The Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO), in collaboration with PwC, presents a set of 12 guiding principles designed to strengthen board oversight and governance practices across public, private, and not‑for‑profit entities worldwide. The publication emphasizes that governance is not a checklist but a framework for reflection, dialogue, and alignment with an entity’s mission, values, and long‑term strategy.
Purpose of the Publication:
*Provide a common reference point for boards where governance expectations are fragmented.
*Support effective oversight by clarifying roles, accountability, and information flows.
*Complement, not replace, existing laws, regulations, and governance standards.
*Offer illustrative practices for boards and management to adapt to their context.
COSO’s View on Governance: Corporate governance is defined as the structures and processes by which boards steer entities toward strategy execution and long‑term value creation, while ensuring ethical conduct and compliance with legal/regulatory frameworks.
How to Use:
Boards and governance professionals can use the principles to:
*Frame boardroom discussions and committee work.
*Guide assessments, refreshment, and director education.
*Align oversight with strategy, risk appetite, and culture.
*Strengthen stakeholder trust through transparency and accountability.
Guiding Principles (At a Glance):
1. Board Governance Structure: Clear roles, delegations, and oversight alignment.
2. Board Accountability: Fiduciary duties, disclosures, and stakeholder confidence.
3. Board Composition & Leadership :
Skills, independence, succession planning.
4. Board Effectiveness:
Continuous evaluation and adaptation.
5. Purpose, Mission & Values: Alignment with culture and decision‑making.Culture & Tone at the Top.
6. Ethical expectations modeled by leadership.Strategy & Performance 7. Independent perspective, monitoring execution.
8. Technology & Data: Oversight of digital practices and resilience.
9. Stakeholder Engagement: Balanced communication and trust building.
10. Executive Leadership & Succession :
CEO appointment, pipeline, resilience.
11. Executive Performance & Compensation:
Evaluation, incentives, accountability.
12. Risk Management & Internal Control:
Oversight of risk, assurance, and resilience.
Key Takeaway:
Effective governance is dynamic, integrated, and principle‑driven. Boards must continuously adapt structures, accountability mechanisms, and oversight practices to sustain trust, resilience, and long‑term value creation.
Link to full report:Corporate Governance - GuidingPrinciples | COSO
Note: this summary was geneate by AI