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The New Boardroom Leaders: How Today's Corporate Boards Are Taking Charge [Hardcover]

Ralph D. Ward (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 30, 2008 031335300X 978-0313353000

For generations, the cozy, standard model of boardroom leadership was simple: The CEO was also Chairman of the Board, and directors rubberstamped his initiatives. The 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act forced radical change on all U.S. public corporations: The board must now hold sessions without management, key committees have tough new independence rules, and all board members now face an unavoidable legal responsibility to provide truly independent oversight of the corporation. Missteps can put companies and individual directors in serious legal danger. The result is an urgent demand that corporate boards develop their own confident, independent leaders from within. But how? That's something that governance expert Ralph Ward, in The New Boardroom Leaders, explains in detail.

Until now, no one has tracked and compiled answers to new, basic governance questions. What should a lead director's job description include? Why is a separate chair not necessarily an independent chair? How do you shape an agenda for meetings of independent directors? How do CEOs and the new board leaders divide their roles? How much power should a separate board leader really have? This book answers these questions and more. Companies are scrambling to create new procedures and roles. But there are few job descriptions for these new boardroom leaders—something this book provides, as well as a wealth of insights and tips. The New Boardroom Leaders offers the first inside look at how board leaders actually do their jobs, based on extensive interviews and research. The emphasis will be on practical advice from real board leaders on what worked in their boardrooms, what didn't, and what they expect in the future. It will become a longtime, worthy guide for board members in the new world brought on by Sarbanes-Oxley and the quest for ever-better, and strictly ethical, corporate performance.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"An absolute must for anyone who wants to stay on top of the living being that is the modern corporation, The New Boardroom Leaders is a strongly recommended pick for executives and community library business collections."

-

The Midwest Book Review

Book Description

An expert on corporate governance shows how boards of directors can and must change to abide by new laws like Sarbanes-Oxley and improve overall performance.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Praeger (October 30, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 031335300X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0313353000
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,507,808 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Ralph D. Ward is an internationally-recognized writer and commentator on the role of boards of directors, the secrets of how "benchmark" boards excel, corporate scandals and reforms, and the future of governance worldwide. He is publisher of the online email newsletter Boardroom INSIDER, the worldwide source for practical, first-hand advice on better boards and directors. He also edits The Corporate Board magazine, and speaks and consults on governance issues.
Ward is author of the books Boardroom Q&A (2011), The New Boardroom Leaders (2008), Saving the Corporate Board (2003), Improving Corporate Boards: The Boardroom INSIDER Guidebook (2000), and 21st Century Corporate Board (1997).

 

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A strongly recommended pick for executives and community library business collections, February 10, 2009
This review is from: The New Boardroom Leaders: How Today's Corporate Boards Are Taking Charge (Hardcover)
The traditional business measure of today's business is no longer the way it's done. "The New Boardroom Leaders: How Today's Corporate Boards are Taking Charge" talks about the shift from totalitarian businesses where it used to be that one man held all of the power, to today's companies where the power is scattered through various parts of the business. Independent power is a thing of the past, as Ward explains how this new, more complex system has drastically changed the corporate world, in some ways for the worse, and in some ways for the better. An absolute must for anyone who wants to stay on top of the living being that is the modern corporation, "The New Boardroom Leaders" is a strongly recommended pick for executives and community library business collections.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Leadership in Post-SOX Boards, November 7, 2008
This review is from: The New Boardroom Leaders: How Today's Corporate Boards Are Taking Charge (Hardcover)
Ward's book is certainly timely. It is also fairly comprehensive, without getting bogged down in unreadable details. Although he acknowledges an independent chair may be the dominant model many years down the road, Ward also addresses what many shareowner activists view as interim models involving "lead" and "presiding" directors. He even has a chapter for combined CEO/Chairs on how to cope with the new realities. No matter where your company falls on the spectrum from board "independence" to board "capture," you'll find your board's leadership needs addressed.

The book begins with a very short history of boards that takes us from when they were composed primarily of the largest shareowners, to an era of employee directors, and on through Sarbanes-Oxley, which "used the audit committee to bash its way into the boardroom." Sure, you already know this history but don't skip it. Ward keeps it brief and provides the reader with a good grounding to take the measure of our current trajectory.

The next several chapters cover the new legalities of directors, like meeting in "executive session." Ward's focus is not so much the requirements themselves but on how they are being met and what best practices leaders are struggling to develop in board evaluations, board logistics, acting as a liaison with the CEO, educating the board, etc.

Chocked full of interesting statistics, legal requirements, but most importantly you'll find opinions from experts who have faced the same problems your board is facing now. For example, how important is it to name a new independent chair from existing board members? Whatever you decide, you're very likely to benefit from the advice of others who have already done it. Plus, he provides a large number of valuable references and links to additional resources, like job descriptions for presiding directors, lead directors, and independent chairs. His discussion of how these roles differ and what skills are needed for each is the best I've seen.

At one point, Ward points to the irony that "by forcing independent boards to wrestle more with the regulatory nuts and bolts of the business, we may have actually weakened their powers in relation to management," presumably because they must depend on management for this information. Luckily, boards have risen to the challenge by developing specialized skills and processes.

How are governance, audit and compensation committees coping? Ward gives us an excellent picture of what is going on inside such committees, what problems they are grappling with, and how they are adapting to new demands. He sees the chairs of each of these committees and the board itself as moving in the direction of approaching these positions "as full-time, consulting-like jobs." Ward is probably right that better pay and professionalization are next steps.

Further along the trajectory, I couldn't put it any better than his final words. "Directors will support management, but not to a fault; they don't owe their position on the board to the CEO. Rather, the other outside board members and major shareholders elected them to their leadership position, and the latter will lay claim to their loyalty... These next generation board leaders may not have all the answers when it comes to independent board leadership. But they definitely won't be afraid to ask questions." Ward provides the best post-SOX guide into this new territory of leadership among independent directors.
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