Reputation and relevance for board directors

Reputation and relevance for board directors

There’s never been a more challenging time to take on a board role and perform as a board director. Board directors responsibilities in terms of their legal and compliance requirements are very clearly set out in the Corporations Act and other regulatory and legislative requirements. Accountability to these is always increasing.

But it’s often not the legal and regulatory requirements that create the biggest challenges for board directors – whether you are one and are seeking new, larger company roles, or whether you are trying to build up your board portfolio career.

Two key aspects of directorships are your reputation and relevance at a point in time and over time. Let’s explore each of these.

Your reputation

There’s a trust deficit across almost all areas of society at the moment. You don’t need to look far to see the consequences of this. The US Presidential election springs to mind, as does the more recent action by the ACCC against Coles and Woolworths around their discounting practices. Then we have the Minister for the NDIS announcing a crackdown on fraud within the system that has blown out to astronomic levels within just 10 years. The destruction of brand value of Qantas over the past four years has been significant, and along with it the reputation of its former CEO and some members of the board.

 Your brand and what and how you wish to be seen and positioned is a creation of your own doing. It is built up over your lifetime and can take just a moment or two to lose. It’s a combination of factors, famously described as ‘it’s what others say about you when you are not in the room’.

So, do you really understand what your reputation is right now? Could it perhaps explain why you are not getting the board roles you are seeking? Do you know what you can do to change it if you need to?

Your relevance

Part of your brand is your relevance, and it’s quite separate from being recognised. You can be recognised (at events, in meetings, in the media) but not relevant. Media coverage (recognition) is not the same as relevance.

Your relevance is more challenging concept as it’s constantly moving. You can be highly relevant in one role – executive or board – but not that relevant in or for another.  When moving from an executive position into the board network, your executive experience while useful and important is NOT as relevant as you might think. The roles and responsibilities of a director are quite different from an executive, as are the legal consequences of getting things wrong. You might think you know about what a director does as you’ve probably worked with and reported to many of them.

In addition, you need to consider the relevance of your skill set (or not) on the board. Most boards are now developed based around a combination of knowledge and skills across the board members.

Separately, the rapid pace of change and radical uncertainty that exists around the world right now means you need to be across a wide range of topics, trends and events.

Just how up-to-speed are you on AI, ChatGPT, data analytics and where your next/new competitor is going to come from? How many of you have undertaken real and thorough training on how to use the various AI tools available, as opposed to scanning articles so you can get across the acronyms?  How many of you have really considered the implications of generative AI for your business?  I’m not talking about a contained digital transformation project but rather a total business transformation.

How far have you explored the cost, options and realities of hitting your net zero targets? What potential threats a shortage of electricity supply could have on your business operations and profitability through the renewables transition?

Insight is essential, foresight is rare.

Your relevance now and in the near future will be based around your insight and foresight into these and other trends that are happening.

If you want to be a board leader of the future, it’s perhaps time to undertake a personal brand audit with a trusted mentor. And here’s that word again, TRUST.  We’re all seeking it, surrounded by examples of where it has been damaged or broken, but it’s something we must have if we are to build stronger relationships and businesses that can thrive.

Connect with me if you are ready to explore your relevance and reputation as a board director.

 

Timely article Garry ,catch up soon .

Robyn Sefiani

President ANZ & Reputation Counsel, Australian PR Leader of the Year, Australian PR Agency of the Year - Sefiani

2mo

Great article Garry. I’ve also been pondering whether Boards would benefit by having a director with reputation management expertise who can ensure good governance across corporate culture, behaviour, compliance to ESG commitments and more. The loss of value in several high profile Australian companies navigating crisis situations recently has prompted this thought.

Garry Browne AM

Chairman, Director, Author, Mentor, Host of Astute Leadership Podcast

2mo

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