
Governance about realising responsibility for ‘whole piece'
Accountant and governor Rachel McLauchlan answers questions at a lunch for women in governance in Dunedin this week. PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON
Being asked to join a board is a privilege and aspiring directors need to understand it is a huge responsibility that must be taken seriously, Rachel McLauchlan says.
Since returning to Dunedin 14 years ago after a decade working in London, Ms McLauchlan has developed a strong interest in governance across various sectors including property, fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG), manufacturing, technology and education.
Responsibility for board decisions sat with everyone.
"It's about everyone realising they are responsible for the whole piece," she said.
It was while working for a United States-listed company in London that the chartered accountant had the opportunity to see so many different aspects of such a huge organisation, including strategic decisions being made.
Questioning the reasons behind those decisions started to whet her interest in governance.
That was coupled with her brother's own prominent career in business and governance and him talking to her about what was going on in his world.
Describing herself as a very proud Dunedinite — and also very proud mother-of-three — Ms McLauchlan grew up in the city, attending both school and the University of Otago, completing degrees in commerce and law.
After graduating, she moved to Auckland, embarking on her professional career at KPMG where she had an "amazing time", with exposure to many different industries, businesses and sectors.
She later travelled overseas with her husband and landed a role with the US-listed company in London.
Shifting from practice into industry was a big step, she recalled.
Returning to Dunedin was also a big step professionally, having been away for quite some time. But she was loving living and working in the city and being part of the community.
Her first network connection was through the Institute of Directors, an organisation which people encouraged her to join.
Former branch manager Vivienne Seaton suggested she do the governance development programme and she discovered a "fantastic network of people".
While she was an accountant and also did consulting, she was interested in exploring the governance space and the institute had been very good at opening the pathway and giving her ideas on how to do that and what skills she needed.
She has served on the board of Whitestone Cheese and is currently on the boards of Otago Innovation, Hillcrest Properties, Columba College board of governors and is a trustee for the Transition to Work Trust.
Asked who had been instrumental in her governance career, Ms McLauchlan said she had "just clicked" with Queenstown-based professional director Sarah Ottrey whom she got chatting to during a coffee break at an Institute of Directors national conference.
Over time, she was someone she would bump into and, once she got to know her, she was able to "pick her brain" and ask her for ideas.
"Sarah is just wonderful, she gives up so much time for people. You need someone like that in your life you can pick the phone up or ask a question," Ms McLauchlan said.
Flipping that around, she now tried to do that with other people.
Another influential person had been her late father who was also involved in the business community in Dunedin and was a very positive person, something that she also endeavoured to be.
Management did not sometimes understand what governance was there for and what a director actually did.
Some people were "almost scared" of board meetings and directors and that was a real shame.
"Directors are on the team of the business, they are just part of the organisation. They are the umbrella on top of everything."
For those starting their governance career, it was a huge learning curve particularly when they joined their first board because they were trying to understand not only a business, but also the terminology which could be very specific to that business.
So it was about listening, particularly in that first year, and being respectful of institutional knowledge — "sitting there and tapping into it as much as you can".
When considering a role, it was important to do due diligence — "please understand the financials of any organisation" — get a feel of it and ensure it was the right fit.
Directors needed to be clear about why they wanted to be on a board.
Many governors started their career in not-for-profit roles and the experience gained there, whether on school boards or sports organisations, threw up a huge amount of governance issues.
"I think you see it all, I think it's great preparation for going into that commercial space."
There was a "very delicate dance" between governance versus management and the critical thing in any board and management relationship was a good relationship and alignment between the chairman and chief executive.
"If that relationship is not strong, the organisation is not going to flourish."
Asked what directors were thinking about at the moment, she said board succession was relevant and, with that, a skills matrix.
When looking at a board, it was important to understand the skills of each board member.
"Everyone brings something different to the table."
Lately there had been government policy changes and discussion around how that was impacting organisations. Boards were also grappling with the "tariff world".
"It's quite an unsettled world at the moment and people are quite unsettled. Being aware of that is really important," she said.
Plus, everyone was talking about artificial intelligence. While there was a lot of debate around it, Ms McLauchlan said it was "just another tool to use".
Asked how her own values had supported her, Ms McLauchlan said being someone who was trustworthy was very important.
