As part of this increased remit, boards are also expected to balance the commercial needs of businesses while simultaneously ensuring they act responsibly towards employees.
The question now – in the light of recent events – is whether this focus on people is currently going far enough?
Even before the Covid-19 crisis hit in early 2020, the trend towards board oversight over workforce issues was already growing. EY said as much in a report on board priorities, authored in 2019:
“Boards should look to oversee the company’s strategy for workforce agility and related cultural initiatives to address broad impacts on business and the workforce, plan for change and future skills, diagnose and realize diverse workforce potential, and drive leadership development and adaptability”.
Since the Covid-19 outbreak, the focus has shifted even more in this direction. There is now a growing interest in how companies care for and safeguard people on a more personal and emotional level. It’s become about wellbeing as well as productivity and potential.
This is not surprising. More than ever, organisations need to consider the mental health and wellbeing of their staff. Many people have had to work on the front line and have experienced emotional stress. Others live in fear of losing their jobs. The long-term effects of remote working on a mass scale – with lines between home and family blurring – are not yet known.
Boards have a responsibility to take account of all these factors – not just for the sake of employees, but also for the long-term health of the organisations they oversee. Businesses simply can’t operate properly with a dysfunctional, worried workforce.
These converging factors mean that boards now need to take certain actions to make people a priority. As a minimum, they need to:
The common factor in all these points is that they are not just valid for the here and now. They represent a good practice that will put boards in a good position to keep a tight grip on employee and leadership issues as we move forward into the future.
That future – according to most predictions – is going to be characterised by permanent changes to the way we all work, prolonged period of economic uncertainty, and possible further large-scale disruptions caused by social and geopolitical upheavals.
Not so long ago, most organisations would have said that their primary concern at all times was the customer. As we move forward into the ‘new normal’, boards will need to help their organisations understand that the satisfaction and wellbeing of employees is just as important.
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You can find more detail on the points in this blog in our eBook: 3 steps to accelerating digital literacy in the boardroom.
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