Nano Tools for Leaders® — a collaboration between Wharton Executive Education and Wharton’s Center for Leadership and Change Management — are fast, effective leadership tools that you can learn and start using in less than 15 minutes, with the potential to significantly impact your success as a leader and the engagement and productivity of the people you lead.
Contributor: Wharton management professor Michael Useem is faculty director of the Wharton Leadership Center and McNulty Leadership Program. He is author of The Leader’s Checklist: 16 Mission-Critical Principles (10th Anniversary Edition), Wharton School Press, 2021, and The Edge: How 10 CEOs Learned to Lead, PublicAffairs Books, 2021.
The Goal
Understand and continuously evaluate your board’s performance and responses to today’s most pressing strategic and leadership issues.
Nano Tool
Company directors are increasingly called to partner with executives, playing a high-stakes role in driving an enterprise’s strategy and leadership. Fortunately, many of them have extensive experience in running their own companies and are ready to contribute to a firm’s strategy and leadership. The challenge is for them to bring that expertise regularly and systematically into their boardrooms — and for this, a set of governance checklists, comprised of a series of well-researched questions, can be a useful resource. These checklists can also be used as templates for leadership in advisory committees, product teams, work crews, or just about any other group. And the leadership roles of board chairs can be extended to group heads and team captains.
Action Steps: Apply Three Director Checklists
Director Checklist 1. Questions for Directors, Executives, Owners, and Investors:

- Do company executives and directors have a compelling strategy for creating value and increasing advantage?
- Are company executives and directors capable of thinking and acting strategically?
- Is the firm’s organization capable of executing its strategy?
- Do all executives and directors add value to the company’s strategy and leadership?
- Identify hazards that can become disruptive or even disastrous if not detected and mitigated — including those caused by management.
- Work with executives to caution against intuitive thinking that can lead company executives to misestimate high-impact but low-probability risks.
- Bring more deliberative thinking into both the boardroom and executive suite.
- Recruit directors with prior risk-management experience to strengthen the firm’s engaged and deliberative oversight of risk.
- Usefully guide and appraise company risks in the development of new products and services, posing critical questions and challenging executive assumptions.
- Press executives to substantiate their forecasts, anticipated results, and identified risks without micromanaging them.
- Strengthen the norms of informed and active engagement in risk oversight; recruit and coach top executives to think more deliberatively about company threats.
- Has the board picked the right board chairperson and established a procedure to identify the next?
- Does the chairperson conduct effective executive sessions and make sure that the chief executive is receiving true feedback from the directors?
- Is the chairperson able to work well with top executives — but also ready to ensure that a faltering CEO is either mentored or removed?
- Has the chairperson arranged a way for directors to communicate directly with owners and investors?
- Does the board annually evaluate the performance of the chairperson?
- Has the chairperson arranged for the best-prepared directors to serve as chairs of the key committees?
- Does the chairperson regularly consult off-line with the other directors?
- Is the chairperson focusing the directors on the company’s strategic challenges and leadership capabilities?
- Are the directors actively leading the company on key decisions in partnership with the executives, not just monitoring them?