It also give the chair a tool for keeping the group on topic – “Good question, Bob, and we’ll cover that topic in November.”

Individual Meeting Agendas Flow Out of the Annual Agenda Plan

When your company has a year-long plan for board and committee agendas, those plans serve as the starting point for preparing each individual meeting’s agenda. It’s good to do that 6 to 8 weeks in advance of the meeting (more, when laying out your review of the company’s strategic plan)  Then confirm that the agenda is still generally in line with the needs and priorities established.

Of course, an annual agenda is just that – a broader, overarching document. You’ll need to be flexible to take advantage of new opportunities or to address unforeseen problems as they arise. For example, if the bond market is moving in a way that provides an environment for opportunistic tenders or issuances, be ready to act. Board authority will be needed – and, well, it’s better to flag that possibility several weeks or two months before the meeting, rather than closer. This approach means that the CFO or Treasurer can work it with the Chair of the Finance Committee or Lead Director in a way that’s not time pressured and unnecessarily stressful.

Learn how Foresight’s proprietary Agenda Hierarchy tool makes this simpler and clearer.

Request a demo

Categories
BoardOps

Foresight: A Case Study

Crawford Becomes Charger Water Treatment Products

Categories
BoardOps

More than a portal

Kathy Graham, CEO, The HQ Companies, Inc. — human capital consulting firm — recently shared her thoughts about the need for and approaches to board rebalancing. While boards are rebalancing membership, she encourages boards to also review the use of and adopt an appropriate board portal to further enhance board effectiveness. thehqsinc.com/RebalanceBoard

Here are some of our thoughts about board portals. Boards and corporate governance teams at both public and private companies have experienced increased workloads and demands in recent years: Sarbanes-Oxley. More demanding exchange listing standards and disclosure. Increased investor and NGO interest in company ESG initiatives. DE&I. Executive compensation. Enhanced disclosure – required and voluntary. Employee concerns. Changes in strategy. Disruption is the new normal.

Many companies have turned to board portals to manage those increased demands and workloads.

There are portals. And then there is Foresight®BoardOps.

It is so much more than a portal. It is a fully-integrated BoardOps Toolbox, putting everything in one place. That means everyone and everything is on one platform – improving collaboration and communication before, during and after board meetings, reducing chance of errors.

Foresight®BoardOps enables boards, C-Suites and corporate governance teams to:

  1. Systematize Agenda planning. Meeting Analytics foster continuous improvement in board processes and board effectiveness using monitoring and measurement. Using these analytics in annual board and committee self-assessments to evaluate and elevate board performance. Increase board focus on Strategy and Leadership agenda topics.
  2. Improve meeting and decision preparation and documentation.
  3. Consolidate governance compliance resources, compare to agenda, then advise and act with confidence
  4. Access investor policies.
  5. Distribute agenda and meeting materials electronically using document- and participant-specific access controls.
  6. Electronic distribution of D&O questionnaires.
  7. Use board composition analytics to better understand board composition. Track information needed to comply with Nasdaq disclosure requirements. Better inform recruitment planning. Also, export Foresight®BoardOps graphs and charts for use in board materials and investor communications
  8. Assess board oversight of ESG topics important to strategy and investors

Foresight®BoardOps transforms how boards and corporate governance professionals work – using advanced technology to speed and elevate their impact. Result: Agile Board. Agile Organization.

To learn more about improving your governance processes, increasing your productivity, and reducing your stress, go to: https://foresight.board-ops.com/

Categories
BoardOps

Despite California court decisions, investors value board diversity

Two recent California state court decisions and litigation over Nasdaq’s Rule 5606(f) have increased scrutiny on efforts by states and regulators to increase diversity on public company boards.  But investors continue to value board diversity.

First, a bit about those two California cases…

SB 826: On May 16, a California state court judge ruled unconstitutional California’s SB 826 requiring publicly held companies headquartered there to include 1 director who identifies as a woman by year-end 2019 and boards with 5 directors to include 2 women and boards with 6 or more members to include 3 women by January 2022.

AB 979: On April 1, a California state court judge struck down AB 979, California’s more recent effort to mandate inclusion of underrepresented groups on boards. Adopted in 2020, AB 979 required a publicly held domestic or foreign corporation with principal executive offices located in California. The law defined an individual from an underrepresented community as “an individual who self-identifies as Black, African American, Hispanic, Latino, Asian, Pacific Islander, Native American, Native Hawaiian, or Alaska Native, or who self-identifies as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender.”

