P1 - 3. Effective board practices Flashcards

1
Q

What happens to the role of directors as a company grows?

A

Role of directors evolves from technical guru to management and strategy

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2
Q

What happens to directors of large companies in terms of ownership?

A

Almost always have a smaller percentage of ownership of the company they manage

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3
Q

What is another word for board evaluation?

A

Board appraisal

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4
Q

Who is the board evaluation an obligation for?

A

Listed companies

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5
Q

Benefits of board evaluation?

A

Key to long term success of the business

To maximise effectivness should be regularly reviewed

The evaluation can assess the skills, knowledge and working practices of the Board and can consider which areas need to be improved

Effective tool that helps to ensure employees understand, are motivated and aligned to the corporate objectives

Resolves issues or grievances, on either side, at an early stage.

Informs directors of how they are performing, individually and collectively

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6
Q

How often should the Boards of listed companies conduct an evaluation?

A

Listed companies = The UK Corporate Governance code recommend Boards should undertake an annual, formal and rigorous evaluation

Of its: performance and that of its committees and individual directors

FTSE 350 = Review should be conducted by an external facilitator at least once every three years

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7
Q

How should evaluations be publicly disclosed?

A

Details of how the evaluation was undertaken should be included in the company’s annual report (usually in the corporate governance section)

Together with a summary of any issues found and steps being taken to address them

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8
Q

What should be reviewed as part of the board evaluation?

A

Board structure, composition and processes

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9
Q

What recommendations does The Governance Code make for listed companies in reference to the composition of the board?

A
  • board to comprise both executive and NEDs (Governance Code principle G);
  • in the FTSE350 at least half the board should be independent NEDs, excluding the chair (Governance Code
    provision 11).
  • Companies outside the FTSE350 should have at least two NEDs; and
  • a majority of board committee members should be independent NEDs (Governance Code provision 17).
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10
Q

Where meetings are held on a regular basis the board should establish board processes (often by the chair with the cosec) relating to what?

A
  • establishing a schedule of future dates for board meetings;
  • standing agenda items;
  • the structure and format of board papers;
  • the process for calling for board papers;
  • circulation of the board pack;
  • the process for non-standard items to be added to the agenda for the next meeting or any meeting scheduled for the future;
  • a robust process for tracking and progressing outstanding actions from previous meetings; and
  • drafting and commenting on draft minutes.
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11
Q

What are some of the key roles of the board?

A

Set corporate strategy

Establish relevant and appropriate systems and policies of governance

Adequately monitor the performance of those policies and systems

Provide a framework to provide support and advice to the executive management team.

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11
Q

What activities should the board monitor?

A

Financial performance
Internal control
Risk management
Processes to manage related party or controlling shareholders
Whistle-blowing processes.

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12
Q

What should the evaluation include a combination of?

A

Elements of self-assessment and peer review by individual directors

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13
Q

Who should carry out a review of the chair?

A

The NED’s, led by the senior independent NED, considering views of the directors

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14
Q

Advantages of an internally facilitated board review?

A
  • Those undertaking the evaluation will be familiar with the company, its culture and objectives.
  • Those participating in the discussions may be more willing to speak to someone they know.
  • Less financial cost.
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15
Q

Disadvantages of an internally facilitated board review?

A
  • Those undertaking the evaluation are likely to be in junior roles and may be influenced by or have a vested interest in the outcome.
  • Internal facilitators are less likely to be skilled evaluators.
  • A well-run evaluation is a time-consuming process and an internal evaluator may not be able to commit the appropriate time to the task.
  • Those participating in the discussions may be unwilling to speak to people more junior in the organisations about their own faults or those of fellow directors.
  • Especially if the outcomes are all or mainly positive the review process might lack credibility with external
    stakeholders.
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16
Q

What are the forms (including combinations) an internal evaluation can take place?

A
  • questionnaires created in-house;
  • questionnaires created from third-party question banks;
  • one-to-one interviews; and
  • group discussions.
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17
Q

What are the required actions if an evaluation is undertaken by an external facilitator?

A

They should be identified in the annual report and any other connections to the company disclosed (Governance Code provision 23).

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18
Q

Advantages of an externally facilitated board review?

A
  • Those undertaking the evaluation are likely to be more objective and freer from internal pressures.
  • Those participating in the discussions may be more willing to speak to someone they view as independent.
  • The evaluators will have suitable skills and experience.
  • The evaluator will have appropriate time to commit to the review process.
  • An externally facilitated evaluation is likely to have more credibility with external stakeholders.
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19
Q

Disadvantages of an externally facilitated board review?

A
  • Those undertaking the evaluation will be less familiar with the company, its culture and objectives.
  • Internal facilitators are less likely to be skilled evaluators.
  • Those participating in the discussions may be unwilling to speak to people they do not know about their own faults or those of fellow directors.
  • Externally facilitated evaluations have a financial cost.
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20
Q

What are the forms (including combinations) an external evaluation can take place?

A
  • bespoke questionnaires;
  • questionnaires created from question banks;
  • one-to-one interviews;
  • group discussions;
  • observation of board/committee meetings; and
  • review of board pack/meeting material.
21
Q

Advantages of qualitative measures?

A

Subjective and open to different interpretations.

