StrategyDriven Podcast Special Edition 35 – An Interview with Robert Kolb, co-author of Corporate Boards
StrategyDriven Podcasts focus on the tools and techniques executives and managers can use to improve their organization’s alignment and accountability to ultimately achieve superior results. These podcasts elaborate on the best practice and warning flag articles on the StrategyDriven website.
Special Edition 35 – An Interview with Robert Kolb, co-author of Corporate Boards explores the motivations, conflicts, limitations, roles, and ethics of corporate boards; answering the often asked question of why Boards and their members behave the way they do. During our discussion, Robert Kolb, co-author of Corporate Boards: Managers of Risk, Sources of Risk and Professor of Finance and holder of the Frank W. Considine Chair of Applied Ethics at Loyola University Chicago, shares with us his insights and illustrative examples regarding:
the Board of Directors’ role in managing upside risk
- how companies deal with the risk of diminished Board independence that occurs when the CEO is also the Chairman of the Board
- what time-inconsistent misconduct is and why it occurs
- why compensation plans may encourage executives to engage in exceedingly risky merger and acquisition deals and the actions Boards take to mitigate this risk
- the Board’s role in establishing executive compensation, including those mechanisms that result in unduly rewarding failure
- who the Board of Directors should serve… just shareholders or a broader group of stakeholders that includes shareholders, employees, the environment, and society
Additional Information
Robert’s book, Corporate Boards, can be purchased by clicking here
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About the Author
Robert Kolb, co-author of Corporate Boards
, holds PhDs from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in philosophy and finance and has taught at the University of Florida, Emory University, the University of Miami, the University of Colorado, and Loyola University Chicago, where he currently serves as Professor of Finance and holds the Frank W. Considine Chair of Applied Ethics. Robert is the author or co-author of more than 50 research articles and 25 finance texts on topics, including financial derivatives, investments, corporate finance, and financial institutions. Robert recently edited the Encyclopedia of Business, Society, and Ethics. He also founded Kolb Publishing, Inc., which published finance and economics university texts and was acquired by Blackwell Publishing, now part of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. To read Robert’s complete biography, click here.
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StrategyDriven Podcast Receives Top Honors in May
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StrategyDriven Change Management Forum
“The number of transistors and resistors on a chip doubles every 18 months.”
Gordon Moore
co-Founder , Intel
Originally published in Electronics Magazine, April 19, 1965
When Gordon Moore made this famous comment, there were approximately 60 devices on an Intel chip. Four decades later, Intel placed 1.7 billion transistors on its Itanium chip; proving Moore’s Law to be fairly accurate.
Only a few things occur with certainty and one of those is change. Technology changes flattened the world and gave us access to individuals living thousands of miles away. And it did so in less than two decades. As business leaders, we no longer compete with local, regional, or domestic providers; we are challenged by rivals from Europe, India, China, and Japan.
Advances in technology altered the social fabric of the workplace too. While cell phones, email, and social networking connect us almost instantaneously from almost anywhere on the planet, medical breakthroughs enable us to live longer, more productive lives; bringing together four generations of employees in our workforce – each with differing values, goals, and needs.
Change is indeed occurring. Leaders who can motivate and inspire their employees to embrace change give their organization a significant competitive advantage. Those who do not place their organization at significant risk of becoming irrelevant.
Focus of the Change Management Forum
Materials contained within the Change Management Forum provide insight to the principles of change management as well as the best practices of those leaders recognized as top performers in this area. Each article is tailored to help readers improve their organization’s change management policies and practices so to achieve superior results and move ahead of the competition.
Articles
Principles
- Post Implementation Productivity [StrategyDriven Premium Content]
StrategyDriven Expert Contributor Articles
- Get Buy-In First Before Initiating Strategic Change by Sharon Drew Morgen
- Be a GPS System for Change by Sharon Drew Morgen
- When Does Change Happen? by Sharon Drew Morgen
- Getting Beyond the Wall of Resistance by Rick Maurer
- Inspiring Employees with a Values-Rich Environment by Ann Rhoades
- A Technology Case Study: Implementing What the Customer Wants by Sharon Drew Morgen
- Buy-In – The Imperative Strategy by Sarah Gee and Val Gee
- The good times. The bad times. The changin’ times. by Jeffrey Gitomer
StrategyDriven Podcasts
StrategyDriven Podcast
- Making Change Work: What is Change? and Why is Change so Hard?
- Making Change Work: What are Systems and How Do They Influence Change?
- Making Change Work: The Problems of Change Management: Bias, Resistance, and Push
- Making Change Work: If Decisions Are Always Rational, Why Are Changees Resisting?