Notably, legislative efforts to increase board diversity don’t stop at California’s borders…

Other states have adopted varied approaches to encouraging more diverse corporate boards. For example, Illinois requires publicly traded companies headquartered there to report board composition.

Second, Nasdaq Rule 5606(f)…

In August 2021, the SEC approved Nasdaq Rule 5606(f). Nasdaq sees the Rule as setting forth “aspirational diversity objectives.” 5606(f) requires Nasdaq-listed company boards to:

  • Include at least 2 self-identified “diverse” board members (a woman and underrepresented minority and/or LGBTQ+ individual) or explain in writing why they are not doing so.
  • Starting in 2022, disclose board-level diversity stats using a standardized matrix template. Those stats include the number of directors who self-identify with specified categories: Gender, Race/ethnicity, and LGBTQ+ status.

Plaintiffs have challenged Rule 5606 in federal court.

While the legal challenges continue, the “influencers” are pressing for greater board diversity

Legal challenges to state and regulators’ efforts to increase public company board diversity are likely to go on (and on). In the meantime, the “influencers” are ramping up expectations regarding board diversity and related disclosure. Among key influencers: investors.

Investors are stepping up efforts to influence (and increase) board diversity    

Many investors recognize that board diversity contributes to diversity of thought and that contributes to better board decision-making – which can improve company performance. So, investors are paying increased attention and attempting to influence board diversity. Governance policies and voting practices reflect this growing focus. These examples are illustrative (policies abbreviated).

BlackRock urges boards to aspire to 30% diversity, at least 2 female directors, and at least 1director from an “underrepresented group”  (which includes individuals who identify as racial or ethnic minorities, LGBTQ+, underrepresented based on national, Indigenous, religious or cultural identity, individuals with disabilities and veterans.). And it wants issuers to disclose:

  • How the board’s diversity characteristics, in aggregate, are aligned with a company’s long-term strategy and business model, and
  • Whether a diverse slate of nominees is considered for all available board seats.

Vanguard is looking for information about current board  composition and related strategy:

  • Statements about the board’s intended composition strategy, including expectations for year-over-year progress.
  • Policies for promoting progress toward greater board diversity; and
  • Current attributes of the board’s composition.

Vanguards looks for diversity disclosure to cover, at a minimum, director gender, race, ethnicity, tenure, skills, and experience.

State Street expects companies to provide board disclosures by gender, race, and ethnicity (at a minimum) at an aggregate or individual level; and also to address efforts to achieve diversity at the board level, including how the governance committee considers ensures diverse candidates are considered during the recruitment process. State Street also encourages companies to consider providing disclosures about other dimensions of diversity (LGBTQ+, disabilities, etc.).

Influencers are having some impact on board diversity and diversity disclosure

Corporate Board Practices in the Russell 3000, S&P 500, and S&P MidCap 400: 2021 Edition (a collaboration amongst Debevoise & Plimpton, KPMG Board Leadership Center, Russell Reynolds Associates, and John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance) includes a comprehensive review of board composition and diversity disclosure. The study notes:  

  • Women’s representation on Russell 3000 boards increased from 21.9% in 2020 to 24.4% in 2021. Women represented about 38% of 2021’s newly elected directors in both the Russell 3000 and S&P 500.
  • However, racial and ethnic diversity among new directors continued to lag.
    • African Americans were 11.3% of new directors elected in 2020, 11.5% in 2021.
    • Latinx/Hispanics were 6% of the 2020 class, 6.5% in 2021.
    • Asian, Hawaiian, or Pacific Islanders were 2.9% of the 2020 class, 3.1% in 2021.
    • 78.3% of the 2021 class of new directors were white.

The study also found that more companies are disclosing more board diversity data. Only 24% of the S&P 500 disclosed the racial composition of their boards in 2020; 59% did in 2021. 7.7% of the Russell 3000 disclosed in 2020; 26.9% did in 2021.

Boards should not take much comfort from the two recent California decisions or wait for resolution of the challenge to Nasdaq Rule 5606(f)

The rather slow progress in board diversity is disappointing to many. Companies realize value from diverse boards – as they compete for capital as well as  customers. Investors see value in diverse boards and seek to invest in companies with diverse boards and boards willing to share meaningful board diversity data with investors. Companies do well to devote attention to building those boards or risk disappointing investors — and facing the consequences.

