Increase the number of women on corporate boards? Some business women gave advices…

Here, you can read some advice from business women about How Can We Increase the Number of Women on Corporate Boards?

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Adele Gulfo, Pfizer, Regional President, Latin America

“Before we see a trend-break in the percentage of women in the boardroom, we need to solve the “leaky pipeline” that diminishes the potential talent pool. Start by encouraging women to find “sponsors,” not “mentors.” Simply put, mentors help you personally, acting as a coach and helping with decisions or challenges. But sponsors have significant influence inside an organization and advocate on your behalf, especially when high profile assignments are being discussed and names considered. Getting more women on boards begins with getting more women in mission-critical P&L roles. And sponsorship is critical to opening doors to these jobs.”

Grace Lieblein, Vice President, Global Purchasing and Supply Chain, General Motors

“If you look on boards, one of the primary reasons we are not seeing more women joining them is that typically they are looking for candidates who either have board experience or are leading large operations. We are locked in a kind of vicious circle: Because there aren’t many women on boards today and also not enough women in CEO or in key positions, they aren’t seen as natural candidates for joining boards.”

Ilene H. Lang, President and Chief Executive Officer, Catalyst

“Let’s talk about what’s not holding women back. It’s not lack of CEO experience. Almost half of F500 board seats in 2011 are occupied by directors without CEO experience. And it’s not a supply problem with respect to board-ready women. If you look at only one potential source of directors—current Executive Officers of F500 companies—you will find over 700 women, enough to fill every board seat that comes available in the next year (with women to spare). When you consider that boards often seek directors with international expertise, and you add women in top leadership positions at companies in just four countries (Australia, Canada, Great Britain, and Israel), your pool expands to over 2,000 women.

“So why the lack of progress? Men join boards every year at a higher rate than women. When Catalyst analyzed new appointments to F500 board seats from 2009 to 2011, we found that men filled 81 percent of the new seats! Thus, women’s appointments to boards have only been sufficient to maintain the status quo, rather than move the needle.”

Liz Mohn, Vice-Chairwoman, Bertelsmann Foundation

“For many women it remains difficult to have it all: career, children, partner, and household. And major decisions on all those issues often come to the fore between the ages of 30 and 40—the “rush hour” of life. For many people, especially mothers, rush hour is all day. A woman’s work is never done, as they say. It is here that employers must play a role. They must move away from office time towards flexible working hours and focus on results. By doing so, organizations and their leaders can serve to encourage women.”

Rossana Fuentes Berain, Editorial Vice President, Grupo Editorial Expansión

“A major initiative is needed to bridge the gender gap and use it as one of the variables to measure a country’s competitiveness. What is the path for achieving it? Education, mentoring, and support in the careers of women must be a priority to improve conditions for diversity in the business world, and make way for a generation that has been prepared and is ready. There are no excuses.”

Susan Segal, President and CEO, Americas Society and Council of the Americas

“One of the key reasons is an unwillingness to take a risk. Existing CEOs, boards, and headhunters appear unwilling to take the risk to incorporate new people and different perspectives—so the easy path is just more of the same: same pool of candidates, same process, and same ideas.

“Women must also take some responsibility for the current dilemma. They must promote themselves better and proactively find mentors willing to fight for them inside and outside of their companies. Women also need to network more effectively and aggressively, while standing up for their goals and ideas.”

 

His article is extract from: How Can We Increase the Number of Women on Corporate Boards?

 

2011 Board Practices Report – Deloitte

This report by the Deloitte Center for Corporate Governance and the Society of Corporate Secretaries and Governance Professionals provides results from a survey of over 200 corporate secretaries on topical governance questions, including shareholder engagement, board committees, strategy, and sustainability. New to this eighth edition is an analysis of director qualifications, which includes insight on board composition related to gender, age, and ethnicity…

2011 Board Pracices Report by Deloitte


A Practical Guide to CEO Succession Planning

By Clarke Murphy, Managing Director at Russell Reynolds Associates

In Touch with the Board – Russell Reynolds Associates’ in touch with the Board series addresses best practices in board composition, assessment, succession planning and other critical corporate governance issues. In this issue, Clarke Murphy and the CEO/Board Services Practice discuss the specific elements and timeline of a successful CEO succession plan, as well as the steps necessary to ensure a smooth transition.

The transition from one CEO to another is a critical moment in a company’s history. A smooth transition is essential to maintain the confidence of investors, business partners, customers and employees and provides the incoming CEO with a solid platform from which to move the company forward. A properly designed and executed succession plan is vital for any successful transition.

CEO vacancies can be planned or unplanned. In either scenario, by the time a succession plan is needed, it is far too late to start building one, and it is incumbent upon the board to make succession planning a priority, even in the face of more immediate and tangible issues. In addition to mitigating risk, succession planning brings with it several beneficial byproducts:

• It provides a framework that drives senior executive development, aligning leadership at the top of the enterprise with the strategic needs of the firm.
• It gives the CEO, through an ongoing analysis of the job requirements, the opportunity to adjust his/her role in light of changing business conditions and strategic imperatives.
• It strengthens the relationship and information flow between the board and senior management through the regular contact that is part of the board’s review of candidates.

Russell Reynolds Associates regularly advises boards and CEOs on chief executive officer succession planning, and, from this experience, we have developed the following practical guide.

This is an extract from the article Busmanagement.com


Sudden Death of a Ceo : Death and Succession planning

Sudden Death of a Ceo : Death and Succession planning 

By Professor, David F. Larcker and Brian Tayan, Researcher, Corporate Governance Research Program, Stanford Graduate School of Business

It is very difficult for shareholders to know detailed information about CEO succession planning among the companies they have invested in.  Although CEO deaths are rare, the sudden death of a CEO can provide insight into the quality of succession planning and governance of a company.  Whereas some companies are able to appoint a successor immediately, others take weeks or months to do so.