Did Emotional Intelligence Traits Mitigate COVID-19 Uncertainty Effects on Financial Institutions’ Board Decision-Making Process?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background and Literature Review of Board Decision-Making Processes
2.1. EI Traits and Effective Board Governance
when you think about … what sort of questions that boards are asking, how they’re performing their oversight functions … there are some … good practices that we might identify or …where people can improve.
2.2. Board EI Trait Skillsets on Effective Group Decision-Making
3. Research Method and Data Analysis
4. Data Analysis
5. Findings from Two Surveys and Interviews
5.1. Observations on Key Themes from the Surveys
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- Facilitating relevant, robust discussion to enable all views to be shared;
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- Considering a variety of potential solutions, negative and positive aspects before making a decision;
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- Cultivating diversity of opinion in board discussions;
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- Taking the time to consider the real issue at hand;
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- Expressing confidence in sharing points of view where it is open to the possibility of two different ideas;
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- The effectiveness of the chair in facilitating and engaging differing views in board decisions;
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- The chair makes a significant contribution to the effective running of board decisions and the way forward.
5.2. Analysis of Interview Data
…if you have a diverse range of people and views which discuss matters in a robust way, you’ll get a better discussion rather than one opinion which is always the decision being made. It is always something that enables a better decision.(Director 8)
A lot of it depends on the chair and how the chair can draw out others’ perceptions, how to manage the strong minded and dominating directors on boards.(Director 12)
It works differently with different boards. The board papers you get provide 90% of the assessment of the risks and strategy for most matters. Robust discussion is very useful and the chair facilitates this and suggests the way forward for a decision to be approved.(Director 11)
I hope that COVID-19 changes a lot of directors and their appetite for risk, tolerance and hopefully even their trust as a board, given we’re having to work together over extensive amounts of time through this period.(Director 13)
Enablement of great autonomy of management within the framework of board governance and oversight. This included distilling decisions to focus on key critical issues at the board level and organisational culture through COVID-19, bring forward decisions that could have been 10 years in the making which were recognised as critical to pivot and delay non-necessary projects during the pandemic.(Director 11)
The Coronavirus pandemic in Australia (and globally) recalled a similar heightened awareness as did the Royal Commission in the Australian financial services sector for directors in relation to the importance behavioural dynamics, empathy and emotional intelligence played on the culture and of operation of boards.
The Royal Commission [and the COVID-19 pandemic] has given a lot to pause and think about. Is the customer really being treated fairly? Boards are now being challenged with—well how do you know? I think there’s been a shift, there’s growing awareness in how you treat your stakeholders. You’ve got to go deeper and understand your business not relying on making assumptions.(Director 7)
The Australian financial services sector had gone through so much over the last 25 years (including through the GFC) without too much going wrong. Therefore, overtime, naturally with human nature, board and management become less risk adverse in decision-making as a result. Risk and non-risks were assessed annually in decision-making which included factoring in pandemics.
Now, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic—the unthinkable is thinkable in decision-making of businesses. It is anticipated in light of COVID-19, in the context of boards and management: risk aversion will decrease in decision-making.
It’s not easy to have the same kinds of decisions and discussions when you’re not in the room, you can’t read the body language, the emotion of other directors and gage whether now is a good time to bring up an issue or not. The most important parts of board meetings and decisions happen in the tea rooms and hallways.
New directors have great challenges with getting integrated into the board or business without having built up the relationships of a business over years face to face. This has a big impact on decision-making in the COVID-19 environment.(Director 7)
6. Conclusions, Limitations, and Implications
- (1)
- boards were going on a journey of developing skills and diversifying personalities of directors, and the composition of the board had a positive impact and influence on the effectiveness and success of strategic decisions.
- (2)
- The directors acknowledged during their interviews that a lot of this was achieved by their boards when looking back in hindsight.
- (3)
- The main theme for this study that arose from the interviews in relation to the effectiveness of the board decision-making process was that the effectiveness in the chair was pivotal in facilitating robust discussion and enabling a structure approach to the decision-making process of the board.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The ASX Corporate Governance Council’s ‘Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations: Principle 2 Structure the Board to Add Value” (ASX Corporate Governance Council 2014) ‘Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations’, and the AICD’s ‘Good Governance Principles for Non-for-Profit Organisations: Principle 6 Board Effectiveness’ (Australian Institute of Company Directors 2018). |
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Role | Board Decision-Making Effectiveness (Standardised) | |
---|---|---|
Pre interview survey (averages) | All | 5.67 |
Non-chair | 5.72 | |
Chair | 5.61 | |
Post interview survey (averages) | All | 5.63 |
Non-chair | 5.69 | |
Chair | 5.57 |
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Hall, J.; Jones, G.; Beattie, C.; Sands, J. Did Emotional Intelligence Traits Mitigate COVID-19 Uncertainty Effects on Financial Institutions’ Board Decision-Making Process? J. Risk Financial Manag. 2024, 17, 106. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17030106
Hall J, Jones G, Beattie C, Sands J. Did Emotional Intelligence Traits Mitigate COVID-19 Uncertainty Effects on Financial Institutions’ Board Decision-Making Process? Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2024; 17(3):106. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17030106
Chicago/Turabian StyleHall, Jessica, Gregory Jones, Claire Beattie, and John Sands. 2024. "Did Emotional Intelligence Traits Mitigate COVID-19 Uncertainty Effects on Financial Institutions’ Board Decision-Making Process?" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 17, no. 3: 106. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17030106
APA StyleHall, J., Jones, G., Beattie, C., & Sands, J. (2024). Did Emotional Intelligence Traits Mitigate COVID-19 Uncertainty Effects on Financial Institutions’ Board Decision-Making Process? Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 17(3), 106. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17030106