
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Today on the Take on Board podcast, Sarah Federman joins me to talk about "corporate reckoning," which she defines as the process of finding a way back and healing massive, irreparable harm that organizations have caused in the past. I was keen to dive into how organizations, many of which in Australia have reckoning to do around issues like stolen land or people, can address their inherited legacies.
Sarah shared that the temptation is to defensively hand these issues over to legal or PR teams, but this can make things worse. Instead, I learned that the whole board needs to be involved, acknowledging that they have inherited both the good and the bad from their predecessors. A great example is The Guardian, which set up a 10-year restorative plan after discovering its founding money came from slave owners.
We also discussed her powerful idea of having a literal or metaphorical "seat for the past" at the board table. This spot, which could be filled by a historian or descendant, allows the board to step back from present-day concerns and consider their long-term legacy and how they will be remembered. Ultimately, the work is ongoing, hard, and should be restorative, not punitive, to strengthen the company's integrity.
Links and Resources
Sarah on LinkedIn
Sarah Federman's Website
Upcoming TOB Events
All events
You might want to:
Join the Take on Board Facebook community
Join the Take on Board LinkedIn community
Follow along on Twitter
Work with me
Join the Take on Board: Kickstarter group program
Join the Take on Board: Accelerator group program
Find out more about me
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Helga Svendsen5
22 ratings
Today on the Take on Board podcast, Sarah Federman joins me to talk about "corporate reckoning," which she defines as the process of finding a way back and healing massive, irreparable harm that organizations have caused in the past. I was keen to dive into how organizations, many of which in Australia have reckoning to do around issues like stolen land or people, can address their inherited legacies.
Sarah shared that the temptation is to defensively hand these issues over to legal or PR teams, but this can make things worse. Instead, I learned that the whole board needs to be involved, acknowledging that they have inherited both the good and the bad from their predecessors. A great example is The Guardian, which set up a 10-year restorative plan after discovering its founding money came from slave owners.
We also discussed her powerful idea of having a literal or metaphorical "seat for the past" at the board table. This spot, which could be filled by a historian or descendant, allows the board to step back from present-day concerns and consider their long-term legacy and how they will be remembered. Ultimately, the work is ongoing, hard, and should be restorative, not punitive, to strengthen the company's integrity.
Links and Resources
Sarah on LinkedIn
Sarah Federman's Website
Upcoming TOB Events
All events
You might want to:
Join the Take on Board Facebook community
Join the Take on Board LinkedIn community
Follow along on Twitter
Work with me
Join the Take on Board: Kickstarter group program
Join the Take on Board: Accelerator group program
Find out more about me
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

897 Listeners

17 Listeners

91 Listeners

47 Listeners

238 Listeners

326 Listeners

351 Listeners

155 Listeners

390 Listeners

183 Listeners

235 Listeners

10 Listeners

61 Listeners

22 Listeners

20 Listeners