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What is corporate governance?

By Stephen J. Bigelow

Corporate governance is the combination of rules, processes and laws by which businesses are operated, regulated and controlled. The term encompasses the internal and external factors that affect the interests of a company's stakeholders, including shareholders, employees, customers, suppliers, government regulators and management.

The board of directors or corporate executive board is responsible for creating a framework for corporate governance that best aligns business conduct with corporate objectives, prevailing regulation and legislation and industry best practices. Good corporate governance involves establishing principles of security, transparency, equity, compliance, reliance and accountability.

How corporate governance works

Corporate governance is about making sound, ethical decisions to sustain and grow the business long-term. It assures that a business fosters the processes and controls needed to balance all its stakeholders' interests fairly.

Consequently, corporate governance is a collection of interwoven practices and procedures implemented to address high-level management issues. Every business can consider similar practices and procedures but also approach each consideration in unique ways -- as long as the overall business goals are met.

Practices and procedures that are part of good corporate governance can include the following:

Each of these elements can vary in scope and complexity depending on the organization's needs and can be developed with input from numerous senior managers across the company. Senior leadership typically reviews and approves each plan before it is adopted and implemented. Plans are reviewed and revised frequently as changes arise in business needs, competitive and threat landscapes, regulatory and political shifts and technological evolutions. Reviews enable the business to refine its strategic goals, ensure it will continue forward, and inspire stakeholder trust.

Importance of corporate governance

Corporate governance is critical for the proper functioning of an organization. Demonstrating good corporate governance is vital for maintaining a company's reputation.

Corporate governance is based on rules, bylaws, policies and procedures to ensure company accountability. When done correctly, it establishes a framework for attaining a company's objectives in all management spheres. It also recognizes the importance of shareholders. Shareholders elect the company's board members, fund company operations and have a direct say in the operation of the business.

Good governance ensures a company's integrity, overall direction, risk management and success planning. This, in turn, helps companies stay financially viable and build strong community, shareholder and investor relations and trust. Demonstrating good corporate governance is often considered as important as profitability for businesses.

Bad corporate governance can lead to a host of adverse outcomes, such as the following:

The role of the board of directors

Ownership is a matter of equity, and modern business organizations are owned by shareholders who possess a financial investment in the business, either through stock or other equity, such as venture capital. However, routine shareholders rarely play a role in the management or operation of a modern corporation.

It is common practice to separate a business's ownership from its control, so shareholders vote to engage the services of a governing board called a board of directors (BoD). All publicly held companies have a BoD. Privately held companies frequently have a BoD, though fewer rules require one.

Members of the BoD are typically elected or extended through an annual shareholder vote. The size and composition of a BoD can vary depending on the size and needs of the business. The governing BoD hires a senior manager, such as a president or chief operating officer (CEO), to run the business. The senior manager reports to the BoD, which represents the shareholders or business owners.

Where a senior manager is responsible for the day-to-day operation and outcomes of the business, the BoD typically meets several times a year to discuss high-level strategy and outcomes over the last period. A BoD is generally tasked with ensuring that the business and its outcomes serve the best interests of the shareholders and other stakeholders. If not, the BoD can direct the senior manager to make changes or replace them outright -- often leading to a broader change in the organization's senior management team.

A BoD can comprise individuals, including major or majority shareholders, inside executives, such as the CEO, or outside parties, such as venture capital representatives or other nonexecutives. Such professionals with comprehensive industry expertise can help provide objective insight into business and its goals. Beyond the acts of hiring, firing, setting salaries and monitoring the performance of senior managers, a BoD can shoulder other high-level responsibilities, such as these:

Principles of corporate governance

While corporate governance structures can vary, most organizations incorporate the following key elements:

Conflict management in corporate governance

One purpose of corporate governance is to implement a checks-and-balances system that minimizes conflicts of interest between various stakeholders and any individual party.

Conflicts arise when two parties have opposing opinions or goals about how business should be conducted. Conflicts of interest can also occur when individual stakeholders might gain personally from a corporate action or decision in which they are in a position to influence. The board of directors should provide a nonbiased way to handle these conflicts.

Conflicts can occur when executives disagree with shareholders. For example, the shareholders might want to pursue goals that generate greater profits, while the CEO might want to invest in better employee engagement efforts. Another type of conflict could arise if multiple shareholders disagree with each other.

Personal conflicts of interest or conflicts among directors, audit plan administrators and company executives are typically disclosed in proxy statements. A proxy statement is a document that shareholders use to evaluate the qualifications and compensation of the board of directors and key senior management staff.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires public companies to release proxy statements. These statements are shared during annual meetings when a company solicits shareholder votes on a given matter, such as nominating a new member to the corporate board.

Corporate governance models

There is no single means, approach or standard for implementing corporate governance. However, several major governance models have evolved to offer prominent frameworks across different regions, including the Anglo-American, Continental European and Japanese models.

Examples of corporate governance

Specific processes that can be outlined in corporate governance can include the following:

An example of good corporate governance practices is a well-defined and enforced structure that benefits everyone by ensuring that the enterprise adheres to accepted ethical standards, best practices and formal laws.

Alternatively, inadequate corporate governance involves poorly structured, ambiguous and noncompliant approaches to running a business. All of these approaches can damage a business's image or financial health.

The Enron scandal is an example of poor corporate governance. Enron Corp. declared bankruptcy in 2001 -- just months before it was one of the largest companies in the U.S. Enron falsely reported its revenue by a wide margin and used fraudulent methods to hide debts and toxic assets from investors and regulators to avoid accountability. This scandal had a lasting effect on Wall Street and led the government to pass new corporate accountability and governance regulations.

Good corporate governance often goes unnoticed in the public sphere. One example of a company with a reputation for good corporate governance is PepsiCo. In its 2020 proxy statement, the company outlined its leadership structure and changes to the compensation program, as well as input from investors in the following areas:

Regulation of corporate governance

Corporate governance has received increased attention because of high-profile scandals involving abuse of corporate power or alleged criminal activity by corporate officers. To counteract those activities, various laws and regulations have been passed to address the components of corporate governance guidelines, including the following:

In addition, there are specific regulations related to establishing businesses and trading their securities or stock. For example, most U.S. states have specific laws that address the formation, operation and ESG posture of corporations incorporated in a given state. Similarly, the SEC implements an array of rules that corporations must follow to be listed and traded on an exchange to maintain a fair and transparent securities market, such as insider trading rules.

Good corporate governance depends on complying with various regulations, both general and industry-specific. Learn the top cloud compliance standards and how cloud companies can use them.

14 Apr 2025

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