Published by:
Harvard Business Publishing
Revision date: 19-Feb-2013
Length: 8 pages
Topics:
Auditing; Career planning
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Abstract
For teaching purposes, this is the case-only version of the HBR case study. John Clough, the CFO of NetRF, a tech firm in Salt Lake City, gets an offer he's not sure he wants to refuse. Benchmark, a Fortune 500 packaged goods company, is looking for someone to join its audit committee. 'Would you be interested?' the executive recruiter asks. John's experience with publicly held companies is limited, but he's highly regarded in the financial community for his acumen and probity. At NetRF, a maker of wireless communications equipment, John had championed expensing stock options when it was uncommon for high-tech firms to do so; he'd received a lot of admiring press for that move. In mulling over the offer, the 39-year-old executive and flight enthusiast considers his situation. He loves his work, his Cessna time-share, and the skiing in the Salt Lake area. Board membership would confer a certain amount of prestige, but would he be spreading himself too thin? One colleague extols the virtues of board membership - the opportunity to learn and expand your business network. But the chief outside counsel to NetRF warns that the hours can be considerable and board members' responsibilities (post-Sarbanes-Oxley) substantial. Subsequent meetings with Benchmark's nominating committee, its CEO, and its audit committee leave John with more questions than answers. Should he join the board? This fictional case study outlines the risks and rewards of board service.
About
Abstract
For teaching purposes, this is the case-only version of the HBR case study. John Clough, the CFO of NetRF, a tech firm in Salt Lake City, gets an offer he's not sure he wants to refuse. Benchmark, a Fortune 500 packaged goods company, is looking for someone to join its audit committee. 'Would you be interested?' the executive recruiter asks. John's experience with publicly held companies is limited, but he's highly regarded in the financial community for his acumen and probity. At NetRF, a maker of wireless communications equipment, John had championed expensing stock options when it was uncommon for high-tech firms to do so; he'd received a lot of admiring press for that move. In mulling over the offer, the 39-year-old executive and flight enthusiast considers his situation. He loves his work, his Cessna time-share, and the skiing in the Salt Lake area. Board membership would confer a certain amount of prestige, but would he be spreading himself too thin? One colleague extols the virtues of board membership - the opportunity to learn and expand your business network. But the chief outside counsel to NetRF warns that the hours can be considerable and board members' responsibilities (post-Sarbanes-Oxley) substantial. Subsequent meetings with Benchmark's nominating committee, its CEO, and its audit committee leave John with more questions than answers. Should he join the board? This fictional case study outlines the risks and rewards of board service.