Unit 6
HO 6-5 (Continued)
The
Sad Truth is -for
the Most Part -
Boards Do Not Help.
Roger H. Ford,
Ph.D.
C O N
Author of Boards
of Directors and
the Privately-Owned
Firm: A Guide
for
Owners,
Officers, and Directors
which will
be published in February,
1992, Dr.
Ford is the Zane
D. Showker Professor
of Entrepreneurship
and the Director
of
the Ctntcr
for Entrepreneurship
at James Madison
University in Harrisonburg,
Virginia.
He currently serves
on four boards
and has assisted dozens
of others.
Do boards
of directors really
help small businesses?
This is an important
question, and
I am looking
forward to addressing
it. But, my answer
will not be complete
until I also address
another important
question: Can boards
of directors really
help small businesses?"
To the
first question, "Do
boards really help
small businesses?"
the sad truth is, for
the
most part, no, they
do not. I am speaking
here in descriptive
terms, which
means that the
simple fact
is the vast majority
of the nation's approximately
20 million
small businesses
are not
being helped
by boards of
directors. There are
two arguments which
I offer in support
of this
fact.
First, the empirical
evidence indicates
that most small
businesses do not
have a working
board of directors.
Second,
which do
have working boards,
of those
firms
the empirical
evidence
does not suggest
that these boards
improve the performance
of the firms.
Let's look
at each of
these arguments in turn.
Many firms do not
have a board beyond
that minimally required
by law, which
in most
states is a
single director (i.e.,
the owner is the
sole director). Others,
while perhaps
having
more than one
director on paper,
do not meet
regularly or perform
any duties normally
associated
with a board of
directors. My study
of several hundred
Inc. 500 firms indicated
that
34 percent of
these successful businesses
had no board,
and of the remaining
66 percent that
indicated
they had a board,
over half of them had
no outside directors
(Ford, 1989, 1988).
A
study by Ward and
Handy roughly confirmed
these findings
by discovering that
more than half
of the small businesses
in their sample
did not have an outside
board (1988).
According to these
authors,
it is conventional
wisdom that only
5 to 10 percent of
all private companies
have
outsiders
on their boards, and
I believe this is
true (Ward, Handy,
1988).
The first
argument for my
statement that boards
are not helping
small businesses, then,
is the
simple fact that
they cannot be helping
if they do not
exist. Most of America's
small
businesses
are not receiving
help from boards of
directors because
they (for the most
part) do
not
h ave boards of
directors!
The second argument
that boards
are not helping small
businesses addresses
those firms
which do have boards
of directors.
Even if they are in
a minority relative
to the total universe
of businesses, there
are probably a
million or more small
firms which have
boards, including
a good percentage
that have outside directors.
How about
these firms, are they
being helped by
their boards?
The answer, again,
is no. For the most,
these firms are not
receiving much help
from
their boards.
The literature overwhelmingly
supports
this position.
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