• Challenges in Implementing Corporate Governance: Whose Business Is It Anyway?, April/2010

Challenges in Implementing Corporate Governance: Whose Business Is It Anyway?, April/2010

Author(s) John Zinkin
ISBN10 0470825227
ISBN13 9780470825228
Format Hardcover
Pages 288
Year Publish 2010 April

Synopsis

John Zinkin's new book on Challenges in Implementing Corporate Governance is a welcome addition for board members and senior management on how to improve corporate governance in the post-crisis period. John correctly identifies that most boards on underperforming companies have three elements of failure: a lack of proper understanding of the business and its strategy; a total lack of appreciation of both the strategic and systemic risks created by new product markets; and a total failure by boards to ensure that the incentive structures for top management reflect long-term needs rather than short-term profits, thereby putting the company's future at risk. John has written a useful and practical handbook that is a must read for all board members on how to improve corporate governance.
Datuk Seri Panglima Andrew Sheng
Chief Adviser, China Banking Regulatory Commission and the Boards of the Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority , Sime Darby Berhad and Khazanah Nasional

This timely book will interest those wanting to improve corporate governance and risk management. It should also appeal to anyone curious about what caused banks to fail in a number of markets in recent times, and the values which led to this failure. In considering principles which are essential to good governance, ACCA recognizes that corporate governance evolves and improves over time. We accept that organizations in different sectors and across the world operate in diverse environments in terms of culture, regulation, legislation and enforcement. What is appropriate, in terms of governance, for one type of organization will not be appropriate to all organizations. John Zinkin’s book seeks to address this challenge, analyzing the essential cultural and behavioral issues which sit at the heart of the challenges.
Paul Moxey
Head of Risk Management and Corporate Governance
Association of Chartered Certified Accountants

A scholarly combination of practical guidelines and strategic vision.
Lady Sylvia Jay CBE
Vice-Chairman, L'Oreal UK
Independent Director, Alcatel-Lucent, Compagnie de Saint Gobain, Lazard Limited and Carrefour

This is a highly topical and timely publication. Globally, the crisis that has gripped the financial services sector following the failure of well known global banks in recent years has focused attention on corporate governance. To restore confidence in the financial services sector is a long-term goal and effective corporate governance, together with the closely associated topic of risk management, has gripped not only governments and banks, but the public too. In this book, John Zinkin clearly asserts that financial institutions need to exert their responsibilities beyond their shareholders and far more into the wider group of stakeholders, including employees and wider society. In considering issues globally, John provides a book that is not only thought-provoking but pragmatic and useful at a time when stakeholders in our banks need to see real change in transparent, practical ways from those charged with governing our banks.
Ruth Martin
Managing Director
The Chartered Institute of Securities and Investment

About The Author:
John Zinkin has 39 years of working experience, of which 24 have been in Asia. His experience as a consultant for McKinsey and as Chairman of Burson-Marsteller's change management practice in Asia; as Associate Professor of Strategy and Marketing at Nottingham University Business School, Malaysia Campus; as Executive Coach of Foresight's Global Coaching Partnership; and as Deputy Chairman of the Institute of Corporate Responsibility Malaysia—gives him a unique insight into the issues of implementing good governance in an Asian context. As the CEO of the Securities Industry Development Corporation (SIDC), the training and development arm of the Securities Commission Malaysia, he is engaged in running regular workshops for senior directors of Malaysian public-listed companies on implementing good corporate governance.