"Trust for me is critical. Feeling like people can trust you and you can trust in someone else is really important. If you don't have that, you have a problem."
Building connections and relationships with those you worked with was also important and having integrity and showing respect — even if you did not agree with a point of view — was critical, she said.
Asked about imposter syndrome, Ms McLauchlan said "the feeling of being completely out of your comfort zone" was common going into a new board setting, but that was normal.
If she was feeling a little uncomfortable, she would ask lots of questions — not necessarily at a board meeting — and, if she was not understanding things, she would reach out to the organisation. There was no such thing as a silly question.
When it came to culture, that could change very quickly and it did not take much to upset the culture of a board, particularly if strong personalities were involved.
"For me, a lot of culture comes from that respect that everyone has for each other and that philosophy of supporting each other and being aligned with the purpose of the organisation and what you're there for.
"When you've got a good culture, work really hard to hold on to it," she said.
sally.rae@odt.co.nz
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
a day ago
- Otago Daily Times
Investment adviser aiding the community
She's a woman on a mission to help others, whether through her job as a financial adviser or via service organisation Rotary. Business editor Sally Rae talks to April Eden. Meet April Eden from Dunedin — and yes, that really is her tagline. The rhyme is on purpose and this powerhouse is hot on her own purpose, particularly helping women build confidence with money and take control of their financial futures and flying the flag for service organisation Rotary as a vehicle to do good in the world. English-born but Dunedin-proud, her road to becoming an investment adviser might not have taken a traditional trajectory but she was determined to show her daughters she could achieve something and make her mark on the world. It was when her first child was young that Mrs Eden, 33, decided she did not want to be "another statistic". Having quit secondary school at the beginning of year 12, she worked in hospitality. At 19, she became pregnant and, while "not quite a teen mum", she felt she was still not a full mum in the eyes of society. With creative flair, she had initially thought she would pursue something like graphic design but at 23 found her aptitude in accounting. When she decided to return to study, backed by her supportive partner, she did not want to commit herself, knowing that secondary school and herself did not agree with each other. So, she did a certificate of business administration at Otago Polytechnic and discovered it was very different from secondary school — "you're in charge of yourself". Having enjoyed that, she later completed a Bachelor of applied management, switching majors from marketing to accounting, at the polytechnic. Those early years were a whirlwind which included getting married, having a second child and buying and selling several houses. While studying, she was one of three New Zealand-based students selected to take part in a student workshop held as part of an entrepreneurs' summit in China in 2018, coincidentally all three coming from Otago Polytechnic. But then she could not find a job as an accountant, despite "interviews galore" all over the country. She specifically wanted to get into audit and risk, with a desire to know how businesses worked, but interviews would indirectly raise the matter of her having two children, questioning how she was going to manage the travel. Also, she was getting blank looks when she asked what the career path looked like for her three years down the track. After potentially uprooting her husband, children and life, she did not want to be uplifting them again in three years' time and she wanted to show loyalty to a company — somewhere she could "grow with them". It was when she got an interview for a private wealth assistant at Craigs Investment Partners that she was shown exactly what a 10-year career path looked like. She started there in 2018 and has worked her way up, next January marking four years as an adviser. Bubbly, colourful and a straight talker, Mrs Eden admitted she loved her job. "It sounds really corny, but no two days are the same, there's so much variety in a day." Ultimately, it was a job that was all about relationships and, with a love of people, that flowed through to her extracurricular passion which was Rotary. She did not want to be seen as "just another investment adviser". And when clients or potential clients searched her name, she did not want it to solely come up with her business profile. She wanted it to come up with all the things she was doing in the community that she was passionate about, so they could feel like they were getting to know her a little before they came to see her — "an ordinary person with a pretty cool job, that I actually do care — and I do". President of Rotary Dunedin Central and on the board of District 9999, the Rotary district which covered the South Island, she said it was unfortunate the organisation had the perception of an "old man's club". Her club was 50% female, and the average age was late 50s. "There is still such a need for Rotary, arguably now more than ever," she said. This year, a team from Ignite Consultants Otago, the student-led voluntary organisation which offered free consulting services to not-for-profit organisations, worked with Rotary Dunedin Central. The team was charged with helping make the club more accessible and appealing to young professionals and worked closely with Mrs Eden. With