More another time about ways to accelerate recruitment of diverse directors.

Categories
BoardOps

Transform Your Board Workflows

People sometimes hesitate to change. Here are a few ways to overcome that hesitation and transform you board workflows. Start with the right board management platform.

Build Buy-In

Often, a designated Legal Ops/IT committee is charged with selecting tech platforms destined for Legal Department use. These “selectors” can gain valuable insights from “future users” while also building enthusiasm for a new platform. Board management platform users are varied: Board members, General Counsel, Corporate Secretary, Governance team members, C-Suite members, the Chief Accounting Officer, the VP of Compensation, other members of the Legal Department, VP of Investor Relations, and others beyond the Legal Department who frequently work on board-related matters.

What kind of insights to seek? About what workflows are working well, what could work better. What elements could be better integrated. About current tools; about a “dream machine” for current and future needs. Goals for a new platform. Aspirations for their colleagues and board.

Listen. Use the insights to build support for and educate future users about the benefits of a new board management platform.

Select a Platform for Now and Into the Future

You asked. You heard. Now, select a board management platform based on those valuable insights – factoring into your decision the inevitable (but sometimes unpredictable) changes to come.

Select the platform that users will actually use. That means one with an intuitive and logical user interface for its varied users (not just developers).

Select is the one that does what your varied users need doing – easier, better and faster than current methods. Choose one that integrates and elevates multiple processes into a single platform – to create a single source of truth for those processes and board-related information. Pick the one that brings relevant internal and external information resources into a single platform.

Make Platform Adoption Easy

  • Identify a core implementation team to partner with your platform provider.
  • Identify advocates for the platform to help the hesitators get over their reluctance.
  • Do as much as possible before rollout. Data transfer. Add new and expanded data. Conduct quality assurance.
  • Customize. Every company and C-Suite has worklow preferences. Best to address those before rollout. Customize report formats. Put the company logo on the welcome screen.

Build a Collaborative Relationship with Your Users and Platform Provider

Change is inevitable. Engage regularly with your users to obtain ongoing feedback and suggestions for further workflow and software improvements. Partner with your platform provider about evolving the platform to meet your emerging needs and workflows.

Summing Up…

A thoughtful and engaged approach to change management and a strong, ongoing relationship with your board management platform provider can oversome hesitation, increase your team’s near-term speed, depth of adoption, and long-term enthusiasm for your new board management platform and resulting improvements.

ForesightBoardOps Toolbox transforms how boards and governance professionals work. It enables you to elevate both your board workflows and board effectiveness – and drive value creation.

To learn more, click here: ForesightBoardOps Toolbox.

Categories
BoardOps

Make Your Board Materials Reflect Well on You

Foresight BoardOps is lucky to have an Advisory Board that includes governance luminaries like Doug Chia of Soundboard Governance. Here, Doug shares his best advice on making your board materials reflect well on you. Here is Doug’s great advice on preparing your advance materials and yourself for board and committee meetings.

Directors must fulfill fiduciary duties to the company, and a critical part that is receiving the information they need to be adequately informed and conduct effective board meetings.  Directors who serve or have served on multiple boards can tell a lot about the company’s management based on the materials they receive to prepare for board meetings and how those materials are used in meetings.  Here are several things to keep in mind for your board and committee meeting materials. 

Manage the Volume of Advance Materials

Generally, you should provide your directors enough information to enable them to:

  1. fulfill their oversight duties,
  2. have well-informed discussions, and
  3. make informed decisions,

but not so much that the volume obscures the most relevant information.  Avoid getting “into the weeds” with operational detail that would be useful to a high-level staff member at your company, but not necessarily to an outside board member. 

To this end, set standards for presentation decks to make presenters succinctly lay out their key points, action items, and recommendations.  Discuss with your board the ideal standards for presentation decks.  Here is a starting point for those discussions:

  • 10 slides per presentation deck,
  • 8 to 10 lines of text per slide,
  • 2 charts, graphs, tables or other visuals per slide.

Specify the Purpose of Advance Materials

Oftentimes, directors are not clear why you are providing certain materials to them.  Your advance materials should always identify:

  • why you are providing the materials to the board, and
  • what board action or feedback (if any) you are seeking. 

