Board presentations: a leadership moment; Board meetings have few rivals as optimal settings for an executive to project authority, credibility, and character. In presenting to the board, make sure you are sized up as a leader.
Publication:
Directors & Boards
Publication Date: 22-MAR-04 |
Format: Online Delivery: Immediate Online Access |
|
Full Article Title: Board presentations: a leadership moment; Board meetings have few rivals as optimal settings for an executive to project authority, credibility, and character. In presenting to the board, make sure you are sized up as a leader.(COMMUNICATIONS) |
|
|
Article Excerpt A FEW MONTHS AGO, a new client, a senior executive of a Fortune 100 firm, showed me the first presentation he had recently made to his board of directors. Although he struck me as bright, articulate, and well-educated, his presentation was a verbatim manuscript. Why, I asked, did he not take a more extemporaneous approach, using an outline instead? He responded that the firm's chairman and CEO insisted on the manuscript, regarding it as a way to keep each executive "on message"--the message the chairman had approved.
This anecdote prompts two broad questions:
1. How does increased director accountability influence the way boards should regard presentations and Q & A?
2. Should increased accountability influence how executives prepare for presentations and field questions?
This article will address these questions as it focuses on major factors related to making and listening to a board presentation.
The presentation as metaphor for leadership
The substance and style of a board presentation have always been important bases for sizing up the presenter as leader. Substance provides a board member with a basis for assessing such factors as the presenter's focus, grasp of the business, strategic thinking, principles, and priorities. The presenter's style or delivery traits provide verbal and non-verbal cues that translate into a wide range of board inferences regarding leadership--e.g., confidence, strength, candor, composure, mental agility, and openness.
Style becomes even more relevant under two conditions:
-- when board members question the executive to discern a trait, e.g., to test his mettle;
-- when the content is more challenging to understand.
This latter condition often results in a natural and usually subconscious tendency for listeners to tune in to style more than substance. In fact, it helps explain why politicians often emphasize image over substance, especially during televised debates.
Since board assessments based on substance and style are so subjective and potentially influential, board members must take care to place the presentation in proper perspective with other opportunities to gauge the executive's leadership ability and business status.
Although a dazzling presenter is not necessarily an impressive leader and...
|
|

More articles from Directors & Boards
Get serious to make CEO evaluations work: the review process should be..., March 22, 2004 Avoiding personal liability as a director.(SPECIAL REPORT 2004), March 22, 2004
Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.
Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication
name or publication date.
About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company
analysis or best practices in managing your organization,
Goliath can help you meet your business needs.
Our extensive business information databases empower business
professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible,
authoritative information they need to support their business
goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting,
company research or defining management best practices -
Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.
|
|