Corporations fear their leaders being held personally accountable for the actions of concentrated corporate interests. They especially fear their names, addresses being known and their board rooms being invaded by OccupyTheBoardroom.org.
Feeney suggests: "suggests that board members and corporate counsels prepare themselves for a bumpy ride by future-proofing their companies." Among the steps taken to protect themsevles is to use social networks to gather intelligence so "board chairs and CEOs should always remain one step ahead in protecting their boardroom."
These executives should be afraid. There is a legitimate anger at the unfairness of the economy. Where the 400 wealthiest Americans have wealth equal to 154 million Americans, while paying an average of 17.4% in federal taxes. Many working Americans pay double that rate. The unfairness in the economy and economic insecurity of Americans is energizing this movement and people will want those who collapsed the economy for their personal and corporate profits to be held accountable.
Kevin Zeese
I’ve been watching the Occupy Wall Street for implications on the boardroom.
This weekend a site was launched called Occupy the Boardroom. I’m sending
you a recent article from Corporate Secretary Magazine that contains guidance
on this issue. I’ll be keeping an eye on this movement at www.riskforgood.com/blog.
Occupy Wall Street Moves to The Boardroom
Here’s what corporate counsels, board chairs and CEOs should know.
As the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protesters are hitting the streets worldwide,
another movement is quietly unfolding online: OccupyTheBoardroom.org (OTB).
The new coalition surfaced on Saturday with the intention of delivering the
messages of those who were hurt by the recession to the CEOs of top financial
institutions such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo. There are
currently over 200 CEOs listed on the website, including Lloyd Blankfein, chief
executive of Goldman Sachs, Vikram Pandit, CEO of Citigroup, and Mukesh
Ambani, a Bank of America board member.
‘The 1 percent have addresses. The 99 percent have messages,’ the website says.
The idea is the ‘1 percent’ reflects board members while the 99 percent are those
willing to have their voices heard. Users can access a list of CEOs and share their
stories regarding bankruptcy, job losses and unfair treatment. According to OTB
(which claims it has the contact information for all members listed), prizes will
be awarded to ‘the best, funniest and most revelatory interactions.’
Moreover, the website promises to ‘hand-deliver’ the stories to the executive
selected by a user. All messages, videos and images will be publicly viewable.
The coterie has already received close to 2,300 tweets and 5,000 ‘likes’ on Facebook.
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