Blog Post

Adoption of Effective Governance

Sue Lawrence • 13 January 2020

The UK FRC published its annual review of the UK Corporate Governance Code last week with the results giving an indication of the depth of the adoption of the key Principles and Provisions. Here we provide additional flavour to their report.

The latest annual review of the UK Corporate Governance Code has been published by the FRC and can be found at: https://www.frc.org.uk/getattachment/53799a2d-824e-4e15-9325-33eb6a30f063/Annual-Review-of-the-UK-Corporate-Governance-Code,-Jan-2020_Final.pdf


This makes interesting reading in that the adoption of the code doesn’t come into full effect until 2020 reporting. The report notes this, and also reflects that the majority of companies “declared themselves fully compliant”. But is this enough and does good governance sit at the core of everything they do?


Effective application is clearly more than purely ticking boxes. It needs to be at the heart of the company, with good business ethics underpinning the business and being tangible, transparent and easily evaluated.

Whilst researching recently published annual reports of listed companies, it became clear which companies live and breathe good business ethics, which are using them to push their own products and which are merely ticking the right boxes.


Some listed companies have clearly adopted the code, or had already recognised the importance and benefit of having an effective ethics and a robust governance structure at the heart of their business. This becomes clear in their annual report through the language used, the examples provided of business in practice and the openness of their reporting, with or without glossy photo’s. These businesses recognise that they have a responsibility not only to their shareholders but to all their stakeholders, whether employees, shareholders, suppliers, the communities in which they function or the wider environment. Whether their sector is going through good or tough times, they recognise their part to play and openly report their actions in delivering.


Alongside these companies are a large proportion where the current reporting language reflects their box ticking. They will meet the standards, they are implementing a review, they are developing an internal code, etc, etc. The next stage of reporting will showcase whether these companies have progressed from box ticking to really recognising the benefits that can be delivered through having full adoption.


Evidence of box ticking are wide a varied such as:

  • Majority of focus on short-term financial results rather than long-term effective sustainability and strategy;
  • Profit over ethics;
  • Lack of obvious cultural inclusivity in the workplace, from the board downwards;
  • Focus purely on shareholder value in isolation of stakeholder value;
  • Employee engagement seen as a means to drive staff retention, resource allocation and cost cutting rather than underpinning a successful business;
  • Remuneration policies that reward financial results in priority to ethical delivery.

There is increasing pressure on all businesses to recognise their impact on climate change and adopt new measures to offset their impact. Alongside this, it would be good to see recognition of the opportunities to do more to positively impact the broad range of stakeholders and the local community. Pro-active actions rather than tinkering would have a greater impact whether through real staff engagement, tangible delivery of actions and immediate change of attitude and ethos would all be good starting points.


It will be disappointing, but not surprising, if the majority of companies continue to merely tick the box and fail to grab this opportunity to upgrade their business into an engaged employer that recognises the positive impact that they can have on their community, sector and environment.


To date, too many companies are seeing this as just another reporting requirement and don’t seem to grasp that this should underpin their business and will support their success.


Independent Directors and Trustees Limited appoints NEDs and independent directors to client companies in the UK, as well as independent trustees to employee ownership trusts. We also deliver governance advisory services and can work with you to build a robust framework to support the growth of your business.

With a core belief that good business ethics and governance should sit at the heart of every business, no matter which sector they work in, what stage of growth they are at or what their size, ID&T supports success through action.

We are not a recruitment firm, instead we work alongside you and appoint directors that support your aims and strategy.

by Sam Moles 22 November 2024
Through personal knowledge and experience, the author, Sam Moles, reflects and expands on one of the core expectations of EO - transparent communication and employee engagement.
11 October 2024
Our Trustee appointment process is designed to meet client deadlines whilst providing a trustee that meets each clients specific needs
5 August 2024
We are a trustee team numbering over 18 professionals (and growing) with a breadth of diverse experience and knowledge.
by Sue Lawrence 29 May 2024
The view of an EO sale, from our experience as an Independent Trustee
by Independent Directors and Trustees 27 March 2024
Balancing leadership incentives with all employee profit sharing is tricky but achievable, and can bring benefits for all. Following a recent webinar, IDT provides some thought provoking insights.
by Independent Directors and Trustees 31 January 2024
Reflecting back on our first 5 years developing our proposition and sharing our knowledge
by Sue Lawrence 26 January 2024
Employee Ownership is increasingly popular in the UK. Here we answer questions on the role of the independent trustee.
by Independent Directors and Trustees 12 January 2023
What are the things you wish you'd known when you were first appointed as a director?
by IDT 2 November 2022
How defining company values can be beneficial, and why they are more tangible than organisational culture
by Independent Directors and Trustees 2 October 2022
What does good look like for an employee owned (EO) organisation?
Show More
Share by: