The Official Baldrige Blog
Washington Post business columnist Steven Pearlstein and others have written about the problem of an excessive and short-sighted focus by many business leaders today on stock values for shareholders.
But what about the role of corporate governance boards? Aren’t members of a board of directors obliged to take a longer-term view of company management and performance results? Aren’t they expected to help ensure their organization’s future sustainability, in part by creating and balancing value for all customers and stakeholders?
As governance board members of Baldrige Award-winning organizations have affirmed, those boards that embrace the role of ensuring responsible governance and leadership of their organizations are likely to find the Baldrige Excellence Framework booklet (which includes the Criteria for Performance Excellence) an essential tool in this endeavor, regardless of the sector or size of the organization.
The “Governance and Societal Responsibilities” section of the Baldrige Criteria (item 1.2) provides a board of directors with self-assessment questions divided into three topic areas: organizational governance, legal and ethical behavior, and societal responsibilities and support of key communities. The first area addresses how the organization achieves accountability for management actions, fiscal accountability, transparency in operations, independence and effectiveness of audits, protection of stakeholder and stockholder interests, and succession planning for senior leaders.
The next questions (also Criteria requirements) guide the board of directors to determine whether it has an effective approach to leadership performance evaluation and improvement, legal and ethical behavior, fulfillment of responsibilities, and support to key communities. For example, the Criteria ask how the organization considers societal well-being and benefit in its strategy and daily operations—including its contributions to the environmental, social, and economic systems in which the organization resides and from which it benefits.
To help boards of directors get started using the Criteria for Performance Excellence, the Baldrige Program has long offered a free resource: A Baldrige Perspective for the Board of Directors (downloadable PDF). Following are ten sample questions (spanning all seven categories of the Criteria for Performance Excellence) that can help a board of directors begin to assess the performance of the organization and target areas for improvement:
Can your board members and/or your organization’s senior leaders answer these questions? If not, your organization may have gaps requiring your attention. Check out related posts on Blogrige on how to prepare to conduct a Baldrige self-assessment: “Baldrige Self-Assessment: Seven Ways to Get Started” and “Baldrige Self-Assessment: Seven Steps for a Full Examination.”
And if you serve on the board of directors of a business or nonprofit organization—whether a corporate governance board, a professional association advisory board, or a school board—please continue to share with us how you have used the Baldrige framework to guide the organization to improve its performance and excel.