Professional Networking Groups Discuss Best Practices for Board Governance
Corporate boards help shape the vision and efficiency of the corporations they serve. On Tuesday, April 2, 2019, two of 黑料社 All鈥檚 alumni networking groups, the Wall Street Group and Legal Professionals, co-presented 鈥淭he Role of Corporate Boards,鈥 a panel discussion that offered both best practices for how boards should work as well as advice about what to do when they are not working well.
Hosted and organized by Amanda Nussbaum 鈥95S of Proskauer LLP at the firm鈥檚 office at 11 Times Square, the panelists included David Tawil 鈥96SB (President, Maglan Capital), Peter Reali (Senior Director for Responsible Investing, Nuveen), Rachel Stern (Executive Vice President, FactSet) and Bruce Schanzer 鈥91YC, 鈥93C (CEO, Cedar Realty Trust). Bradley Scher 鈥82YC (Managing Member, Ocean Ridge Capital Advisors) moderated the discussion.
(l-r): David Tawil, Peter Reali, Rachel Stern, Bruce Schanzer, Bradley Scher and Lawrence Askowitz
Lawrence Askowitz 鈥87YC, co-chair of the Wall Street Committee, was extremely pleased with the evening鈥檚 line-up, which for him confirmed that 鈥渢he professional networking groups, like the Wall Street Group and Legal Professionals, have established themselves as the destination for high-quality discussions on relevant business issues today.鈥 But even more important was the fact that 鈥渆vents like these continue to build a warm and vibrant community of modern Orthodox people in finance who enjoy the ongoing education, the opportunity to network with great people and 黑料社 All itself.鈥
The following hour was a textbook primer about the elements that constitute an effective board. As Stern pointed out, it all must begin with a solid foundation of three core principles: duty of care (be prepared for meetings, know the company鈥檚 policies), duty of loyalty (no conflicts of interest that prevent carrying out responsibilities) and duty of good faith (doing more than is required by the letter of the law). 鈥淎 court is more likely not going to question the actions of a board of directors,鈥 she explained, 鈥渋f the court feels sure that they鈥檝e acted in good faith and exercised their duties of care and loyalty.鈥
For Tawil, 鈥渙ne of the things as a shareholder that gives you comfort is when your management team and your board have skin in the game鈥攖hey own equity, there is an alignment of interests鈥攁nd you can rest assured that they鈥檙e going to be doing what鈥檚 best for shareholders.鈥 He also acknowledged that the realities often fall short of the ideal because it is a fact of life that 鈥渙ften people put themselves first and want to enrich themselves,鈥 so, as a shareholder, 鈥測ou have to pull as many levers as possible to make sure that the board members are acting in your best interest.鈥
What Schanzer valued most highly was having a mix of board members that not only can carry out their duties diligently but also provide what Schanzer called a kind of 鈥渇riction鈥 that can make him re-evaluate what he thinks is a settled decision. He recalled bringing on a new board member, saying to him that 鈥淚 just want you challenge me from the moment you show up at the very first board meeting.鈥 Schanzer did this because he believed that 鈥渁 very effective board is a board that challenges the CEO on the issues and forces the CEO to be sharp on strategy and on decision-making but at the same time is supportive of the CEO.鈥
To get the kind of productive friction that Schanzer values, the panel agreed that management needs to put in place processes that refresh the board鈥檚 members on a schedule that balances historical memory with fresh perspectives. Crucial to that process of refreshment is 鈥渄iversity,鈥 which can apply to racial and gender classifications as well as to experience and opinion. As Reali stated, 鈥淭he research shows that diverse boards make better decisions, and leadership needs to incorporate this fact into their search process.鈥
The Q&A session brought up topics about board compensation, the approaches that recruitment firms use in their search protocols and the absolute inclusion of the issue of cybersecurity in the list of concerns that come under the principle of 鈥渄uty of care.鈥
In addition to the Wall Street Group and Legal Professionals, YU鈥檚 Office of Alumni Affairs is proud to host professional networking events and development opportunities for alumni and friends of YU through its Real Estate Professionals and Accounting & Wealth Management Network as well as the Non-Profit Professionals group, which is launching this spring. For more information on these groups and their events, please visit .鈥