The Stryker Corporation Board/CEO event reported in today's Wall Street Journal gave me something to pause about around CEO expectations and Board/CEO trust.
In brief, the event focuses on that ever-so-nebulous question of trust between the CEO and the Board of Directors. Without a lot of detail, the CEO started a relationship with a flight attendant employed by the company working on the company jet (I know, a company jet may not be much of a reality for many if any nonprofit CEO's). The CEO went to the Board Governance Committee advising of the relationship with the intention of minimizing anything embarrassing for the company (which then of course could have an impact on company stock value). The Committee recommended no problem if the employee resigned. The employee did but, and this is where I'm a bit fuzzy about the details, an audit of the situation turned up the possibility that the relationship between the CEO and the employee may have been going on a lot longer than reported by the CEO and this in turn raised trust issues which in turn resulted in the CEO's resignation. Interestingly, today's article begins with a statement by the board Chair that the now resigned CEO had not broken any company rules and resigned for personal reasons.
So what to nonprofits? The "so what" is a reminder that, whether for profit or nonprofit, the relationship between a board and its CEO, its one employee, is heavily reliant on trust. When there is full trust a CEO can move an organization forward doing what is needed to achieve success. When trust is broken, even for the smallest reason, the CEO can become handicapped and pretty much every action is subject to question.
There is a lesson here for all parties.