From our colleague in Australia, Tony Jaques, reprinted with his permission…
Boards and individual directors are now very clearly in the crosshairs when their organisation is battered by an operational crisis or high-profile issue.
It used to seem sufficient to jettison the CEO and a handful of executives as red meat for the media, investors and regulators. But recent cases, such as those involving Crown and Rio Tinto, have highlighted the increasing personal risk to Directors when things go wrong.
Back in 2019, after a television exposé of money-laundering and links to organised crime at gambling giant Crown Resorts, the Board – not the executive – took out full page newspaper advertisements denying the allegations.
But the New South Wales Casino Inquiry late last year found the allegations of unlawful activity were substantially true, and declared Crown not a suitable person to hold a gambling licence. Some Directors claimed ignorance; former Chairman John Alexander blamed senior staff for not raising concerns with the board; and there was a rush for the exit as Directors tried to save their personal reputations.
The unseemly exodus left Helen Coonan to take the Chair and she pledged to stay on to clean up the mess. However, she had been a Director for nine years – throughout the prolonged period of governance failure – and there was immediate speculation she would remain in place only until a new CEO and Board can be appointed.
The litany of mismanagement at the top of Crown will likely be a case study in Board rooms and textbooks for years to come, and it’s probably the most egregious recent example of Directors failing to identify and manage admitted wrongdoing.
Yet it also demonstrates the growing trend for blame to be sheeted home at Board level, and a growing expectation that individual Directors need to publicly take responsibility.
Contrast the Crown fiasco with what happened at Rio Tinto after destruction of 46,000-year-old aboriginal shelter caves in Western Australia’s Juukan Gorge in May 2020. Not surprisingly the CEO and two senior executives immediately lost their jobs.
Earlier this month the Chairman of the mining company, Simon Thompson, said Rio Tinto’s achievements in 2020 were “overshadowed” by destruction of the sacred Aboriginal site, and announced he would stand down. “As Chairman,” he said, “I am ultimately accountable for the failings that led to this tragic event.”
Taking responsibility at the top should not be remarkable. But at a time when politicians and leaders increasingly try to avoid doing the right thing, there is now a greater than ever demand for Directors to take the fall.
While Directors may complain they have to depend on the executive to report issues and update them on potential crises, the reality is that external Directors are supposed to bring an outside perspective, and they have a responsibility to make themselves aware of potential risks.
Boards need to have their own issue management capability to act on matters which could jeopardise the organisation and the board. Measures might include:
Pleading ignorance and blaming management – as Crown and other Directors have tried – is no longer good enough. In the new world of social media instant opinions, more assertive regulators and increasingly litigious investors, company Directors must understand that expectations have changed, and it’s they who may be facing calls for heads to roll.
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