Video Friday: “Say on Directors iPay” @ Apple

My say on director pay will be on the Apple proxy (embedded links added):

6 – Shareholder Say on Director Pay

Resolved: Shareholders request that our Board of Directors adopt a policy that provides shareholders the opportunity, at each annual meeting, to vote on an advisory proposal, prepared by the Board of Directors, to ratify the pay given members of our Board of Directors as disclosed in the proxy statement. The proposal submitted to shareholders should make clear that the vote is non-binding and would not affect any pay given to any director.

The proxy advisory firms Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis each recommended that shareholders of at least one major company vote in favor of a 2011 shareholder proposal on this topic. A shareholder proposal with similarities to this proposal won 55%-support at a major company in 2010.

This proposal is similar to our management’s proposal on this same ballot enabling us to cast a vote in regard to the pay of our executives. This shareholder proposal simply extends the shareholder voting opportunity to apply to our directors. Some of our directors are paid more than $1 million for work that may take less than 400 hours per year – or $2500-plus per hour.

The merit of this Shareholder Say on Director Pay proposal should be considered in the context of the need for improvements in our company’s 2011 reported corporate governance status:

  • Only one yes-vote from our 900 million shares was all it took to reelect each of our current directors. On the other hand, we cannot elect a director by written consent to fill a vacancy created by removal except by a 100%-vote from our 900 million shares. Two of our directors owned less than 200 shares each, including a member of our Audit committee.
  • Two of our directors were active CEOs, Andrea Jung and Millard Drexler. CEOs don’t always make the best directors. While CEOs are on many boards, they don’t always make the best directors, according to a recent survey by Heidrick & Struggles and Stanford University’s Rock Center for Corporate Governance.
  • Active CEOs were described by some respondents as “too busy with their own companies to be effective directors.”
  • Stephen Miles, a vice chairman at Heidrick & Struggles said, “Because active CEOs are so busy, they might be unavailable during a crisis or have to cancel meeting attendance at the last minute. They also have less time to review materials. For some, the demands of their full-time job make it hard for them to consistently be as engaged as they need to be.”
  • Plus these two CEO directors made up two-thirds of our Executive Pay Committee. And Timothy Cook’s pay was $59 million.
  • The Corporate Library www.thecorporatelibrary.com, an independent investment research firm, said our directors Albert A. Gore Jr. and Millard Drexler were paid more than $1 million each.

The above concerns shows there is need for improvement.  Please encourage our board to respond positively to this proposal: Shareholder Say on Director Pay – Yes on 6.

Click twice to read AAPL Response – Director Say-on-Pay, which I’ll summarize for you as “the Company’s compensation levels for its non-employee directors are well within the range for director compensation paid by the peer group companies…”

If you are an Apple shareowner or represent Apple shareowners, I’d like you to consider the whole concept of “say on director pay.” For example, here an excerpt from Ceres Governance Principles (page 12)

1.A. Loyalty
The primary duty of the board of directors is to oversee management on behalf of, and in the interest of, shareowners. Shareowners elect directors to guide and monitor the company’s management, to assure that the company is being managed in such a way as to safeguard the interests and assets of its owners, rather than in the managers’ own interest. This is the duty of loyalty.
In applying this principle we would, therefore, recommend a vote ‘FOR’ resolutions that align the interests of board members more closely with those of shareholders. Ensuring that board members truly represent shareholders requires certain changes to the director nomination and election process such as declassifying boards, allowing shareholders to nominate candidates using the corporation’s proxy card, nominating more than one director for each position or electing directors by a majority of votes cast in uncontested elections—all measures that can bring some competition to the market for corporate directors. Independent boards and key committees are less beholden to management and therefore more likely to represent shareholder interests, as are boards chaired by an independent director. Director pay practices should align directors’ economic interests with those of shareholders through stock retention guidelines and through some shareholder say on director pay. (my emphasis)

Ceres is a nonprofit organization that leads a national coalition of investors, environmental organizations and other public interest groups working with companies to address sustainability challenges such as global climate change and water scarcity. List of Board Members. The Ceres Company Network has approximately 80 members representing more than 20 industries, including technology, footwear and apparel, food and beverage, oil and gas, electric utilities, and financial services. More than one-third of the company members are in the Fortune 500. For a list of members click here. Apple is not on the list of members but you can download Ceres Sustainability Podcasts from iTunes, so Apple at least knows of their existence.

While the above cited material from the report, Ceres Guidance: Proxy Voting for Sustainability, may not reflect the views of all Ceres sponsors, I note that one of the purposes of the Guidance is to get asset owners and managers to re-visit their guidelines and policies. See especially Proxy Guideline Examples, Appendix C.

The National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) recently held the second annual meeting of its national Nominating and Governance Committee Chair Advisory Council to identify ways that board nominating and governance committees can help build investor confidence in publicly traded companies.

The group discussed how boards can avoid pitfalls in proxy reporting and why shareholder proposals in 2012 are expected to focus on individual directors. The Advisory Council then discussed board practices for dealing with those issues, including more thoughtful disclosure about pay and board composition, aligning board composition with corporate strategy and communicating the rationale for director elections to shareholders more proactively.

If you represent an institutional investor, I realize “say on director pay” may not be covered by your existing proxy voting guidelines. However, I hope you will give this proposal careful consideration. We don’t elect CEOs and they aren’t directly accountable to shareowners, yet we have a say on their pay. Doesn’t it make much more sense for shareowners to have a say on the pay of directors, our representatives? The NACD recognizes shareowners have turned the spotlight on directors.

The NACD Advisory Council raised the need for “more thoughtful disclosure about pay and board composition.” If we had “say on director pay,” would you expect more communications from and with your elected representatives on the Apple board or less? If shareowners answer that question before voting we will have a revolution more powerful than that envisioned by the 1984, Apple’s Macintosh Commercial. Isn’t it time shareowners woke up? Don’t just occupy space, occupy a real role in our company as a shareowner. Vote Yes on item #6 – Shareholder Say on Director Pay.