Indicate on the cover of each cover memo and slide presentation deck: “For Information,” “For Discussion,” “For Action,” etc.  This will tell your directors how they should be thinking about each item before diving into the advance materials.

Provide Cover Memos for Advance Materials

Provide a 1 or 2-page cover memo for each topic on the meeting agenda.  This memo will set the stage for each presentation deck and meeting discussion with a narrative explanation of the context, key take-aways and decision points.  The memo should:

  1. Briefly summarize the topic.
  2. Say why this topic is on the agenda for this particular meeting.
  3. Include relevant background or context not covered in your presentation deck (particularly helpful to the newer directors). 
  4. Summarize your conclusions and/or recommendations.
  5. Tell your directors what (if anything) you need from them.

These memos will focus your directors’ attention on the most critical points in the presentation decks.  

You can also use brief memos to update your board regarding ongoing oversight matters that do not require review at meetings and to address any follow-up items from prior meetings that do not require further discussion.

Use a Consistent Format for Presentation Decks

Develop a standard template for slide presentation decks for board meetings.  A consistent layout, format and style will help your directors better navigate the materials.

Consistent format is especially important in reporting key performance metrics, which should be part of the advance materials for every board meeting, so directors can easily see trends.  You can also develop standard “dashboards” of key performance metrics for this purpose that regular presenters update for every meeting.

Your directors are likely accessing your advance materials via an electronic board portal, such as Foresight®, and reviewing them on a laptop or tablet.  Make sure to use a format conducive to reading and navigation on a small electronic device.  Make sure fonts are large enough and your charts are not too busy.  You can build required fonts and font sizes into your standard template.

Write to Be Easily Understood

Make your materials crisp.  Write in active voice and in “plain English.”  Use short sentences and bullet points.  Avoid using shorthand, acronyms and industry or company jargon.  Ifyou use do use certain acronyms, shorthand, or technical terms in your board materials on a regular basis, consider providing a glossary that spells out acronyms and defines technical terms.  This will be especially helpful for newer board members.

Promote Discussion

One common complaint from boards in general is that presenters spend too much time “walking through” the advance materials, taking away precious time for directors to ask questions and give feedback.  Assume your directors will carefully read the materials you send and arrive at meetings prepared to engage in robust discussion and make necessary decisions.

Resist the urge to go through each slide in your advance materials at the meeting.  Do not read your slides aloud word-for-word.  You may not even need to reference every slide during your presentation.  A consistent message from boards is that showing fewer slides results in more efficient meetings and allows more time for engage discussion. 

Manage Your Time

Assume you will have less than the budgeted time to cover your agenda topic.  With many substantive items to cover at each meeting, there is a good chance that at the meeting, presenters will be asked to move quickly through their presentations “for the sake of time” (especially topics scheduled for the later part of meeting).  Even if you do have a large chunk of time budgeted for a topic, anticipate that directors will ask questions that take the discussion deeper into some elements or off on tangents.  A good “rule of thumb” for presenters is planning to devote only one-third of the budgeted time to presenting.  That will leave plenty of time for questions and discussion without running over.

Make a Good Impression

Consistently providing your directors with high-quality materials and conducting effective meetings are critical components of your obligation to them and will leave direct impressions of your levels of commitment and preparedness.  

Categories
BoardOps

Talking Foresight BoardOps with Broc

Broc Romanek of ZippyPoint (a good friend and big fan of Foresight BoardOps) recently talked with Foresight BoardOps Senior Advisor, Carol Ward (a good friend and big fan of Broc).

They discussed how Foresight BoardOps board management software brings needed agility to board planning and decision-making. Watch the video below or on ZippyPoint.

For corporate secretaries and general counsels as well as other members of the C-Suite, Foresight BoardOps enhances workflows.

  • Automates the tedium of board meeting planning, documentation and follow-up.
  • Brings together frequently used but dispersed corporate governance and regulatory resources.
  • Frees up time for more strategic work.

Plus, Foresight BoardOps can make the board more effective.

  • Prioritizes high impact agenda topics.
  • Helps to align management and board on goals.
  • Unique analytics provide actionable insights into board activities and board compostition.

Broc has had a firsthand look at what Foresight BoardOps can do and highly recommends you check it out!

Agile Board. Agile Organization. Agility begins at the top.