Unit 6
HO 6-5 (Continued)
ownership, and in direct
proportion to the relative size of that ownership.
Directors can only
be effective with an authority
that is drawn from that ownership's respect
for the board, and
from its expressed desire to
accept and act upon the board'ssuggestions and
advice.
What about a director's liability?
Liability is
often listed as a major excuse for not having a
board of outside directors.
It's a
lousy excuse in most cases. A director's potential
liability (assuming he or she is not
associating with
people intent on committing fraud) is only to
one group of people: the
shareholders. When the owner/operator
is the shareholder, clearly the chairman can't
sue the
other directors for negligence. Most problems,
if they arise, will come from inactive
shareholders -and a little pnidence can eliminate
most of these potential problems.
There are many types of liability
insurance for directors and officers. It comes
in all
shapes and forms, with deductibles
and with umbrellas. Still, given the generally limited
nature
of the liability problem, insurance may often
be an unwarranted and unnecessary expense.
Good
corporate legal counsel
could answer this question.
What about
hiring consultants instead of boards?
Sometimes
- as in the case when a business is not yet
ready for a board -a consultant
can serve the business well.
I have been a consultant now
for nearly thirty years. Usually, after solving the
crisis that
precipitated our first
meeting, I urge the business to create a board of
mutually respecting, risk
taking peers without self-interest.
I hope that I will be remembered
as one who left a living institution -the concept
of the
outside board of directors -forever to serve the continuing
needs of successful business owners
and their companies.
There will probably
always be a need for consultants in highly
specialized fields. But,
I think that the role
of generalist consultants will increasingly be replaced
by the outside boards.
Strong boards have more
to offer than generalists.
Outside
directois represent a commitment to an ideal.
They symbolize the acceptance
of a significant
truth: that the truly closed corporation cannot
survive long in today's world.
Boards can help by opening private
owner-managed businesses to the inevitable:
the changes
that loom on the horizon.
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