- Making Change Work: Why is Buy-in Necessary and How to Achieve It
- Making Change Work: A Radical Approach to Change Management, Real Leadership
- Overcoming Resistance to Change, part 1 of 2
- Overcoming Resistance to Change, part 2 of 2
StrategyDriven Podcast – Special Edition
- An Interview with Sharon Drew Morgen, author of Dirty Little Secrets, part 1 of 2
- An Interview with Sharon Drew Morgen, author of Dirty Little Secrets, part 2 of 2
- An Interview with Rick Maurer, author of Beyond the Wall of Resistance
- An Interview with Victoria Grady, author of The Pivot Point
- An Interview with Jason Jennings, author of The Reinventors
Resources
Books
StrategyDriven Editorial Perspective – Creating Event Certainty, part 2 of 3
Oil from the ill-fated British Petroleum (BP) leased Horizon Deepwater rig continues to gush into the Gulf of Mexico – the massive oil slick already contaminating the coastline of several Gulf States, injuring wildlife, and threatening to evolve into an unprecedented ecological disaster. In the over forty days since the leak first began, both BP and U.S. government agencies have been ineffective at mitigating the effects of this accident. Recent reports, however, suggest this didn’t need to be the case; that the U.S. government should have been better prepared to handle such an accident if it had truly learned from readiness exercises conducted over the past eight years.
Investigations by The Center for Public Integrity and ABC News revealed the U.S. government conducted oil response drills in 2002, 2004, 2007, and 2010. These drills revealed several concerns regarding the United States’ preparedness to handle such an accident including inexperience, poor communications, and conflicting roles.1 The investigation also showed these vulnerabilities went uncorrected; resulting in diminished effectiveness of the government’s response when the actual accident occurred.2, 3
Large scale exercises involving multiple government agencies are often incredibly expensive and highly disruptive – though not as expensive as the events they seek to prevent or mitigate. Not acting to eliminate deficiencies identified during these learning events is simply irresponsible. Unfortunately, the impact of this negligent behavior is only now being recognized – far too late to for those irreparably harmed by the BP oil leak.
StrategyDriven Recommended Practices
Self assessments and other activities identifying emergency response vulnerabilities are nearly worthless unless organization leaders act to resolve deficiencies and improve subsequent performance. Without this corrective action, unnecessary uncertainty knowingly persists.
Whether developing the response to a newly identified risk or an opportunity to improve existing response plans, organization leadership should consider implementation of the following actions to ensure their organization is ready to appropriately respond when an adverse event occurs:
Contingency Planning and Response Readiness
- Prioritize and act on assessment findings. Companies don’t have the unlimited resources needed to pursue every opportunity and preventative measure. However, actions to mitigate or prevent shortfalls that represent significant risk to the organization should be funded, acted upon, and monitored for ongoing success.
- Put in place those mechanisms that will help your organization mitigate, transfer, and avoid risk realization. Every company should have a portfolio of contingency plans to deal with adverse circumstances and marketplace opportunities. Also consider adding contingency plans to deal with the adverse impacts brought on by another company’s actions if the significance of those impacts warrants such action.
- Prestage personnel, procedures, materials, and tools to respond to events as they occur. To be effective, a response must be timely. Prestaging personnel, procedures, and materials enables an organization to mobilize quickly when an undesired event occurs.
- Conduct follow-up maintenance and inventory checks of prestaged procedures and materials. Regulations and policies become change and methodologies become outdated necessitating the periodic review and updating of prestaged procedures. Likewise, materials spoil (exceed their expiration date) and tools need periodic servicing to maintain their effectiveness. And all of these items are at risk of being misplaced, lost, or stolen which demands periodic inventories be taken and replacements made as needed.
- Practice, practice, practice. Practice provides experience which drives response readiness. Additionally, changes to procedures and new personnel create the need for refresher and initial training.
Final Request…
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Sources
- “Training Exercises Showed Gaps in Government Preparedness Before BP Oil Spill – Inexperience, Poor Communications, Conflicting Roles Cited,” John Solomon and Aaron Mehta, The Center for Public Integrity, May 11, 2010 (http://www.publicintegrity.org/articles/entry/2079/)
- “Before the Gulf Oil Spill, U.S. Training Exercises Revealed Preparation Gaps,” Matthew Richmond, Fair Warning, May 17, 2010 (http://www.fairwarning.org/2010/05/before-the-gulf-oil-spill-u-s-training-exercises-revealed-preparation-gaps/)
- “Coast Guard officials told of potential oil spill response problems years ago,” Ben Raines, Alabama Live, May 21, 2010 (http://blog.al.com/live/2010/05/coast_guard_officials_have_kno.html)
Leadership Inspirations – Influencing Others
“The greatest ability in business is to get along with others and influence their actions.”
John Hancock(1737 – 1793)
Founding Father of the United States of America, signer of the Declaration of Independence, President of the Second Continental Congress, and first and third Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts