7 Secrets of Board Evaluations
Most boards conduct regular self-evaluations of their effectiveness, typically before the nominating/corporate governance committee sets the slate of director nominees ahead of the company’s next annual shareholders meeting.
NYSE-listed companies are required to do it annually – Nasdaq-listed companies aren’t required, but most do it because their investors & proxy advisors expect it.
There’s no required formula for how these evaluations are conducted, it ranges from a director leading the process to using third-parties to facilitate the evaluation.
Boards sometimes dig deeper by going further than evaluating themselves as a group to evaluating each individual director’s performance. About half the time, board conduct individual evaluations – but that statistic can be deceptive, because individual evaluations aren’t worth much if they are in the form of self-evaluations – where directors personally evaluate themselves. A more risky proposition for individual evaluations are peer evaluations, where directors evaluate each other – not too many boards engage in this exercise.
Here are 7 things to consider when conducting board evaluations:
- Make it safe (but not too safe)
- Breaking up is hard to do
- Pick the right person to faciltate
- Change it up every few years
- Ask the right questions
- Ask open-ended questions
- Follow-up to see if the process worked
For many more Vid-Guides dealing with corporate & securities law, corporate governance, E&S issues and more – particularly if you want to review any Vid-Guides referred to during this Vid-Guide – see the list of Vid-Guides spread throughout these categories:
- Corporate Governance
- Proxy Season
- Executive Pay
- ’34 Act/Other
- ’33 Act/Deals
- Sustainability/E&S
- Career Advice
- Fun Party
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