What separates boards that govern well from boards that don't?
Most boards spend their time reviewing what management has already decided and approving what management recommends. The meetings happen, the minutes get filed, and nothing changes. That is not corporate governance. The best boards have directors who ask uncomfortable questions before money gets spent, who bring experience from industries and markets that management has never worked in, and who know when a strategy needs to be challenged rather than rubber-stamped.
You do not get a board like that by appointing people you already know or people who just look impressive on paper. You get it through a proper board search process run by a firm that understands what effective governance looks like, and Stanton Chase has been doing exactly that across more than 45 countries since 1990.

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