CAP: Do Non-Executive Chairs and Lead Directors Serve on Board Committees?

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By Christopher McMains and Ryan Colucci

A question we get as board advisors is: do non-executive Board Chairs and Lead Directors typically serve on board committees, and if they do serve on a board committee, or committees, is it typically as a member or as the Chair of the Committee? We analyzed practices among the 100 largest U.S. public companies, by revenue, to address this and related questions, with a focus on the three standard.

Do non-executive Board Chairs and/or Lead Directors serve on board committees?

Among our sample, a majority of both non-executive Board Chairs and Lead Directors serve on board committees. 69% of non-executive Board Chairs serve on at least one board committee, compared to 83% of Lead Directors. Most commonly, both roles serve on one or two of the standard board committees, and on average non-executive Board Chairs serve on 1.1 board committees compared to 1.4 committees for Lead Directors. In our experience, directors serving in either of these leadership roles at times will attend committee meetings even if they are not a formal/voting member of a given board committee.

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Which board committees do non-executive Board Chairs and Lead Directors serve on?

Among the non-executive Board Chairs that serve on at least one committee, they most often serve on the Nominating/Governance Committee (59%), followed by the Compensation Committee (33%), with more limited prevalence of serving on the Audit Committee (13%).

At a high level, prevalence is directionally consistent for Lead Directors, Nominating/Governance Committee has the highest prevalence (57%), Compensation Committee has the second highest prevalence (48%), and Audit Committee has the lowest prevalence (32%) among Lead Directors that serve on at least one board committee.

While directionally similar in terms of prevalence, Lead Directors are more than twice as likely (32%) to serve on an Audit Committee as a non-executive Board Chair (13%). This is likely driven by the independence standards that exist for Audit Committee members on public company boards.

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When non-executive Board Chairs or Lead Directors serve on a board committee, how often do they Chair that board committee?

Among non-executive Board Chairs that serve on at least one committee, when they are on an Audit Committee they serve in the Chair role 20% of the time, when they are on a Compensation Committee they serve in the Chair role 31% of the time, and when they are on a Nominating/Governance Committee they serve in the Chair role 35% of the time.

In contrast, among Lead Directors that serve on at least one committee, none in our sample served as the Chair of the Audit Committee. Serving as the Chair of the Compensation Committee is also less common for Lead Directors compared to non-executive Chairs, with the Lead Directors in our sample serving in the Chair role only 17% of the time. The Nominating/Governance Committee has the inverse relationship, where Lead Directors serve as the Chair in the majority of instances (56%) which is significantly higher than their non-executive Chair counterparts.

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Conclusion

This information has compensation-related implications. For example, a question that periodically comes up during director compensation reviews, is for instances where the Lead Director also serves as the Chair of the Nominating/Governance Committee, is if the Lead Director should receive additional compensation for both roles, or just for the Lead Director role? Answering such questions in a data-based manner, in terms of both pay data and other relevant market/prevalence data, is best practice. Detailed information on pay levels and trends can be found in CAP’s annual CAPintel on non-employee director compensation here: https://www.capartners.com/cap-thinking/director-compensation-increases-are-back-among-the-largest-us-companies/