Is it time for a Brand Trust expert on the Board
(also appeared in Firstpost)
The recent Tata boardroom spat has spawned many faceted discussions, and one of these has been on the appointment and role Independent Directors – an aspect that not only concerns governance, but also Board room expertise. Like many, I spent a considerable amount of time wondering what the boardroom discussions would be like, extrapolating from the little information that was available.
The recent Tata boardroom spat has spawned many faceted discussions, and one of these has been on the appointment and role Independent Directors – an aspect that not only concerns governance, but also Board room expertise. Like many, I spent a considerable amount of time wondering what the boardroom discussions would be like, extrapolating from the little information that was available.
To emphasize the need for expertise in the board, the rules
for appointment of independent directors of a board under the MCA Act require
the independent director to possess appropriate skills, experience and knowledge in one or more fields of finance,
law, management, sales, marketing, administration, research, corporate
governance, technical operations or other disciplines related to the company's
business. It is quite clear that expertise (and not just experience) is one
of the necessary qualities of the board.
The question that kept coming back to
me was whether it was possible that the board of Tata did not see the repercussions
of their actions on the brand and the trust it carried for 150 years? Or is it
that counsel prevailed to decide that this action was worth the risk to the
brand? Was the Tata brand not important enough to be a the core part of this
discussion? Or was it that the people in the room did not enough expertise to
understand what would be the impact on brand trust, other than in the
simplistic ways that everyone does? I think the last is more likely than any of
the previous options.
My argument is that the board has
experience of maintaining trust in brands, and in Tata’s case, perhaps the best
the country has to offer, but the board did not have the expertise for understanding Brand Trust. Because the one important
outcome of this Tata tiff is that the one word that Tata was synonymous for,
Trust, is definitely lost some sheen. Can Tata regain the trust? Of course. Will sales be affected? Of course not. But the question is could
the ouster have been handled differently? I think, everyone including the board
which took the decision will not deny that possibility.
Trust is an aura, a halo that the
brand carries around it, and that halo around the Tata brand just does not seem
as shiny as it was a few days ago. This, unfortunately, is not just an
intangible as the Rs. 24,000 crore market-cap loss of the Tata shares in only
three days after the announcement goes to show. Trust is the confidence that
one places in a brand, even when nothing else exists – no products, no people,
no assets. If Tata can traverse from salt to software, it is on the basis of
the trust that is placed on two simple alphabets, repeated – T A T A. If the
board did not see these four alphabets, the brand, just as one sees a living
person, as something with a soul - quite independent from what the current
interim Chairman carries as a surname - then the gap in expertise in the board
room is evident. Trust is so potent that it is immutable and lives on beyond the tangible, physical
aspects of the organization and the lives of the people who build it.
If the board cannot or does not protect the brand trust that
is responsible for everything the brand is and does, even perhaps the reason
that the independent directors are hold the position, then it is not a
sufficiently equipped board. The need of a Brand Trust expert on the board is
not only important, but now an imperative that brands like Tata, Nestle, Volvo
will probably testify to. It is time to rethink the boardroom indeed.
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