Professor Xu Jiang's research shows that agreeing with highly confident CEOs can be effective corporate governance
“Visionary” CEOs are confident about what’s best for their companies and how to achieve results. Think Steve Jobs or Elon Musk: These types of leaders are bold with their predictions and laser-focused on the fulfillment of their vision.
Xu Jiang, an associate professor of accounting at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, wants to understand what happens when boards and activist investors try to impose changes in a visionary CEO’s strategy.
In a working paper, co-authored with Volker Laux of the University of Texas at Austin, Jiang found board interference can zap the motivation of visionary CEOs and increase the likelihood a board-directed strategy will fail. The researchers used an economic model representing strategic behavior between the CEO and the board. The co-authors were then able to test strategies and implications—and concluded worse outcomes resulted from board interference.
Q. What are the most important findings of your study?
[This article has been reproduced with permission from Duke University's Fuqua School of Business. This piece originally appeared on Duke Fuqua Insights]