22
Q

Disadvantages of qualitative measures?

A

Time-consuming

Qualitative research is not statistically representative.

23
Q

List some of the 15 recommendations from the CGI to the Department of BEIS

A
  • The FRC should consider adopting the terminology ‘board performance review’ instead of ‘board evaluation’ when it next updates the UK Corporate Governance Code and the Guidance on Board Effectiveness
  • A code of practice should be published to which all organisations conducting external board performance reviewsfor FTSE 350 companies. BEIS should either issue the Code itself or identify a suitable organisation to become the ‘owner’ of the Code.
  • Listed companies, and other organisations using the services of external board reviewers, should be encouraged voluntarily to adopt principles of good practice covering the selection of the reviewer and how the review is conducted and reported on.
  • The FRC should issue additional voluntary guidance to listed companies on how to report against Provisions 21 and 23 of the 2018 UK Corporate Governance Code
  • The FRC should assess board performance review practice and reporting in the listed sector as part of its regular monitoring of the UK Corporate Governance Code.
  • BEIS should conduct or commission a formal review of the impact of these measures three years after the proposed register of board reviewers becomes active.
24
Q

On appointment, what should all directors undergo?

A

An induction exercise tailored to their individual experience and knowledge of the company and industry in which it operates.

And receive regular updates, sometimes referred to as continuous professional development (CPD),

25
Q

What additional details should the induction for directors of a listed company include?

A

Details of the additional responsibilities of a listed company director and the disclosure and transparency rules.

26
Q

What is the best approach for board education?

A

Staggered – so as not to overload

27
Q

How can updates be delivered?

A

Written or verbal board briefings, formal briefing notes and internally and externally delivered board presentations.

28
Q

Why does The Governance Code recommend boards formally adopt written policies covering key governance matters?

A

Clear objectives, authority, parameters

They ensure a clear division of responsibilities between the role of the board, the executive team, between the CEO and chair responsibilities delegated to board committees.

29
Q

What are matters reserved for the board?

A

Requirement of the UK Corporate Governance Code that listed companies should publish on their website a document setting out those matters that the board has reserved to itself for decision making.

30
Q

The Governance Code 14

A

The responsibilities of the chair, chief executive, senior independent director, board and committees should be clear, set out in writing, agreed by the board and made publicly available

31
Q

The Governance Code – Guidance note 28

A

‘Ensuring there is a formal schedule of matters reserved for its decision will assist the board’s planning and provide clarity to all over where responsibility for decision-making lies.

32
Q

Any such schedule of matters reserved for the board will be divided into which subject areas?

A

Authority limits
Code of Conduct
Tenure policy for NED’s
Expense policy
Independence standards for independent NEDs
Committee terms of reference
Share dealing policy
Whistle-blowing policy
Risk management policy

33
Q

Authority limits

A

Directors have a fiduciary duty to the shareholders – require appropriate authority limits to protect themselves, shareholders, and stakeholders.

34
Q

What is a Code of conduct?

A

A code of conduct sets out the standards of personal behaviour and conduct required of directors and senior executives.

35
Q

Tenure policy for NEDs

A

No maximum period of appointment for a director whether they are executive or non-executive appointments

Any non-executive director serving more than nine years will be deemed to be no longer independent for the purposes of the Governance Code

The Chair should not remain in post beyond nine years from the date of their first appointment to the
board.

36
Q

Committee terms of reference

A

Board committee created – clear written terms of reference setting out:
Composition of the committee
Duties of the committee
Delegated responsibility
Budgetary restraints
Reporting requirements

37
Q

Which committees are recommended for listed companies?

A

Audit, Remuneration, Nomination and Disclosure

38
Q

What elements are typically included in the general content of a committee terms of reference?

A

Membership
Secretary
Quorum
Frequency, notice and minutes of meetings
AGM
Duties
Reporting responsibilities
Authority

39
Q

Whistle-blowing policy

A

‘Whistle-blowing’ is the reporting by employees of suspected misconduct, illegal acts or failure to act within their company.

40
Q

Risk management policy

A

Important tool to support the company’s corporate strategy.

The identification, classification and mitigation of both strategic and systematic risks = central part of every company’s management processes.

41
Q

Listed company requirements on risk management policy?

A

Annual reports should detail the principal risks and uncertainties facing the company and steps taken to mitigate those risks.

42
Q

Which companies are required to undertake board evaluation?

A

All listed companies

43
Q

Which companies must carry out external facilitated board evaluation and how often?

A

FTSE350 companies – at least once every three years

44
Q

Who should evaluate the performance of the company chair?

A

The NEDs led by the senior independent director

45
Q

When should directors receive induction training?

A

Shortly after appointment

46
Q

Is it necessary for experienced directors to receive induction training?

A

Yes, as all companies have different processes

47
Q

Is it better for directors to receive training all in one session or spread out during the year?

A

It is better to drip feed the updates rather than overload with, say, one annual update session

48
Q

Why should board committees have written terms of reference?

A

To ensure there are clear objectives, authority and parameters for the matters delegated to them

49
Q

Who is responsible for notifying the FCA where a PDMR deals in the company’s shares?

A

The PDMR but often delegated to the company secretary

50
Q

Can an employer legally sack a whistle-blower for blowing the whistle?

A

No