Boards in a Time of Crisis

The phone hacking scandal in the UK raises questions about the role of its corporate board.

By Lucy P. Marcus

What role does the board play in times when a company is involved in a crisis that has an impact on the community?

I don’t mean “brand management” or “reputation management”. I mean cases like the one we are seeing now with the News of the World hacking scandal in the UK, or last year with the BP oil spill, where real people are harmed and whole communities are affected.

News International decided to close the News of the World. It is a bold gesture, but it does not negate the need for a larger look at the way the company runs and the way the board operates.

This issue was left to fester for too long. It escalated to the point that a dramatic choice had to be made. The board needs to take a long hard look at itself.

As independent directors on the boards of companies our job is to help the companies navigate and be successful. Part of that is calling the company to task if something it is doing is harming the long-term stability of the company, and, I would argue, is beyond ethically acceptable business practice. We should not simply be automatons with only dollar, pound, euro or yen signs. If an organization is caught up in a spiral of bad or unethical behavior we as directors need to be people who step up and challenge the manner in which a company is doing business.

I realize that News International’s board is perhaps not the best demonstration of good corporate governance, with so many inside executive directors in the balance, not a lot of diversity (there is only one woman), and the independent directors including amongst their ranks an opera singer and Marc Hurd formerly of HP. I would ask the board of News International, and particularly the independent members: what are you doing about the News of the World hacking scandal? I’d genuinely like to know.

About Lucy P. Marcus  

The founder and CEO of Marcus Venture Consulting, Lucy P. Marcus currently serves as the non-executive chair of the Mobius Life Sciences Fund and as a non-executive director and chair of the board audit committee of BioCity Nottingham. She is a fellow at the University of Cambridge’s Judge Business School and a member of the board of IE Business School. She is a prolific writer on global economic trends and best practices for corporate governance, venture capital, entrepreneurship, biotech, cleantech and women in business, and regularly speaks on these topics to diverse audiences around the globe. 

Follow Lucy P. Marcus on Twitter: @lucymarcus

Readers: What should News International’s board be doing about the phone hacking scandal in the UK? Share your thoughts with Talkback!

08:27 pm by csrwiretalkback[10 notes]

Comments
  • Notes
  1. technologies-blog reblogged this from csrwiretalkback
  2. st-louis-dentist reblogged this from csrwiretalkback
  3. du-hoc-nhat-ban reblogged this from csrwiretalkback
  4. sitevalue reblogged this from csrwiretalkback
  5. csrwiretalkback posted this

blog comments powered by Disqus

ABOUT US

CSRwire is the leading source of corporate social responsibility (CSR) and sustainability news, reports, events and information.

CSRwire Talkback is hosted by Francesca Rheannon, Managing Editor, and Sarah Peyok, Director of Editorial.

WHY WE'RE HERE

Talkback brings thought leaders and readers together to discuss many topics in these two areas:

Corporate Social Responsibility - business ethics, shareholder activism, corporate governance and public policy

Sustainability - green living, human rights, the environment and social enterprise

CSRwire on Twitter

    via Twitter

    Most Recent Posts