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MISSION:INTANGIBLE, the blog of the Intangible Asset Finance Society, offers critical comments on intangible asset, corporate reputation, and finance; supplemented by quantitative reputation metrics. Intangible assets include business processes, patents, trademarks; reputations for ethics and integrity; quality, safety, sustainability, security, and resilience; and comprise 70% of the average company's value. MISSION:INTANGIBLE is a registered trademark of the Intangible Asset Finance Society.

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Compensation: Contact sport

C. HUYGENS - Wednesday, July 13, 2011
In this month's issue of IAM magazine, #48, the regular contribution on reputation explains how this epiphenomenon can provide management with freedom to operate. In the words of editor Joff Wild, who also recently penned a much appreciated shout out, "Although it is intangible, reputation allows businesses and executives operational freedoms that lead to very tangible results."

Now for an update from the National Association of Corporate Directors. According to their daily newsletter, NACD Directors Daily (13 July), "In an rare example of how 'say-on-pay' votes can influence companies' relationships with some shareholders," Cincinnati.com (July 12, Boyer) reports that "a lawsuit has accused Cincinnati Bell Inc.'s outside directors of breaching their duty to investors and the company's top executives of 'unjust enrichment' over pay raises granted last year." The raises range from 54 percent to 80 percent for three of the company's top officers despite a 68 percent drop in 2010 net earnings. A non-birding shareholder vote in May opposed the pay raises. "The lawsuit was brought in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati last week by attorneys for the Illinois-based NECA-IBEW Pension Fund, a Bell shareholder," the website reports. "It seeks a court order and unspecified damages on behalf of the corporation, possible return or impoundment of the pay increases, and implementation of internal controls preventing excessive compensation to the company's top executives."

We've discussed "sue-on-pay" before. And we will again. It appears compensation is evolving into a contact sport.

NB: Further to recent queries from attentive followers of this blog, Huygen's will opine on the reputational crisis gripping News Corporation (NASDAQ:NWSA) presently.

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