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Harvard Business Review, April 2007. Letters to the Editor How Well-Run Boards Make Decisions In “How Well-Run Boards make Decisions” (November 2006) Michael Useem underlines the importance of deciding what matters are reserved for the board, but gives managers no tool to help make this crucial decision. Focusing on “large-impact decisions” or those that “will change the future” or “any issue that could have a material impact on the company, from either a financial or a public perspective” are rather vague concepts that would not have ensured that Enron’s off-balancesheet partnerships were brought to the board’s attention. We need a set of criteria for deciding what needs to go to the board and some examples demonstrating why items like off-balance-sheet accounting would make the list. Having spent 20 years studying the relationship between corporate centres and their subsidiary companies, I offer four suggestions. First, the board should authorize all significant governance decisions concerning how the company records what it is doing, presents itself to outsiders, make decisions, and assesses risks. Given the importance of financial accounting, for example, the board should authorize all accounting changes, specifically those that are not conservative. This category is about the probity and integrity of the company. Second, the board should authorize all decisions with material risks. Third, the board should get involved in other decisions only when the probability that the discussion will add value (result in a better decision) outweighs the probability that it will destroy value (result in a worse decision, delay, or undue cost). Boards can add value if directors have special knowledge or expertise that his relevant to the decision or if the managers proposing the decision are likely to be biased (consciously or subconsciously) in their thinking. Otherwise, boards are likely to destroy value by wasting time and money or giving bad guidance due to ignorance of the details. Fourth, the board should appoint the CEO and CFO and authorize other senior appointments. Useem’s case studies address the third point but raise some concerns. The board of Universal Investments seems comfortable encouraging its CEO to present the decision about the diamond fund. On what basis does the board believe that it can add more value than it destroys with this decision? Surely the management team is best placed to examine the options and identify the best solution. The role of the board in this kind of decision should be to review the criteria the CEO is using to choose between options, not make the choice itself. In the Tyco example, the board reviewed the 60 recommended divestments and decided that in six instances the case for divestiture was not strong enough. This would add value only if the board had some special expertise with regard to these six companies or if the directors believed management was biased toward selling too much. Both reasons seem unlikely. Instead, the board might have better used its time to review the 50 businesses that management recommended keeping. Tyco’s history suggests that management would probably be biased towards keeping too much rather than selling too much. Andrew Campbell, Director, Ashridge Strategic Management Centre, London Useem responds: Andrew Campbell has called for tools to help governing boards make decisions. That is indeed a useful next step. This content is explored in Ashridges Business Strategy course. http://www.ashridge.org.uk In my article, I set forward a set of principles to guide directors’ decision making. The principles range from the preparation of a protocol specifying which decisions should be taken up by the directors to the creation of a governance culture that mandates director engagement in the company’s major decisions. Once these principles are in place, boards then need to develop more specific guidelines for deciding what to delegate to management and which issues to reserve for themselves. Campbell helpfully offers four such tools, and they are, in fact, widely recognized as constituting good governance guidelines. While he quarrels with the boards’ decisions at two of the companies described in my article, his commentary reminds us how important it is for directors to become explicit about their principles and tools – and how difficult it can be to reach agreement on them. Corporate boards are moving toward greater engagement in major company decisions, and establishing the right principles and tools will require continuing appraisal and debate. http://www.ashridge.org.uk