Evaluating the 'Doofus Factor' In Corporate Governance
PolygamousRanchKid writes with this quote from an article in the Economist:
"The directors of Yahoo! were 'so spooked by being cast as the worst board in the country' that they fired Carol Bartz as chief executive 'to show that they're not the doofuses that they are.' That was Ms Bartz's typically blunt verdict, offered to Fortune after she was dismissed with a phone call by the internet firm's chairman, Roy Bostock, on September 6th. She would say that. Yet Ms Bartz's criticisms of the board have been sympathetically received. Firing a chief executive by phone smacks of hasty, panicky decision-making. And Yahoo!'s board already had a poor reputation, having turned down an offer from Microsoft that valued the firm at several times what it is worth today. It is not just Yahoo!'s board that is feeling the heat. The directors of HP, another stumbling Silicon Valley giant, have been accused of serial ineptitude spanning the appointment and dismissal of Carly Fiorina as chief executive, the firing of her successor, Mark Hurd, and the selection of his replacement, Léo Apotheker. ... There is growing demand for boards to undergo a formal evaluation process, to assess both the performance of each individual board member and how they work together as a group. The European Union is considering new regulations that would require an independent evaluation of the board every three years."
A significant amount of research has been conducted that demonstrates monetary incentives that are too high actually severely decreases the effectiveness and productivity of a person to levels even lower than when monetary incentives are too low. I have no doubt this happening to corporate CEO boards across the western world. Any of these corporations could hire perfectly competent CEOs from business schools for 1/10 their current pay. But like frat boys they all sit on each others' boards and give each other multimillion dollar raises, bonuses, and parachutes, all at the investors' expense.
James Carville, who was Clinton's right hand man just wrote advice to Obama, on how to look more compentent. His advise was to do lots of firings to appear in charge and for them to be scapegoats.
It works for past presidents like Reagan, Clinton, and Bush Jr. Surely, the board did this for the same reason to appear like they are doing their jobs etc. Many in upper management reading this can relate to newer guys coming and firing people in order to appear all scary and powerful to their new employer.
Most of the smart people who pay attention can see right through this.
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