14 Feb IT or digital capability on your Board or governing group (Part 3). The how.
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Considering what options you have in order to add more IT or digital capability to your board? Great! If you haven’t had a chance, read our earlier article describing what capabilities you might need, and whether they might be a priority for your organisation/s. We also introduce the difference between the general IT skills and specialist skills of interest to Board Directors.
Here, we define four approaches you can take for adding the capabilities you’ve identified. None of them are mutually exclusive so you should mix and match them to suit.
At times, multiple approaches may be necessary, as it may not be possible to have one person or one way that provides the right capabilities now and into the future. Some of these are better suited to building the general skills introduced in our last article, and some are more relevant to the specific or transient topics that can come and go in prominence from time to time.
At times, multiple approaches may be necessary, as it may not be possible to have one person or one way that provides the right capabilities now and into the future. Some of these are better suited to building the general skills introduced in our last article, and some are more relevant to the specific or transient topics that can come and go in prominence from time to time.
The first option to consider is hiring Directors with the Digital/ICT capability who can inject their unique perspectives into your Boardroom. As covered in our first article, this should not be at the cost of the corporate governance skills that all of your Directors should have. You should focus firstly on the general IT/digital skills listed in our last article. If you feel you have these covered, then you could also consider specialist IT skills that your organisation will be focusing on over the coming years.
The benefit of hiring is that there is no better learning than on the job learning. So having someone with good IT/digital skills can bring insights and perspectives that can help your entire Board to lift their own capabilities in this area. If you choose well, you may get someone willing to spend some time outside of the boardroom with your other Directors, to accelerate their learning. This is a good step to building long term capability in your Boardroom. Remember though, that depending on your Board culture, and the size of your Board, having one person on their own to quickly change the perspective of your Board, may be asking too much.
The next option is the active development of your existing skills. There are multiple ways of doing this. On the job learning is one way through increased dialogue and discussion at the Board table, and increased discussion and information papers or presentations from the executive team. As already mentioned, having Directors with more IT/digital savviness can help uplift everyone, either through Board discussions or discussions outside the Boardroom.
Additionally, there are significant opportunities for external training and education. The AICD is one such body with increasing amounts of IT/digital education for Directors. Another option is coaching and mentoring for some Directors. If you have strong skills on your Executive team then building opportunities for high value contact time between specific Directors and Executive can be helpful.
Skills development should be adopted by all Directors, as part of their continuous learning. And there is no better area to invest time than in IT/digital, given its changing landscape.
The third option is to extend the Board’s consideration of important or challenging matters through Board Committees or Advisory Boards. This will be organisation specific, as one topic could be challenging for one organisation, but easy to deal with for a different organisation.
This approach gives you flexibility to involve Directors (due to their special knowledge or interest, or to support their growth), Executive (due to their role, special knowledge, or to support their growth) and external advisors or experts.
This approach gives you flexibility to involve Directors (due to their special knowledge or interest, or to support their growth), Executive (due to their role, special knowledge, or to support their growth) and external advisors or experts.
Sometimes Boards may use Committees or Advisory Boards to assess candidates for future Board vacancies. For those Directors or Chairs concerned about whether bringing in IT/digital skills means sacrificing basic corporate governance skills, then this could be a good testing ground.
Where you have existing Board Committees (eg Risk Management, Remuneration etc), it is prudent to consider how the IT/digital landscape may change their scope and role. And in doing so, do they have the skills and capabilities to deliberate on this expanded scope. For example:
- Does your Risk Management/Audit Committees also cover Security/Privacy? How would this change the operation, make-up, reporting?
- Does your Nominations/Remuneration Committees also cover IT/digital skill needs and recruitment/retention strategies? Have you got the skills on that committee to understand current and emerging needs in this area?
The final option to consider is consultancy or advisory input. This could be used to accelerate the improvement in general IT/digital skills across the Board.
It could also be used for specific topics that may be of interest from time to time. It could take the form of research and discussion papers, presentations, hosted discussions, and guest presentations.
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