11 May 2010
HR directors must re-engineer the board of directors to both mitigate and capitalise upon an increasingly ‘crash’ prone global marketplace
Many of the news events of the last two years and the damage
done to company balance sheets and brands show that the traditional
focus on financial, legal and accountancy qualifications and
experience within UK company boards are not enough to avoid
business disaster, according to SMF (Sainsbury Management Fellows'
Society). The organisation is urging HR directors to consider
professional engineers with business qualifications and experience
as an attractive complementary skill base for board director
positions.
The call comes as new research commissioned by SMF demonstrates
a discrepancy between perception and recruitment reality when it
comes to professional engineers' recognition as board-level
appointees and the lack of diversity in the viewpoints represented
around the table that this brings.
SMF believes that to increase the competitiveness of the UK
economy more directors are needed in UK boardrooms that have the
knowledge of how products are imagined, designed, made and work,
combined with complementary business and management skills set
within a global mindset. This will help drive organisations
forward, maximising innovation and the opportunities of new markets
while controlling and mitigating the inherent risks in rapid growth
businesses.
SMF has undertaken a survey among 100 FTSE250 HR directors to
establish the level of awareness within the HR community of the
suitability of engineers to fulfil these important roles. Results
show that, while 86% surveyed were open-minded about employing
directors with non-financial or legal backgrounds, only 66% believe
that engineers have the skills and attributes necessary to move
onto boards.
"Our research shows a discrepancy between perception and
recruitment reality," says SMF President, David Falzani. "Over
250,000 engineers are employed in the UK, contributing to the
economic strength of the nation and it is essential that
organisations understand the benefits they can derive from having
an engineer among its management team."
The SMF research goes on to reveal that while HR directors do
acknowledge core competencies of engineers, including the ability
to deal with complex issues (both financial and operational), to
lead cross functional and cross geographical teams and to provide a
rigorous yet balanced risk
management and governance function, only half of the companies
taking part in the survey have board directors with engineering
backgrounds.
Where engineers have MBA qualifications and business experience,
HR directors surveyed felt reassured that engineers had the skills
to move into the boardroom (80%).
"Historically, engineers have not been seen as a natural choice
to be members of boards of blue chip organisations," explains David
Falzani. "Conventional wisdom means candidates tend to come from
financial and legal disciplines. However, HR directors are
discovering that once engineers possess the requisite legal,
financial, and marketing training, they have a breadth of skills
that can be used to help organisations grow faster and more
reliably."
Professional engineers, who by the very nature of their job are
creative problems solvers are not seen as board material and are
often lost to more forward thinking international organisations. HR
directors can avoid this talent leakage by encouraging their
professional engineers with leadership qualities to expand their
existing skills by studying for a first class business education
and degree qualification.
"Up and down the country, the collective skills and experience
of the boardroom are being analysed," concludes David Falazni.
Board directors have traditionally not been trained to manage the
risk of failure positively by working with variables where
mistakes, unknown consequences or side-effects might develop. These
risk analysis skills are an integral part of the skill set of
engineers and we are urging HR directors to reflect this when
assessing the skills mix of their board."
SMF has produced a booklet for HR directors encouraging them to
seek more information on the role of professional engineers in the
corporate world. Within the booklet is a skills matrix to assist in
the assessment of an organisation's needs and how a
business-qualified, professional engineer can enhance the board.
Copies of the booklet are available from SMF.