HOME PAGE ABOUT US CONTACT US SUBSCRIBE ADVERTISE ARCHIVES
TOP STORIES NATION ECONOMY COMPANIES SHIPPING OPINION PERSPECTIVE LIFE SPORTS MOTORING
SEARCH ENGINE
WWWOur Site
Anchored by Jonathan dela Cruz, Salvador Escudero, Boying Remulla, Teddy Boy Locsin and Alvin Capino
Monday to Friday
8:00pm-10:00pm
ARTICLE SERVICES
  • bookmark this page
  • print this article
  • view archive
  •  
     
    The hidden good news about CEO dismissals
     
    By Chuck Lucier and Jan Dyer
     

    Worldwide, boards of large corporations are dismissing four times more CEOs today than in 1995, a trend that raises an important question: Are boards undermining the chief executive’s ability to lead for the long term?

    If it were the case that boards had become trigger-happy, overreacting to brief fluctuations in financial performance or the demands of hedge funds and other short-term investors, the answer would be yes. Companies would undoubtedly suffer as CEOs, trying to dodge the bullet, focused only on quarterly earnings.

    But Booz Allen Hamilton’s decade-long study of CEO turnover at the 2,500 largest companies in the world points to a different answer. Boards aren’t overreacting. They are doing what they should have been doing all along: removing clearly inadequate CEOs who in years past would have been sheltered by faulty corporate governance.

    While a handful of CEOs are dismissed for illegal or immoral behavior, the vast majority get the ax for dismal financial results stemming from a significant deterioration in the company’s core business. On average, an ousted CEO’s company achieves only half the profit, cash flow and market capitalization of a comparable company led by an effective CEO for the same length of time.

    In the bad old days of the imperial CEO, chief executives were as likely to enjoy a long tenure if they performed poorly as if they performed well. Today’s more independent boards, strengthened by changes in governance practices, remove ineffective CEOs once the chiefs have had a fair chance but before they can do irreparable damage to the company.

    These boards give CEOs the same opportunity to prove themselves as their counterparts did in 1995. Then and now, dismissed CEOs get sacked, on average, in their sixth year. The tenure of CEOs who retire normally has remained steady, too, at nine years. The decline in average CEO tenure is no more than the arithmetic result of the increased proportion of CEOs being fired.

    The six-year time frame for dismissal makes a great deal of sense. The dynamics of global competition—rapid, unpredictable change driven by competitors’ innovations, new technologies and government actions—challenge businesses to build and rebuild their competitive advantage every three to four years. In this environment, a traditional focus on the long term fosters complacency, causing inadequate responses to innovative competitors and a failure to seize opportunities.

    Yet, by the same token, quarter-to-quarter financial performance has little to do with sustained returns to investors. The medium term is today’s critical strategic time horizon: It’s long enough to allow a CEO to make significant business improvements yet short enough to force the top executive to take actions that will have a near-term impact. It’s no coincidence that the companies producing sustained superior returns to investors deliver big performance improvements over successive medium terms.

    Fewer than 5 percent of CEOs were fired in 2005, not an excessive number (for example, it’s about half the proportion of employees who are fired). The story about CEO dismissals isn’t how many are being fired now but rather how few were removed in 1995—only 28 in 2,500 companies.

    What’s more, the rate of CEO dismissals appears to have leveled off, suggesting that companies have reached an equilibrium of sorts that will prove highly beneficial to all stakeholders—generating better leadership, improved investor returns and greater opportunities for growth.

     

    (Chuck Lucier is a senior vice president emeritus of Booz Allen Hamilton and the lead author of the firm’s annual CEO turnover studies. He is currently a strategy consultant based in Princeton, New Jersey. Jan Dyer, formerly a principal at Booz Allen Hamilton, works with Lucier in their consulting business and is a student at Princeton Theological Seminary.)

    OTHER STORIES

    The hidden good news about CEO dismissals

    Worldwide, boards of large corporations are dismissing four times more CEOs today than in 1995, a trend that raises an important question: Are boards undermining the chief executive’s ability to lead for the long term?

    read more

    Overcoming resistance to change

    There are a few in every bunch: the naysayers, the predictors of disaster, the ones who dig in their heels and fight you at every turn. What would a change initiative be without them?

    read more

    From Small to Big Screen

    Jim Libiran is not your regular commercial filmmaker and screenwriter who has a standard formula for a box-office hit and makes use of predictable plots and cliché lines.

    read more

    Winning: What makes a lousy leader

    Q: What is lousy leadership? Goran Milic, Zagreb, Croatia

    A: Now, why would you ask that question? Certainly not because you want to be a lousy leader yourself!

