Empire Club of Canada

Virtual Event: In Conversation with Rahul Bhardwaj, President and CEO, Institute of Corporate Directors; Moderated by Tom Watson

12.07.2020 - By Empire Club of CanadaPlay

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The COVID-19 pandemic has posed both an unprecedented governance challenge and ushered in a period of extraordinary experimentation and innovation. It is time for boards to question old habits and imagine new possibilities.

Rahul Bhardwaj, ICD.D, President and Chief Executive Officer, Institute of Corporate Directors

As President and CEO of the Institute of Corporate Directors, Rahul K. Bhardwaj leads an organization of over 15,000 members committed to improving national outcomes by growing the board leadership and governance capacities within Canadian businesses, agencies and not for profits.

Mr. Bhardwaj currently serves on the board of the Rideau Hall Foundation, supporting the office of the Governor General of Canada as it connects, inspires and honours Canadians, the Executive Committee of the Global Network of Director Institutes, as well as the Leader Council at the Ian O. Ihnatowycz Institute for Leadership at the Ivey Business School.

He was Chair of the 2012 Ontario Summer Games, the first multi sport games to be held in Toronto, and was Co chair of TO2015 IGNITE, a program of the Toronto 2015 Pan Am and Parapan Am Games. Other past board commitments include founding board member of Metrolinx and Chair of the Governance Committee, Chair of the Toronto Downtown Jazz Festival, Chair of Community Foundations of Canada, Upper Canada College, George Brown College, Stratford Festival of Canada and United Way of Toronto, among others.

Prior to joining the ICD, Mr. Bhardwaj was a corporate lawyer at a leading Canadian law firm, and then later, President and CEO of the Toronto Foundation, where he focused on engaging philanthropy to improve the quality of life in Toronto. He was also Vice President of the Toronto 2008 Olympic Bid and, as part of the Mayor’s Blue Ribbon Fiscal review panel in 2008, Mr. Bhardwaj was involved in identifying efficiencies for the City of Toronto.

In 2012, Mr. Bhardwaj’s commitment to city building was recognized as he received the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal. He has been named one of The 50 Most Influential people in the city by Toronto Life magazine, and was named to the Quadrangle Society at Massey College and The Ultimate List of Social CEOs on Twitter. His vision for Toronto and Canada has made him a sought-after presenter and speaker locally, nationally and internationally, particularly on issues relating to leadership and governance.

Moderated By:

Tom Watson, Ivey Business Journal Editor

Thomas Watson is a Canadian journalist and business consultant who covers major market events and trends as Financial Post Magazine’s Big Picture columnist and edits Ivey Business Journal, one of Canada’s oldest resources for business professionals published by the Ivey Business School at Western University. Watson also works with Ivey’s leadership institute to promote best practices in management and corporate governance, and creates customized content for select Ivey Academy executive education programs. As a case writer, Watson consults with Ivey faculty to develop educational material on high profile topics, ranging from the role that personal ethics should play when investment bankers consider backing controversial businesses such as the Ashley Madison adultery service to whether or not the resignation of former Liberal Cabinet minister Jane Philpott was warranted. As a guest lecturer on financial sector whistle blowing, Watson shares his experience as a senior executive at a European venture capital firm who was ostracized after uncovering an international stock manipulation scheme aimed at Canada’s Open Text during the dotcom boom, which led to a decade long investigative reporting career at Canadian Business magazine. Watson’s work as a journalist has been repeatedly recognized for excellence by the National Media Awards Foundation. Highlights include: Shell Games, an exposé of criminal boiler rooms that destroyed the lives of naive pensioners to help finance struggling Canadian ventures, including Ben and Jerry’s ice cream parlours, during the 2008 financial crisis; ABCP: Hunter and the Hunted, an exclusive profile of the retail investor who launched a rebellion against Bay Street for flogging high risk asset backed commercial paper like GICs; The Trials and Tribulations of Brian Hunter, an inside account of how politics led to the multi billion dollar implosion of the Amaranth Advisers hedge fund in 2006; and An Apology for Eleanor Clitheroe, an exclusive profile of the sexism and hypocrisy that derailed Hydro One’s failed attempt to go public with a female CEO in 2002.

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