Chairman As a Litmus Test

May 21, 2024

Back in the 1980s at the height of the cold war era, a communist party meeting was taking place at a local village town hall.  The chairman concluded his speech and asked if there were any questions. No one said anything until Dimitri raised his hand.

“I have three questions, Comrade Chairman. First, where have all our cattle gone? Second, where has all the meat from the cattle gone? Third, where has all the lumber gone?”

“I have written your questions down, and will have an answer prepared for you at next week’s meeting,” replied the Chairman. Next week, the Chairman concluded his speech and invited questions. No one said anything until Nikolai raised his hand.
“I have only one question, Comrade Chairman. Where has Comrade Dimitri gone?”

Part of our daily work at my consulting firm is helping family owned businesses to set up advisory boards as the first governance step in their sustainability journey. We guide our clients to undertake skills assessment needs for their boards so that they know what professional expertise is needed from the directors to be recruited. No two boards will ever look alike just as no two companies do, hence a cut and paste job across multiple boards is just not possible. The most important role to fill, we tell our clients, is that of the chairperson. The chairperson sets the tone and the board culture that will eventually cascade to the organization.

The discerning eye will look at the chairperson of your organization and use that as the litmus test for the firm’s standing and reputation. A chairperson who is well respected by customers and employees alike, is of a high integrity, is personable, knowledgeable and firm will put the firm in good public stead. The chairperson whose name was last seen in the auctioneer’s pages in the dailies or dragged through a corruption scandal will definitely taint your organization with the same raised eyebrows that they are already personally receiving. I tell clients that it is extremely easy to on-board directors. It is a nearly heart attack inducing process to ask a director, moreso a chairperson, to step down for malfeasances that they may have undertaken elsewhere.

So what should a business founder look for when seeking a chairperson, other than the obvious reputational issues? There are five key attributes you should look for. Firstly, has the candidate led another organization, either as a chair or as a CEO? This would indicate whether they have the experience to provide overall guidance and drive performance. The second attribute is what is the candidate’s ethos and value system and does it align to yours as a business founder? If you are the kind of entrepreneur that likes to take shortcuts to financial heaven via the long road through tenderpreneurial hell, it doesn’t make sense to seek a chairperson whose ethical compass points only in one direction, scrupulously northward. You will only drag each other through many of the dreaded “we-need-to-talk” situations.

The third attribute the business founder should ask themselves is would this person have the capacity to build consensus amongst divergent views on a board? This attribute is closely aligned to the fourth attribute which is the chairperson’s capacity to listen first and to speak last. Due to the deferential stance to seniority which is our culture in this part of the world, quite often once the chairperson has given an opinion, meeting attendants do not want to contradict or give an alternative view. Hence the board protocol that the chairperson should speak last, summarizing what they have heard from all participants and then driving for consensus if there are disparate views. That is one of the hardest things to do, particularly if the chairperson is highly opinionated because they would want their view to be the final one. So in your assessment as a founder, look to see how the candidate engages with you in conversation, do they listen first or do they want to show you how they know a little thing about everything?

Finally, the fifth attribute is whether the candidate can guide a board to arrive at decisions that are in the best interest of the founder’s family, employees, customers and suppliers if they were admitted into the ICU ward of a Mumbai hospital. Would the founder’s back, laying flat on that hard hospital bed, be covered and protected from potential leadership coups or missteps from those appointed to look after the ship in the founder’s absence? Will Comrade Director Dimitri be made to disappear for asking the hard questions?

This is not an exhaustive list of attributes, but it is a basic litmus test to apply as you seek the individual that will help you safely let go of the founder’s leadership chains.

Twitter/X:  Carolmusyoka

[email protected]

 

 

 

RELATED

World Cup Non-Fever

May 11, 2026 business

Planning For Your Promotion To Glory

April 27, 2026 business

How Geopolitics Affect Sheep and Goats

April 16, 2026 business

Contacts

Carol Musyoka Consulting Limited
A5 Argwings Court
Argwings Kodhek Road
Kilimani
P.O Box 6471-00200
Nairobi, Kenya.
Office Tel: +254 (0)777 124 002
Email: [email protected]

Follow Us

Subscribe to Newsletter