The Activist Director The Activist Director

The Activist Director

Lessons from the Boardroom and the Future of the Corporation

    • $23.99
    • $23.99

Publisher Description

Some of the worst corporate meltdowns over the past sixty years can be traced to passive directors who favored operational shortcuts over quality growth strategies. Thinking primarily about placating institutional investors, selective stockholders, proxy advisors, and corporate management, these inattentive and deferential board members have relied on short-term share price increases to sustain their companies long term. Driven by a desire for prosperity, not posterity, these actions can doom any company.

In The Activist Director, attorney Ira M. Millstein looks back at fifty years of counseling companies, nonprofits, and governments to actively govern their corporations and constituencies. From the threat of bankruptcy and the ConEd blackout of 1970s New York City, to the meltdown of Drexel Burnham Lambert in the late 1980s, to the turnaround of General Motors in the mid-1990s, Millstein takes readers into the boardrooms of several of the greatest catastrophes and success stories of America's best-known corporations.

His solution lies at the top: a new breed of activist directors who partner with management and reject short-term outlooks, plan a future based on growth and innovation, and take responsibility for corporate organization, strategy, and efficiency. What questions should we ask of potential board members and how do we know they'll be active? Millstein offers pragmatic suggestions for recruiting activist directors to the boardroom to secure the future of the corporation.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2016
December 20
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
240
Pages
PUBLISHER
Columbia University Press
SELLER
Lightning Source, LLC
SIZE
5.3
MB
The Evolution of a Corporate Idealist The Evolution of a Corporate Idealist
2014
Control Your Destiny or Someone Else Will: How Jack Welch Created $400 Billion of Value By Transforming GE Control Your Destiny or Someone Else Will: How Jack Welch Created $400 Billion of Value By Transforming GE
2018
The Harder You Work, the Luckier You Get The Harder You Work, the Luckier You Get
2019