The Star Early Edition

Reaping the ‘diversity dividend’

- Parmi Natesan and Dr Prieur du Plessis

BOARD diversity is not an end in itself, and organisati­ons that want to maximise board performanc­e must understand the inner dynamics of diversity and what it seeks to achieve. Any sports aficionado knows that what sets great coaches apart is their ability to pick the right team for the prevailing conditions, and being cognisant of the weaknesses and strengths of the opposition. The same principle holds when it comes to boards of directors. If they are truly to make the decisions that will lead the organisati­on to sustained success, despite changing operating conditions and fierce competitio­n, they simply have to have the right skills around the boardroom table.

This has always been true, but it is especially pertinent in a multicultu­ral and global world. Organisati­ons now exist in a complex context with a wide range of stakeholde­rs, and face competitio­n from new quarters. Clearly, if a board is composed of the same type of people, with no diversity of thought, then chances are it will find itself constantly on the back foot – unable to think its way into the minds of its various stakeholde­rs, its staff and, importantl­y, its competitor­s.

One of the reasons advanced for the failures of both African Bank and Lehman Brothers was that its non-executive directors lacked the necessary industry knowledge to constructi­vely challenge management.

So far, so logical, you may be thinking. But what “productive diversity” means will differ from board to board and from industry to industry. The first order of business must be for the board to understand what skills it needs now and what skills will be required for the future, bearing in mind that skills can become outdated.

The 2017 edition of PwC’s annual Non-executive directors: Practices and remunerati­on trends report offers a fascinatin­g insight into how directorsh­ip qualities and skills are changing. This year’s report makes the point that the need to ensure the digital competency of the company, including how it approaches cybersecur­ity and artificial intelligen­ce, and the ongoing focus on the environmen­t, will require a new set of skills on the board.

It predicts that “the non-executive of the future will be an advisory technocrat – a specialist in a particular field with the ability to discuss many aspects of the business”. How many members of your board could be described in these terms now?

Professor Richard Leblanc of York University, an internatio­nal corporate governance guru, also emphasises the importance of assessing what skills are needed for the future, and the importance of regular, rigorous board assessment­s.

But putting together the right set of complement­ary skills is not enough. The board has to work as a whole. The ideal, in Malcolm Forbes’s words, is: “Diversity is the art of thinking independen­tly together.” Epigrammat­ic, but devilishly difficult to put into practice, relying on the chair to play a critical role in turning a diverse board with the right skills into an effective team.

Difficult, but also well worth getting right. The Institute of Directors in Southern Africa’s board appraisal benchmark study concludes that “board compositio­n probably has the greatest single impact on the future success of an organisati­on”. There is a large body of research to bear this out. A McKinsey study by Vivian Hunt, Dennis Layton and Sara Prince on Why diversity matters shows that companies

The non-executive of the future will be an advisory technocrat – a specialist in a particular field with the ability to discuss many aspects of the business

(in the US, Canada, Latin America and the UK) in the top quartile for racial diversity are 35 percent more likely to achieve financial returns above industry medians. Also, top-quartile gender-diverse companies are 15 percent more likely to outperform financiall­y.

A similar study by the Catalyst Informatio­n Centre found a strong correlatio­n between the number of female directors and return on sales and on invested capital.

Viewed in this light, the JSE’s recent move to require listed companies to have a policy to promote racial diversity at board level should be welcomed. This new requiremen­t complement­s the existing one relating to gender diversity. Applied in the right spirit, and with the outcome of improved performanc­e in mind, it has the potential to unlock the diversity dividend latent in a fractured society like ours. Parmi Natesan and Dr Prieur du Plessis are executive director: Centre for Corporate Governance; and chairperso­n of the Institute of Directors, respective­ly. Enquiries: info@iodsa. co.za. Better Directors. Better Boards. Better Business.

 ??  ?? Dr Prieur du Plessis
Dr Prieur du Plessis
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Parmi Natesan

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