Tag Archives: annual meeting

The Annual Meeting is Dead. Long Live the Annual Meeting!

The Rise of the Virtual Investor

A few days ago, I wrote about the brouhaha that has erupted over Symantec Corporation’s plan to hold an online-only shareholder meeting on September 20th. The U.S. Proxy Exchange and CorpGov.net have taken exception to Symantec’s plan to hold it’s meeting only on the Internet, suggesting that this effort is an affront to important shareholder rights.

As was noted in its post on the subject, CorpGov.net’s James McRitchie wrote, “[s]ome investors have expressed concerns that virtual-only meetings would deprive them of the opportunity to meet with company representatives face to face. They believe that physical meetings allow investors to better express their positions – and that management and the board listen more closely when communications are made in person.’

If the primary purpose of attending a shareholder meeting is to confront company executives face-to-face and to engage in a bit of verbal jousting, then by all means, fight the good fight and get executives to see the light and stay with in-person meetings. But is that what investors actually want from an annual meeting?

Let’s review the annual meeting process for a moment.

An annual meeting is convened to consider management and shareholder proposals and allow for both company representatives and shareholders to engage in a presentation of views about matters pertaining to the corporation. To suggest that the parties engage in a discussion is a bit of an overstatement as most executives simply try to get through the process as quickly as possible while shareholders either read their proposals that have already been published in the company proxy statement or raise issues of concern to them. The proxy ballots have already been tabulated and the company representatives already know where things lie. On occasion, the meeting becomes a forum for shareholder theater where the wrongs of the company are put on full display. An hour or so later, everybody goes home.

The virtual shareholder meeting is a game changer. What it does is remove the human element from this process. Indeed, it enables wily CEOs to avoid one of the few times they have to go mano-a-mano with the company’s owners. More importantly, it forces investors to develop meaningful strategies for expressing their views and influence the annual meeting process.

As I have noted in a number of previous posts on this subject, the annual meeting process has devolved into a form of Kabuki Theater, a drama in which the outcome is already determined before the play begins. Taking this process off the table forces shareholders to engage in creative forms of engagement, which they have largely failed to do.

Let me suggest a couple of shareholder approaches in a virtual world:

  1. Social Networking: Facebook and LinkedIn shareholder pages discussing the issues
  2. Investor Blog: An in-depth discussion of the issues surrounding the annual meeting
  3. Online Commenting: Make noise as a commenter on other blogs, investor forums and other online publications
  4. Microblogging: Twitter like hell. Got a quick thought, Tweet it. Find an article of note, put it up.

None of these tasks are easy and they take time and thought. But herein lies the challenge to investors: Do you simply want to rain on the CEO’s parade or do you want to improve the company’s performance and shareholder value? I argue that the virtual meeting is a wake up call for investors to develop substantive strategies for effecting corporate change.

Symantec and the Virtual Meeting

Angry shareholders take to the streetsIn the last couple of days, there has been rattling from some investor quarters over the recently announced virtual shareholder meeting at Symantec Corporation. Certain shareholders are incensed that the company would hold an online-only meeting, thereby precluding an in-person event where shareholders could face off with company executives.

While I understand certain shareholders’ interests in confronting Symantec executives on a range of issues from lackluster performance and excessive executive pay, isn’t this event really about “sticking it to the man”, face-to-face?

Annual meetings have become tactical events for activist shareholders, a media event where sullen CEOs have to suck it up for an hour of so and occasionally take the heat from angry investors. The press shows up and if the event is in, say New York, the shareholders get a bit of ink.

Great.

So did anything improve? Did the stock skyrocket? Did executives cut back on their grotesque pay packages?

In most cases, the shareholder meeting has no effect on the bottom line. Activists and their followers felt better after the bit of theater and the executives had a stiff one before getting back into their limos to the home office.

No, it’s time to put the annual meeting down. The day has past where the shareholder meeting and the events that transpired meant anything. Executives have always controlled the annual meeting forum and with virtual meetings, that will continue. It will certainly be easier for companies to cut off shareholders communicating online but so what? At best, shareholders got a chance to communicate with perhaps a few hundred other people at a live annual meeting. At a virtual meeting or certainly the run up to an online affair, the audience is virtually limitless.

So an executive cut you off at the virtual meeting? Then Twitter this MF!!!