Corporate governance reporting: Definition, requirements & best practices

Board members listening to the highlights of a corporate governance report.

Corporate governance implements a collection of processes, policies, structures and relationships to control and direct corporations and hold them to account.

Corporate governance includes the practices and procedures that corporations rely on to make sound decisions in corporate affairs, and it delineates the roles and responsibilities of many different individuals, including:

What are the pillars of corporate governance?

Corporate governance divides into six broad categories: accountability, efficiency and effectiveness, fairness, responsibility, transparency and independence. Each of these pillars influences corporate governance reporting and how boards disclose their activities:

  1. Accountability: a corporation's leadership, including the board and the senior managers, are individually and collectively accountable for their actions and decisions.
  2. Efficiency and effectiveness: leadership needs to continually monitor their activities and operations to ensure they're efficient and effective and support the corporation's mission.
  3. Fairness: corporate governance requires a corporation's leaders to be honest, faithful, diligent and fair at all times and be mindful of the importance of displaying ethical and virtuous behavior.
  4. Responsibility: Leaders must be capable, responsible, and aware of their obligations and responsibilities.
  5. Transparency: Openness and transparency are primary components of good governance. Leadership must report information about the company accurately and promptly.
  6. Independence: An impartial board is important to good corporate governance because it ensures that decision-making is objective and fair.

What is corporate governance reporting?

Corporate governance reporting is an ethically driven business process that reflects how corporations monitor the corporation’s actions, policies, practices and decisions, as well as the effect of their actions on their agents and affected stakeholders.

These reports typically include information about corporate governance procedures, regulatory compliance, company and board performance, board composition and how effective the company is at following good governance practices.

Corporate governance reports aim to provide shareholders visibility into how the corporation does business, specifically the corporation’s model, structure, activities and performance.

Who writes the corporate governance report?

In most large corporations, governance and compliance reporting fall under the direction of the Chief Compliance Officer (CCO). The CCO is responsible for establishing company-wide standards and implementing procedures to ensure that an organization’s governance and compliance programs can effectively and efficiently identify, prevent, detect and correct noncompliance issues with applicable laws, regulations, industry standards or company policies.

Members of the compliance department and the corporate secretary may recruit or consult with subject matter experts to complete a particular report and oftentimes, gather data from across the organization through polling and questionnaires.

In smaller organizations or organizations without a compliance officer, the responsibility for reporting may fall on a member of the legal department or another qualified employee. When choosing a manager to lead a compliance reporting team, it is best to find someone with expertise in the particular business operation under review and the regulations or mandates involved in the compliance initiative. It is also important to note that this manager may need temporary relief from their typical duties, as compliance reporting can require extra time and effort.

Who reads the corporate governance report?

Corporate governance and compliance reporting (like ESG reporting) can have various audiences, depending on the particular focus of the report and whether or not the report is internal or outward-facing.

The details of compliance and corporate governance reporting might also concern a select department whose work with new regulations informs their business dealings or future plans. Finally, the organization may use the lessons gleaned from a compliance report to educate the wider workforce on the importance and necessity of following standard procedures and policies.

How laws and regulations have driven corporate governance reporting

Just as competitors in various industries borrow concepts and principles from one another, governments and regulators worldwide try to learn from each other how to improve corporate governance practices. The following is a brief look at how some of the significant laws and regulations have improved corporate governance over time.

The Dodd-Frank Act incorporated a whistleblowing provision with a financial reward to help deter security violations. In addition, the Dodd-Frank Act created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to protect consumers from large, unregulated banks. Many financial experts believe that the Dodd-Frank Act will prevent future financial crises that mirror that of 2008 and the abuses that led to it.

Contents of a corporate governance report

Governance reports offer detailed accounts of an organization's progress on particular compliance initiatives or, taken collectively, can provide a broad summary of your company's compliance efforts.

Also called the annual corporate report, a corporate governance report includes a statement of corporate governance procedures and compliance, information on board composition, statements on the company's performance, and information about compliance and conformance with best practices for good corporate governance.

Corporate governance reporting best practices

Corporate governance reports should be updated at least annually. But that doesn’t mean that boards should limit their reviews to only once per year. A thorough corporate governance report is the product of effective day-in-day-out practices that are continuously reviewed and disclosed.

To do that, boards should strive to adopt the following best practices for corporate governance reporting:

Benefits of improved governance reporting

Corporate governance reporting identifies areas within the company where they meet compliance initiatives and areas where more work is needed to meet the standards of regulation. With this knowledge, business leaders can make more effective decisions about resource allocation, risk management and strategic planning.

In addition, the completion of annual compliance reports has two key benefits for your organization:

Turn corporate governance reporting into strategic growth

Corporate governance reporting can be more than retrospective. Instead, it can become an enterprise-wide source of truth that reduces noncompliance, eliminates inefficiencies and reduces management costs by 90%.

What does that look like in practice? Corporate governance reporting automation that puts repetitive processes on autopilot, freeing up capacity to identify strategic growth opportunities.

Download our recent Forrester Report to see how Diligent Entities reduces the burden of corporate governance reporting, leading to a 318% ROI.