The Pillars of Good Corporate Governance (2024)

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Patrick Gitau CFE,CRISC,CERG,GRCP,CFIP,CRICP,CRA, CPMP,CHPC,SRMP,CIA,CPPP,MBA-Finance (With Merit) The Pillars of Good Corporate Governance (1)

Patrick Gitau CFE,CRISC,CERG,GRCP,CFIP,CRICP,CRA, CPMP,CHPC,SRMP,CIA,CPPP,MBA-Finance (With Merit)

Lead-Forensic Audit and Investigations at HWG & Company CPAs

Published Jul 27, 2015

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The pillars of successful corporate governance are: accountability, fairness, transparency, assurance, leadership and stakeholder management. All six are critical in successfully running a entity and forming solid professional relationships among its stakeholders which include board directors, managers, employees, customers, regulators and most importantly, shareholders.

  • Accountability: Accountability embraces ownership of strategy and task required to attain organisational goals. This also means owing reward and risk in clear context of predetermined value proposition.. When the idea of accountability is approached with this positive outlook, people will be more open to it as a means to improve their performance. This applies from the staff all the way up to top leadership embracing Risk management within defined formal appetite for risk. This also include fostering culture of compliance to create real and perceived believe that the entity is operation within internal and external boundaries
  • Fairness: Fairness means “treating all stakeholders s including minorities, reasonably, equitably and provide effective redress for violations. Establishing effective communication mechanism is important in ensure just and timely protection of resource sand people asset as well correcting of wrongs
  • Transparency: Transparency “means having nothing to hide” that allows its processes and transactions observable to outsiders. It also makes necessary disclosures, informs everyone affected about its decisions. Transparency is a critical component of corporate governance because it ensures that all of entity’s actions can be checked at any given time by an outside observer. This makes its processes and transactions verifiable, so if a question does come up about a step, the company can provide a clear answer
  • Independent Assurance: In progressing transparency it is important for non-direct actors to obtain confidence that that executive actors are leading the entity towards pre-defined intent and not using it for self and obtain expert advisory on how applied approached can be improved. Assurance services provide independent and professional opinions that reduce the information risk (risk that comes from incorrect information).Independent assurance is the verification by a third party (not directly responsible for QA and acceptance of the product/deliverable and/or the reliability of test results obtained from quality control and acceptance testing. This independent assurance insures that (1)the representation or acceptance test results are accurate and provide a fair and equitable basis for construction acceptance and (2) quality control testing is accurate and thus will properly indicate process quality.
  • Leadership; Direction “defining and offering leadership on organisation’s agenda within the values and principles that frame the way business should be done. Those charged with governance are responsible for these key strategic issues and for proving leadership in establishing the right culture to drive the performance of the business. Without clear direction, policy and procedures, the organisation will flounder and likely never to realise its long term goals and potential. This should include leadership and core expertise renewal to both retains knowledge/experience, ensure appropriate representation and continuity.
  • Stakeholder engagement: Those charged with governance should identify the key stakeholders and how they interact with the business and how they are engaged with to ensure the best outcome for the organisation. Stakeholder engagement included in the annual agenda and strategic plan.

Conclusion

In summary, the responsibility an individual assumes when he became charged with governance of an entity is considerable and one that should only be taken with a clear understanding of, and commitment to, fulfilling this responsibility to the best of their ability foremost for the stakeholder interest. Having a clear understanding of the principles and practices of good governance will enhance the performance of both the individual and the organisation – so how do you and your organisation stack up against this checklist of good governance

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24 Comments

Victor Nazeer

Network Administrator at PAPTECH COLLEGE

9mo

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great sir

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Dembe Sharon Kgamedi

Information Technology Asset Administrator at Financial Sector Conduct Authority

11mo

thank you

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Tertia Fourie

Recruitment Consultant at 3D Crystal Recruitment

1y

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If a company claims to be run according to the King Comm for corporate governance, yet their practices contravene this, what can be done?

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everjoice chatora

Student at University of Zimbabwe

1y

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thank you .

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livhuwani Tony Mthike

Warehouse Operations/Inventory/Continouos Improvement Manager

1y

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thank you

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The Pillars of Good Corporate Governance (2024)

FAQs

What are the 4 pillars of corporate governance? ›

The aim is to align as nearly as possible the interest of individuals, corporations and society.” There are four pillars for successful corporate governance. They are accountability, fairness, transparency and Independence.

What are the 6 pillars of good corporate governance? ›

The pillars of successful corporate governance are: accountability, fairness, transparency, assurance, leadership and stakeholder management.

What are the pillars of good governance? ›

The three pillars of corporate governance are: transparency, accountability, and security. All three are critical in successfully running a company and forming solid professional relationships among its stakeholders which include board directors, managers, employees, and most importantly, shareholders.

What is the meaning of 4 P's of corporate governance? ›

That's why many governance experts break it down into four simple words: People, Purpose, Process,and Performance. These are the Four Ps of Corporate Governance, the guiding philosophies behind why governance exists and how it operates.

What are the 3 C's in governance? ›

Instruments of Informal Governance: Co-optation, Control and Camouflage. The evidence collected in the research supports the relevance of three types of informal governance practices. Nicknamed “the 3C's”, they are associated with high levels of corruption.

What are the 5 pillars supporting the principle of corporate governance? ›

What Are the Basic Principles of Corporate Governance? The basic principles of corporate governance are accountability, transparency, fairness, responsibility, and risk management.

What are the three key objectives of corporate governance? ›

Ans. The three objectives of corporate governance are transparency, accountability, and security.

What is principle 7 of corporate governance? ›

Principle 7: Audit

Organisations should consider having an effective and independent internal audit function that has the respect, confidence and cooperation of both the board and the management.

What is 4 pillars concept? ›

Conclusion. The four pillars of Java—Encapsulation, Inheritance, Polymorphism, and Abstraction—constitute the foundation of its Object-Oriented Programming paradigm. Together, they provide a robust framework for creating modular, reusable, and maintainable code.

What is a corporate governance framework? ›

The corporate governance framework consists of (1) explicit and implicit contracts between the company and the stakeholders for distribution of responsibilities, rights, and rewards, (2) procedures for reconciling the sometimes conflicting interests of stakeholders in accordance with their duties, privileges, and roles ...

What are the five-five concepts in corporate governance? ›

The five principles of corporate governance are responsibility, accountability, awareness, impartiality and transparency.

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