    It can only be because you’re checking your instincts about someone you know. Maybe even the person who writes your paycheck.

    read more

    A challenger like no other

    THE grip on the speakership of Lakas Rep. Jose de Venecia Jr. of Pangasinan has never been threatened since he assumed the post the first time. He has taken it effortlessly four times.

    read more

    Ukiwa na udhia, penyeza rupia

    The title of this piece is a Swahili proverb which means: to get rid of an annoyance, pay some money.

    read more

    ‘Just do it’

    IMAGINE a situation where killings and disappearances are taking place. The victims form a distinct and disliked, though by no means unpopular political grouping. In fact, they have the most populist agenda of any other.

    read more

    Leadership that focuses on the customer–really

    Many executives and managers exhort their followers to make the customer the center of everything they do. Yet for all the passion and conviction of their words, genuine customer focus remains theory rather than practice in their organizations.

    read more

    Forward-Thinking Cultures

    It’s hard to manage any organization so that its long-term interests aren’t sacrificed to short-term expedience. But there is an added wrinkle for organizations whose operations are globally dispersed: cultural orientation toward the future varies widely the world over.

    read more

    Book Keeper

    The life of National Book Store founder Socorro C. Ramos should serve as an inspiration to the younger generation on how to hurdle the numerous challenges thrown our way. Her success, not just in business but in all aspects of life, stresses the importance of focus, dedication, hard work, education and other important values.

    read more

    It takes a village to raise a child

    Aldo, 5, did not mean to trap his mother when he asked her if God made everything, to which she answered, naturally, “Yes, He did.”

    “Why did He make the poor?”

    read more

    Baguio Calling

    BAGUIO City—Success in today’s fiercely competitive global economy depends on an organization’s ability to change and the abilities of the people around it to respond.

    read more

    A ‘broken people’ in booming India

    DALLIPUR—The hip young Indians working inside this country’s multinational call centers have one thing in common: Almost all hail from India’s upper and middle castes, elites in this highly stratified society.

    read more

    What is your company’s ‘signature’ experience?

    Your company’s signature experience exemplifies what you do especially well; it’s the odd or unique process that makes your company stand out in people’s minds. Developing a signature experience and communicating it to job candidates can help you streamline your hiring process. It also helps you build an unusually engaged, excited and committed work force.

    read more

    Strategy: private equity’s long view

    What can the gods of private equity (PE) teach us about managing for the long term? If you think that their lightning reflex, do-what-it-takes approach has nothing to tell us about the long haul, you’d be wrong.

    read more

    Wrapped up

    Having fun and making money are two things that Rommel Juan can mix quite easily.

    read more

    Winning: China, India and US economic dominance

    Q: You have written about the reasons to invest in India and China, but you haven’t said whether you think those countries pose a threat to American hegemony in the world economy. Do they? Sahara Chhabra, Dallas

    read more

    China Rising

    HONOLULU—The rapid spread of product development and research in high-technology industries toward the Asia-Pacific Region is accelerating China’s rise as an economic superpower.

    read more

    Why do presidents lie?

    TO understand why presidents lie, following Herbert Spencer’s advice, judgment must first be withheld, for above all men (and women, to be gender-blind), they have different desires, hopes, fears and restraints, although it is a truth from experience that all presidents, no matter how saintly (a wrong term to use on them in the first place), lie.

    read more

    As Capitalist As Ever

    HONG KONG—Tim Freshwater, Asia vice chairman of Goldman Sachs Group Inc., gazes across the Hong Kong skyline from his 68th-floor window toward a rectangular building that houses the barracks of China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA).

    read more

    How to Zap the Zombie

    A company finds great success with a product or service. Makes loads of cash. Builds a seemingly strong brand. Settles in to a satisfying position of dominance. A couple of years pass and then, out of nowhere, a new player swoops in and gobbles up most of the customers, leaving little but scraps for the once dominant firm.

    read more

    GREED IS BACK

    Earlier this year, someone was confident that Hydril Co.’s stock was due to take flight—and very soon. During the two days ended on Friday, February 9, investors purchased options conveying the right, through February 16, to buy more than 160,000 Hydril shares for $90 apiece.

    read more

    What is the color of gold?

