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Tag Archives: Nell Minow

November 20, 2012

Nell Minow: Film Critic and Corporate Governance Extraordinaire

Since it is a holiday week, I thought I’d do something a little lighter. For today’s blog entry, I provide some quips and highlights from Nell Minow’s keynote at this year’s NASPP Conference.

Nell is a phenomenal speaker, outspoken, honest, engaging, and funny. She has not one, but two successful careers as a movie reviewer (she mentioned that she was interviewing Ben Afleck the day after her keynote presentation) and as a corporate governance critic, and is embarking on a third career as an ebook publisher. She was the fourth person to join ISS and she currently works for The Corporate Library/GMI, where they rate boards of directors on their effectiveness and sell those ratings to D&O insurers, plaintiff lawyers, investors, etc.

Nell on how she ended up as a both a film critic and corporate governance critic:

When I was in high school, one of my teachers said to me: “You think you’re going to make a living as a smart aleck?” I did not realize that was a rhetorical question; I thought it was career counseling…I managed to find not one but two careers where I do nothing but criticize people all the time.

On the qualifications for being a critic of either films or corporate governance:

The #1 requirement for being a movie critic or a corporate governance critic: an infinite tolerance for failure.

On the challenges of rating executive pay:

The challenges of rating executive pay are kind of like the challenges of rating movies, which is that so many of them are so terrible.

On Say-on-Pay:

I never really thought [Say-on-Pay] was going to be very effective but I’m extremely impressed and delighted that in just two years, Say-on-Pay has become significant enough that you could get a no vote at Citigroup…But let’s face it, anything that is precatory is not going to be very meaningful.

On director pay:

I used to say that we pay directors too much for what they do and not enough for what we want them to do. So I am in favor of serious pay for directors because we expect them to spend serious time on this…But again, as with CEO pay, you want that pay to be tied to performance.

If she were queen for the day:

I would say that no pay plans, particularly stock-based pay plans, have any credibility whatsoever unless they are indexed, preferably to the peer group but, if not, then to the market as a whole. I would make one sweeping change in that direction…If you are not outperforming your peer group, you shouldn’t get paid the big bucks.

Movie recommendations for the holiday season:

Ben Afleck directed and stars in “Argo,” which I strongly recommend…and no one should go see Kevin James in “Here Comes the Boom.”

Nell had a lot of interesting things to say on a lot of topics related to corporate governance. It’s not too late for you to hear her presentation; you can download her keynote and the panel she participated in afterwards (as well as any other session offered at the Conference).  You can purchase just a single session or save with a multi-session package.

Because this is a holiday week, this will be our last blog until next week.  I hope everyone has a great Thanksgiving!

– Barbara

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