What are the Barriers and Pitfalls to Build a High-Performance Board

What are the greatest barriers to building and maintaining a high-performing board: The real BoDs dilemma is that driving the business forward is extremely difficult. This means looking into an unknown future and attempting to define the landscape with its risks and opportunities. Thus, having "deep common sense" is very important for the high-performance board. The more complicated the strategy, the worst the rates of return. Lacking "common sense," can complicate the matter, get trapped by the complexity and lose focus on critical issues. Some call common sense "informed judgment," defining it to include providing wise counsel on the broad range of issues, being able to think strategically about complex issues. High-performing boards can sense emergent opportunities, and predict potential risks, to steer the business ship to the uncharted water or the blurred digital territories. They have to prioritize and put significant efforts into governance and risk management. The ‘Deep common sense” leads toward ”Effective Judgment," which has been defined as "Applies common sense, measured reasoning, knowledge, and experience to come to a conclusion."
What tends to be the biggest gaps and “blind spots” in achieving and maintaining the right board composition? The composition of Boards should reflect approximately the profile of the company' stakeholders: shareholders, employees, customers, and suppliers. It's the diversity both from a cognitive difference or functional perspective; as the diversity of thought more often does not come from the diverse physical identity; but from one’s thinking process, cognitive difference, learning habits, experience or skill sets., etc. The question now becomes who (can or should) drive such diversity in the Boardroom and how can you make that happen? The non-executive members should be selected for their ability and willingness to constructively challenge management and this is less likely to happen if they are related to, or are close pals of, the executive members. Therefore, the “deep diverse” BoDs can practice independent thinking, bring the differentiated point of views, ideas, and capabilities to the table, and fulfill the board duty more effectively.

The high performing Board shows the ability and openness to "question itself and its decisions/ discussions." It’s not talking about "second guessing" but the ability to validate and double back on decisions past and present discussions. This is basically getting the "oversight" closer to the forefront (if not within) of every board process. High-performing boards set goals for their own performance and regularly evaluate how they are performing as the board. They frequently brainstorm issues such as Board Composition, Structure, and Leadership - periodic risk assessment and well-tuned succession plans. The high-performance board makes the disproportional impact on running a high-performance business.
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Published on April 18, 2017 22:56
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