    I lost my appetite for shark’s fin soup when I learned how the shark was skinned alive and thrown back into the sea. But not entirely, for it tastes good. Some of the good and precious things in this world—including such wonders as the Pyramids of Egypt and the Hanging Gardens of Babylon—have a cruel history. It seems that civilization is built on blood for the most part. But time and the hunger for precious, wondrous things blurs the history of the process.

    read more

    Toward An Independent, Fair And Fast Justice System

    Adrian Cristobal: The Supreme Court has been in the news lately, principally because in these perilous times, we think of the Supreme Court as “the enemy of political persecution.” We tend to think of the three branches of government—Executive, the Judiciary and the Legislative—as contradictory to each other.

    read more

    Real Leaders Negotiate

    Good leaders are invariably effective negotiators. After all, authority has its limits. Some of the people you lead are smarter, more talented and, in some situations, more powerful than you are. In addition, often you’re called to lead people over whom you have no authority, such as members of commissions, boards and other departments in your organization.

    read more

    Set Up To Fail: Economist Paul Ormerod on strategy and extinction

    In his recent book Why Most Things Fail, theoretical economist Paul Ormerod argues that failure is the defining characteristic of biological, social and economic systems. But Ormerod, a former economic forecaster and now principal of Volterra, the London-based consulting firm he cofounded, doesn’t think that’s a bad thing.

    read more

    Tubbataha dreaming

    My initiation to Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park started with a back-roll, one day in May, into Jessie Beazley Reef. The first sharks of the trip were close enough to make out the white on their tips. Grey reef sharks were on active patrol, too, and we spotted no less than three pregnant sharks, bulging at their sides.

    read more

    The ethics of revolution

    THE death of Elias achieves revolutionary significance the moment society is recognized as a creator of victims in order to execute them. Elias had been condemned even before he was born, and it only remained for society to carry out the death sentence.

    read more

    Down in the Valley

    SAN JOSE—Silicon Valley, says San Jose/Silicon Valley Journal editor Norman Bell, is more of a state of mind than a piece of geography.

    read more

    3 habits that hold leaders back–and how to overcome them

    In my 10 years as a board member of the Peter Drucker Foundation, one of the wisest things I heard him say was, “We spend a lot of time teaching leaders what to do.

    read more

    Help newly hired executives adapt quickly

    The main reason why newly hired outside executives have such an abysmal failure rate (40 percent, according to one study) is poor acculturation: They don’t adapt well to the new company’s ways of doing things. In fact, some three-quarters of 53 senior human-resources managers I surveyed cited poor cultural fit as the driver for onboarding failures.

    read more

    Chip off the old block

    Developing a good work ethic at a young age proved to be beneficial for Intel Technology Philippines managing director Michael Wentling.

    read more

    Help wanted: HK banker soaks Indian call centers in black humor

    Shyam Mehra, 26, is a self-professed loser in New Delhi. When he dons a telephone headset each night, though, he becomes Sam Marcy, a polite troubleshooter for Americans angered by their home appliances.

    read more

    Seeking a sea change

    It was—and still—is considered the country’s southern backdoor, a way out for Filipinos caught in the grip of poverty and conflict, and a way in for Filipinos wanting to free themselves of that grip, through the power of smuggled goods and smuggled ideologies.

    read more

    The rise of confessional politics

    THREE centuries and a decade have changed America’s image of itself, it seems. In 1797, under George Washington, John Adams signed a treaty with Tripoli with the following disclaimer:

    read more

    At Your Service

    ALTHOUGH the Philippines’ tourism industry is now assessed by the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) as the best-performing in Asia, the number of local manpower shifting to work in the tourism industry abroad also continues to rise.

    read more

    The Force of the Weak

    In times when the exercise of power tends to exceed the limits laid down by the law, and when the law itself is perceived to be mangled by power, a people, cowed by power, finds its liberty restored by the weakest branch of government: the Judiciary, specifically the Supreme Court.
    read more