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Season 5 is live! New episodes every Monday and Thursday. This season, we’re exploring questions that directors need to *answer*. Are you a director, senior executive, investor, or someone who’s just curious about corporate governance? Tune in for insights about how things work inside and outside the boardroom, based on 20 years of experience and interactions with thousands of directors from around the world. Each episode lasts about one minute and will provide you with questions to ask yourself, your board and your management team, designed to optimize the way your organization makes decisions. Matt Fullbrook is a corporate governance researcher, educator and advisor located in Toronto.
Episodes
Monday Sep 09, 2024
223. How do we really know if our CEO is doing an awesome job?
Monday Sep 09, 2024
Monday Sep 09, 2024
This season, every episode of OMG focuses on a question that directors really need to answer.
OMG is written, produced, narrated and scored by Matt Fullbrook.
TRANSCRIPT:
Question #21: How do we really know if our CEO is doing an awesome job? Did you know that there’s no evidence that the market for CEOs is efficient? An efficient market is one where supply and demand are basically equal. When a job market is efficient it means that both sides of a potential transaction have lots of information about each other and they are able to confidently assess the talent of the candidates, the appropriateness of the compensation, etc. We don’t have any of that for CEOs. There’s a great summary of this in Larcker and Tayan’s amazing paper Seven Gaping Holes in our Knowledge of Corporate Governance, which I’ve referenced a few times on this show. Anyway, since we have no objective way of knowing whether our CEO is the most qualified person for the job, or whether we’re paying them appropriately, it raises an even more urgent question of how good they might be at their job. You can’t just say, “well the company is really profitable and shareholders are happy, therefore the CEO must be amazing.” Why? Partly because to confidently prove that the CEO is the cause of that success would require you to get rid of the CEO and see what happens. Or to have a multiverse with an infinite number of different CEOs so you can compare them against each other. And how many stories can we think of where a CEO had great performance at the time, but once they were gone we realized that they’d done lots of damage in the process. But answering this question should start, in my opinion, with an open-ended and open-minded conversation about what doing an awesome job really means. In terms of actions AND results.
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