This article was first published in CNBC TV18 Access on April 08, 2026. Please click here to read the article.
Boardrooms don’t lack data; what they lack is decision clarity under compression. In a year where economic signals, geopolitics, technology shifts, and stakeholder scrutiny collide, effective oversight is about joining the dots – not necessarily adding more. This means aligning strategy, risk appetite, incentives, and culture – and hardwiring agility into decision rights, information flows, and committee architecture.
Board of Directors today are operating in a landscape where volatility is structural, not episodic. Trade fragmentation, policy divergence, technology controls, and shifting alliances are now enduring design constraints, requiring strategies built for contested markets rather than stable global norms. At the same time, risk has evolved from narrow “IT risk” to enterprise wide business systems risk, as AI and data permeate core operations and governance failures surface as customer harm, regulatory breaches, or reputational damage. Importantly, as complexity rises, the board’s effectiveness hinges less on operational depth and more on clarity of questions, guardrails, and escalation – staying firmly in oversight while enabling management speed. This is reinforced by a shift from compliance signaling to execution credibility, with regulators and investors testing whether ERM responses are genuinely operational – owned, resourced, and time bound. For boards, the challenge is no longer recognising these shifts, but ensuring governance is calibrated to act decisively within them.