Mentoring

Are mentors valuable to those who inhabit the C-suite or are they above this need? Top executives often find themselves isolated and more than ever in need of a mentor.  
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Management

Different times and circumstances call for different leadership skills. What abilities and skills should working executives hone as they strive to reach the next level?
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Technology

Technology has become an integral part of a company’s business strategy, and it changes faster than ever as new C-suite titles drive change. How can leaders manage it?.
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Finance

The CFO is ideally poised to be at the helm of the C-suite in years to come. The CFO is the new doctor of technology with a shift requiring flexibility, patience, and collaboration.
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Digital

This section delves into the impact the digital age, the emergence of the “digital native” generation and on how they interact with information differently than earlier generations.
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Analytics

Leadership is today hands-on the power of data and analytics, seeking and seeing the myriad possibilities offered in their data to make informed, proactive decisions.
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Branding

The brand is key to building trust and support in the boardroom as CXOs need to go beyond data to tell a compelling story about the outcomes they’re delivering for the business.
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Human capital

The challenge of “getting culture right” has fallen to human capital leaders, but how can you measure the culture? Which culture is 'best' and how can it drive meaningful and sustainable change?  
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Among the biggest compensation-related risk factors facing corporate boards in 2016 will be establishing short- and long-term incentive goals that are selected and calibrated to motivate behavior while driving corporate results and company total shareholder return (TSR). This issue will be more transparent in 2016 due to the SEC’s proposed pay for performance (P4P) disclosure rules.

 

At a high level, the proposed P4P disclosure rules require that registrants include:

A standardized table in proxy statements that includes a new calculation of compensation actually paid (CAP), compensation from the current summary compensation table, and TSR for the company and a peer group.

A narrative description and/or graph to describe relationship between CAP and company TSR, and also between company and peer TSR.

Unfortunately, as proposed, the P4P disclosure rules measure executive equity awards at vesting, where any alignment or misalignment with end-of-year TSR is inherently coincidental, or even false. This mismatch may provide a hazy or even coincidental understanding of pay for performance linkage at best. We expect that many companies will not show alignment of pay and performance in the P4P disclosure table.

Since executive compensation disclosure is subject to close scrutiny by media, proxy advisory firms, investors and regulators, it will be critical that the narrative and/or graphic explanation clarify pay for performance alignment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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