Posts in On Directorship
MC20: How Useful is a Theory of Usefulness ?
The Time for Debating the Difference Between Governing and Directing is Over
Three Contradictions in Australian Director Education
The Board's Greatest Challenge
What is Directorship ?

Over 60 years has passed since the word “corporate governance” entered the boardroom. In that time much has changed for company directors. But not the language. Company directors still have only word to describe what they do. Leaving boards defined by a term that ignores the binary nature of their role and responsibility.

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A Matrix for Long Term Thinking
Getting the Balance Right Between Value Protection and Value Creation
An Open Letter to Corporate Governance Scholars
Leadership Vs Management : Only Half the Story
Back to the Future: Newton and the Next Economy
DLMA Analysis: Can You See Beyond the Forest From Behind the Trees?
Do Company Directors Know Right from Wrong
It’s hard to see beyond the forest from behind the trees: rethinking organisational design.
A Copernican Revolution In Corporate Governance
23rd Australian Association for Professional & Applied Ethics (AAPAE) Annual Conference
Better Boards Conference 2016
Duty Before Virtue : The Real Ethical Dilemma Facing Corporate Governance
“I don’t think our duty is to put shareholders first. I say the opposite”.

The Dutchman is convinced that something is rotten:

“Capitalism in its current form is broken... The very essence of capitalism is under threat as business is now seen as a personal wealth accumulator…. if you go back to Adam Smith, his thoughts were that capitalism was intended for the greater good”.

Since Polman's appointment, the Anglo-Dutch company has ended quarterly reporting, refused to pander to analysts, doubled capital spending, increased R&D, reduced the number of hedge funds in its shareholder base by half and, according to its CEO treats people, such as their 75,000 small hold tea farmers, fairly.

Polman’s approach puts him at odds with elite academics like Professor Macey from Yale Law School who teaches that “all major decisions of the corporation, such as compensation policy, new investments, dividend policy, strategic direction and corporate strategy should be made with only the interests of shareholders in mind”.

To his critics, Unilever has an impostor at the helm.  

But this CEO is no phony.    He's more capitalist than any shareholder activist and he's bringing the magic back .

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The 10 Most Important Principles of Directorship
How to Build Alignment Between the Board and Executive
What Company Directors Can Learn from Sesame Street