On bailing out from a board: when the reasons to resign are compelling, just do it--walk away.

AuthorSutton, Gary
PositionSUTTON'S LAWS

ONE OF MY board terms expires in a year, but I quit last month. If you've sat on a dozen boards, chances are you've resigned from one or two.

And you should have.

My recent departure was from a small outfit with 600 shareholders. I knew the business well from the outside.

At our first meeting the board discussed an undisclosed liability. It was news to me.

All the directors had been advised by legal counsel to say nothing until the amount could be reasonably estimated. Litigation was under way, and the lawyer didn't want wild guesses floating around that might hurt his negotiations.

Where's the logic in that?

The board had disclosed the probable liability, but in calm, vague language that didn't raise a single question. At my second board meeting, outside experts presented their conclusions. This did not include an estimate of the liability total, since we hadn't paid them for that. I asked for an informal guess, and the top expert wrinkled his brow, pulled out a calculator, and scratched down some working notes.

"About $10 million," he said.

A collective gasp swept around the table, including the attorney. Nobody had thought the problem to be 10 percent of that size.

When I suggested this gave us no choice but to disclose immediately, the lawyer and chairman objected.

"If you're uncomfortable keeping this quiet until we can determine the actual amount," the attorney said, pointing at me, "then you should resign."

"We can't be panicking people," the chairman added, "with estimates that were made in just a few minutes." "That guess came," I replied, "from an expert who we paid to assess the situation. The final number will undoubtedly be different. But nobody here seemed to grasp the magnitude, so how can we expect the shareholders to have any clue?"

The chairman and attorney prevailed. I quit.

That resignation was easy; black and white, no choice.

Other situations were tougher.

I've bailed out when I lost confidence in the CEO.

I've quit after finding myself consistently disagreeing with the other directors. Who was right or wrong didn't matter. I was in the way of a consensus. This didn't change anything, frustrated me, and angered them.

I've wanted to quit when agreeing with everything. In that situation, I wasn't contributing any alternative thoughts. And it's not good when the record shows all unanimous votes. That simply proves nobody's thinking. Those are bobblehead boards.

When you quit, tell nobody but the board. Give them your...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT