Director's Domain: Corporate Governance News & Board Insights
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April 30, 2026
Are you cool enough to sit on the Lululemon board? That’s the question company founder turned activist shareholder Chip Wilson is asking, as he wages a proxy fight accusing the current board of failing to understand the essence of the once trend-setting brand and the talent it needs to be a success. Meanwhile, activist investor Starboard Value takes a significant stake in Dynatrace to target performance more directly, pressing the board on whether its oversight and strategic direction are sufficient to unlock growth. Elsewhere, AI continues to introduce additional layers of governance complexity, bringing heightened legal exposure around novel issues such as how a company deploys AI (are legal and copyright norms respected?), and how it doesn’t (when public companies promise more AI integration than they deliver). And a new Glass Lewis memo outlines current trends in board composition.
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April 23, 2026 -
Who’s next? CEO succession is back in the spotlight as boards confront leadership transitions spotlighting the governance architecture that underpins them. Apple’s carefully choreographed handoff from Tim Cook to John Ternus highlights the premium placed on strategic continuity while sharpening a more nuanced tension around longevity vs. independence. What does good governance demand? Elsewhere, Lululemon’s CEO appointment follows mounting pressure from activists and its founder, underscoring how succession decisions are increasingly shaped by external forces, while Best Buy’s leadership change signals a more performance-driven reset. Reed Hastings’ exit from Netflix’s board marks the quiet unwinding of founder influence and a natural inflection point for board refreshment. Even the question of CEOs as the public face of a company invokes succession considerations: when leadership visibility is high, yet tenures are increasingly fluid, boards must plan around not only who leads but how they show up. Game on: change happens whether boards are prepared or not. Competitive advantage goes to boards that treat succession not as a moment but as a continuous exercise in governance discipline, stakeholder oversight, and long-term alignment.
Read OnApril 16, 2026 -
How big is too big? When it comes to pay packages, the answer is simple: when shareholders balk. It will be curious to see whether ISS’s challenge to Warner Bros.’ proposed billion-dollar “golden parachute” for executives shepherding its acquisition by Paramount will survive amid growing investor intolerance for outsized payouts that appear disconnected from performance, particularly when the long-term value of the merger remains uncertain. Proxy advisors like ISS are taking an assertive stance, challenging not only the scale of the Warner Bros. pay packages but also legacy features like tax gross-ups that feel increasingly out of step with market norms. Boards will be watching how this shareholder vote plays out as M&A momentum builds. When it comes to the appetite for mergers, the question of how big is too big comes down to antitrust law and the government’s willingness to challenge industry behemoths. Reports of a potential United-American airline merger (just wishful thinking on the part of United’s CEO?) arrive hand-in-hand with a jury’s verdict that Live Nation created an illegal monopoly on concerts and ticket sales and could face being broken up. Meanwhile, activists are refining their approach, with observers noting a growing willingness on the part of boards to work out informal settlements and avoid prolonged and disruptive campaigns. Whether it’s scoping out the implications of a potential merger, setting a pay package, or negotiating with activists, the best approach will always be proactive and thoughtful board engagement.
Read OnApril 09, 2026 -
Set the tone, control the tempo. More than ever, boards are being tested on how they harmonize to bring all of the players together. To wit, rising CEO turnover is testing whether boards have the right oversight processes in place, from succession planning to talent readiness. Those that stay grounded in core governance practices and clearly aligned committee mandates are best positioned to add value and get out ahead of unexpected challenges. Against this backdrop, activists may try to change the beat, but boards determine how the music is played. This week’s headlines include some practical advice as to what to expect in the current environment, along with pointed reminders that no one sits still, including activists, regulators, and the myriad of other stakeholders. In short, the environment remains noisy, highlighting a familiar dynamic: external demands are constant. Governance is not about accepting the cacophony but about maintaining the clarity and readiness to conduct the response on your own terms.
Read OnApril 02, 2026 -
Parlez-vous governance? While Air Canada’s CEO was forced to exit after failing to address his French speaking audience in their native tongue, observers say the board is ultimately responsible, as they chose a non-French speaker for a role that requires communication with francophones, and made matters worse by not requiring him to learn the language. Communication with stakeholders is, after all, a key leadership responsibility. At American Airlines, the issue isn’t which language is being spoken, but that leadership of a pilots’ union says they’re being denied the opportunity to speak to board members at a time when frustration is mounting with the airline’s strategy and financial performance. Elsewhere in the travel industry, Norwegian Cruise Lines appointed five new directors to appease activist investor Elliott Management. Snapchat also finds itself in the sights of an activist campaign, criticizing it for underperforming in the market. There are a number of insightful perspectives this week on how boards can better serve their CEOs, in ways that would help businesses succeed and perhaps avoid activist interest, and that might include refreshing their composition. Not surprisingly, D&O insurance is evolving as boards find themselves responsible for an ever-expanding portfolio of risks. After all, it’s not just the airlines who are finding that governance accountability is in the air.
Read OnMarch 26, 2026 -
Greater accountability...there’s no avoiding it. The bar is going up as boards and management teams are being pushed by legal systems, the capital markets, and their own customers to take ownership in the outcomes of their decisions. Fulsome governance seems to be demanding a refined definition of risk from product liability to AI oversight to go-to-market strategies to geopolitical fluctuations. Two major rulings against social media giants signal that longstanding legal protections are weakening with juries scrutinizing internal decision-making, management risk awareness, and sufficiency of warning labels. At the same time, a European investigation into Snapchat’s child safety and age-verification practices highlights how accelerating regulatory scrutiny is expanding globally. Activists continue to turn up the heat with Elliot’s move on Synopsys, Starboard’s board additions at Tripadvisor, and Trian’s dealmaking with Janus Henderson. Even small cap targets, like Maryland-based Eagle Bancorp, are under pressure with calls for a board shake-up. As evidenced by Phillips 66’s board refresh and that of many others, having a strategy and acting on it may be the board’s best preemptive move. Notably, in his annual letter to constituents, BlackRock’s Larry Fink encourages everyone to think beyond the near term challenges and take a long-term view. Philosophically sound advice, that feels like a luxury for many boards right now.
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