How to Handle a HiPPO

Julie helps boards and directors to be more effective and build stronger organisations

It is a moment that every director dreads: the High Profile Person’s Opinion is stated and, after that, all the expertise, all the careful study, all the reasoned and reasonable recommendations, seem to fall upon deaf ears. The HiPPO can squash the life out of any idea.

If you let it.

Most directors are highly successful, highly opinionated and highly intelligent. They are also highly motivated to procure the success of the enterprise. It is not wise to go head to head with a HiPPO. They can, and will, crush you if they feel threatened by you.

You will also lose the support of the board. Everyone in the room is aware of the HiPPO’s profile, prowess and previous track record. The board is a team where success depends on combining the talents of all the directors. Nobody wants to see the HiPPO hurt. And directors do have feelings, just like everyone else.

So how do you handle a director who makes a statement that is in danger of shutting down the board discussion?

With respect.

Acknowledge the truth in the statement. Agree with the bits that you can support and then expand the discussion to  bring in other ideas.

With questions.

Clarify the basis for the statement: Have you seen this before? When was that? What did you try? How did it work? How did that situation differ from ours?

With the help of the rest of the board.

Stimulate the discussion: who else was thinking that? Who had a different idea? Who has seen or read or heard something about this recently? Is there an example of success that we can emulate?

This is easiest when you are the chair. But all directors are leaders (or should be). Take the initiative and encourage the board to follow as you continue to explore the topic whilst respecting the addition that the HiPPO has made to the discussion.

Diversity is only useful when it is used. Make sure that your board gets the benefit of all the perspectives. Not just the most emphatic or senior ones. Handle your HiPPOs.

Julie Garland McLellan is a boardroom trends forecaster, experienced company director and professional conference speaker.

She features frequently as a commentator on TV and radio and is the bestselling author of 6 books. Her most recent book  Not For Profit Board Dilemmas is a practical guide to thriving in boardrooms as the non-profit sector faces immense disruption.

To see Julie speaking live, click here.

For more information on Julie’s keynote speaking topics, visit www.directorsdilemma.com.

Julie Garland-McLellan is a boardroom expert with a difference; she has over 20 years of real-life board experience (including chairing a listed company board) as well as the latest governance theory from leading international institutions. She is the author of six books of practical wisdom for boards and directors.

Her newsletter The Director’s Dilemma is read in 68 countries and enjoyed by directors from government-owned, commercial, and not-for-profit boards. Hire Julie to speak at your next board retreat or conference.

# data #alternativedata #BoardPerformance #Boardreview #boardprocess #disruption #business #linkedin #inspiration #networking #training #strategy #directorsdilemma #directors #companydirectors #boardofdirectors #corporategovernance #casestudies #newsletters #trainyourboard #DirectorTraining #strategy #strategicboard #strategicboards #AICDirectors #AICD #Governance #BoardGovernance #WhartonBusinessSchool #Wharton #USA #Australia

Leave a comment