Describe your board
We have three independent directors and two executive directors, all of whom are shareholders. Two of the independent directors became shareholders after joining the board. Our chairman is Michael Bushby, who is Leighton Contractors' executive general manager in Australia and former CEO of the Roads and Traffic Authority in New South Wales.
Then we have Tony Gibson who has an extensive background in transport logistics and is CEO of Ports of Auckland. Our most recent appointment is Sean Keane who has about 30 years' experience in global capital markets as an independent director of NZ First Capital. Our other executive director is EROAD's founder responsible for global business development, Brian Michie, who is an economist with a background in infrastructure and government.
What is your board doing for you?
With a board comes a lot of extra work for management as you try to keep the directors informed. Their contribution is invaluable, though, because it encourages constructive discussion and forces management to validate their strategies and business plans or rethink them. Having a strong board also provides comfort to our regulatory stakeholders NZTA and MOT. Because the company currently collects $160m of road user charges for NZTA, these agencies need validation that we are a reputable business. Having a strong board is crucial and this will only become more important as we expand internationally and collect road charges in more jurisdictions.
How often do you meet?
We have quarterly meetings but I am also in contact with the directors outside of that. Our business is expanding quickly in a whitespace area. We don't have reference points for much of what we do, and we need to make decisions quickly so we can't involve the board in everything.
However going back to the board for validation that we're running the business against an approved plan is essential. We'll go to the board to discuss where we've corrected plans and why we've done that. The board needs to be involved in the bigger picture stuff. You want to talk to them about the capabilities for the company to ensure continued growth and their role is to challenge management to ensure there good risk management in place.
On what other occasions do you call on your board for advice?
I will call on the board when I want advice on bringing in a new senior member to the team or anyone who is reporting to the CEO. Our board will also meet on an ad hoc basis if there's a significant strategic initiative that needs discussion, such as capital expenditure, significant new business opportunities, or funding.
What is your relationship with the chair?
I have a great relationship with our chair, Michael Bushby and he is my sounding board. A high-performing partnership between the CEO and chair is pivotal - if you don't have it, the business is not in a good place.
Why do directors do it?
Directors are not in it for the money. Typically a small business will pay its board directors around $30,000 per annum and for that they are getting six meetings a year and a number of conversations and emails outside of that. In terms of hours and legal responsibilities, it's not very well paid.
We are paying more but we have the expectation that the business is going to be a very significant one and good governance is necessary to support that growth.
What is the effect of a board on enterprise value?
If your aim is to grow a business and potentially bring in more investors and maximise the long term value, then having a board to support governance is the only way to do it. A board provides confidence and as a significant shareholder and contributor to the business, it helps to support maximising value on exit. If you have built a business with no governance then potentially all that value goes when you leave.
Corporate philanthropy the small business way.What do you do with your favourite charities and how does it align with your business? Email me, Gill South at the link below: