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  <title>97. The Modern Boardroom Playbook with Jonathan Foster</title>
  <description>In this episode of On Boards, Jonathan Foster joins hosts Joe Ayoub and Raza Shaikh to discuss what makes a board effective in today’s evolving governance landscape. Jonathan is the founder and managing partner of Current Capitals Partners.&amp;amp;nbsp; Drawing from his experience serving on more than 50 boards, Jonathan’s book, On Board: The Modern Playbook for Corporate Governance, shares lessons on board evaluations, activist thinking, shareholder accountability, and why the best directors listen first.&amp;amp;nbsp; The conversation also explores how boards should approach CEO activism, director offboarding, and the growing influence of AI. Foster argues that directors must actively educate themselves on emerging technologies while maintaining focus on thoughtful decision-making and long-term value creation. Key takeaways   Effective directors prioritize listening    Strong directors listen before speaking in order to understand the dynamics of the boardroom.   Asking thoughtful questions is&amp;amp;nbsp; more effective than dominating a discussion   Credibility is built through observation, preparation, and collaboration – but saying what you think.&amp;amp;nbsp;      Governance history shapes modern board responsibilities    Landmark governance cases provide the foundation for today’s fiduciary standards   Understanding the origins of duty of care and duty of loyalty helps directors make better decisions   &amp;amp;nbsp;Governance principles become more meaningful when directors understand the stories behind them      Honest evaluations are critical to strong boards    Boards should directly address underperformance rather than avoid difficult conversations   Annual evaluations are more valuable than arbitrary term limits   If a director is not improving, there should be a respectful and honest process to offboard them      &amp;amp;nbsp;Boards should proactively think like activists    Directors should regularly evaluate the company from an outside shareholder perspective   Boards can identify strategic weaknesses earlier by considering activist viewpoints internally   Jonathan emphasizes balancing short-term pressure with long-term shareholder value creation      AI oversight begins with education    Directors must actively learn about AI before they can effectively oversee it   AI should support board preparation, not replace board judgment and be used in discussions   Boards should focus on AI strategy, ethics, governance, and implementation questions    Quotes “ If you think you're the smartest person in the room, you're probably wrong. But even if you are, every director has just one vote, so you need to develop a consensus to get things done.&amp;amp;nbsp; “ My objective is to not say anything for the first two meetings. I'm just listening; you learn a lot and gain&amp;amp;nbsp; credibility by just listening first.” “ I try to make every decision I make as a director, as if my family had 100% of its money in that one company’s stock.” “ I don't want AI in the boardroom — yet. A boardroom is a&amp;amp;nbsp; place to consider and have conversations and make decisions, not be overwhelmed by data.” Links On Board: The Modern Playbook for Corporate Governance jonathanffoster.com Guest Bio Jonathan F. Foster is the founder and a managing director of Current Capital Partners LLC, a mergers and acquisitions advisory, corporate management services and private equity investing firm. Jon spent a decade at Lazard, primarily focused on mergers and acquisitions advisory work, ultimately as a managing director. He has been on more than 50 boards, including Fortune 500 companies, private companies and companies involved in restructurings. Foster has served as chair, lead director and on the three major board committees as well as special, transaction and CEO succession committees. He has been chair of two Fortune 500 Audit committees. He has also been an expert witness in corporate litigation for some 60 cases. With decades of experience, Foster has written, spoken and been quoted frequently about governance and finance topics and has guest lectured at various universities. Jon lives in New York City with his wife and goldendoodle; he has two adult children. &amp;amp;nbsp; &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>On Boards Podcast</author_name>
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