only one of the students knowing what Rotary was before the project, they looked at it from a "completely outside perspective" with no preconceived ideas. Being able to take their suggestions back to the club and further afield was a chance to say "this is literally what young people are saying". For the younger generation wanting to do good in the world, Rotary — which has a seat at the United Nations — could be the vehicle to allow them to do that, she said. Mrs Eden was on a mission to help bring Rotary into 2025 and beyond by breaking the stereotypes, modernising the message and ensuring the organisation continued to do good for decades to come. It was a fine line to tread as she did not want existing members, who had so much wisdom and connections, to be alienated. But she was adamant the only tradition that Rotary had was that it "does good in the community". The organisation had lots of different club structures and options. While there were still some clubs which met weekly, there were also online clubs which did their project planning online, and some clubs which dealt specifically with one cause. "It's just that balance between reminding our existing Rotarians why you joined in the first place — because you wanted to do good in the community — and then telling the next generation that 'hey, we're here and we'll help you do these good things that are important to you now'," she said. Personally, Rotary had given her purpose, friendships, professional and personal development and the chance to make a real impact. Her club was very open to change and trying new things. It had three or four key fundraising projects a year; it helped with the Dunedin Brick Show, featuring all things Lego, at the Edgar Centre and the money raised went to a youth-oriented charity — last year it was Rock Solid. It has the Rotary book sale next month and it also sells pea straw. It bought a commercial washing machine for the Night Shelter and has helped re-establish gardens and an orchard at Bradford School and has also helped the astronomical society. "We recognise that the little guy needs help too. Buying a new laptop for an organisation ... could be the difference between them paying rent on a building they're using for a month or two," she said. Mrs Eden said, when asked how she managed to balance everything, that she worked very hard and she had a fantastic support system with her husband. When it came to resilience in leadership, she was inspired by her elder daughter, who was one of two children who went missing after a bush walk in the Mavora Lakes area in Southland in July 2023. They were found by a search party the following morning. Her daughter came out of that experience braver and even went skydiving for her 13th birthday. Watching her navigate that experience, Mrs Eden said she could not "be the scared person". "Leadership is not about how to avoid the storms, it's how you navigate them and how you bring the others through with you," she said.


Otago Daily Times
a day ago
- Otago Daily Times
Government-backed Frankton film studio fizzles out
The plug has been pulled on a government-backed motion capture and production studio in Frankton's Remarkables Park. Target3D New Zealand was planning to open the studio as a key tenant of the Queenstown Research & Innovation Centre after getting approval for a $2 million loan from a government regional development fund. Announced by then-economic development minister Stuart Nash in 2022, the Queenstown Digital Studio was intended to support virtual production through motion capture technology, game-engine servers, lighting, production equipment and staging. However, Gisborne-based Target3D NZ director Shannon Dowsing said he had to pull the pin two months ago after concluding the business model for the studio — and the rationale for taking up the loan — no longer made sense. It had relied on commercial screen industry production, research and development funding and education partnerships to come together, but each has faced major challenges, Mr Dowsing said. Although Queenstown is still busy with internationally-funded productions, spending by NZ on Air and Te Māngai Pāho has "significantly reduced" in the past three years. "It's highly competitive and existing players are very likely to be getting that funding." The company also has a specific R&D programme in mind for the resort town, but the government's scrapping of Crown entity Callaghan Innovation has made funding support "questionable". Another important component of the studio had been education, but it has not made enough progress with education providers to get that under way. Screentime NZ's setting up of a full-time production facility, Remarkable Studios, in the former H&Js department store in Remarkables Park last year meant Target3D could not justify investing in the equipment for a second studio. Mr Dowsing said he was not a believer in the concept of "if you build it, they will come". "We've been trying to solve all these challenges but, ultimately, we didn't feel it was a great time to be borrowing a couple of million dollars to invest in Queenstown in such an unstable market." However, he thought it would only be a matter of time before Target3D had a presence in the resort. "We've decided to go into the region organically and make decisions based on what actually can be done. I think we can achieve the same results, but without starting with a risky investment."


NZ Herald
a day ago
- NZ Herald
What Jim Rohn taught me about new beginnings
It's new beginnings for Nicky Rennie. Photo / 123rf Opinion by Nicky Rennie Whanganui-based Nicky Rennie returned to her home town in 2018 while celebrating three decades in broadcasting. She has written a column for the Whanganui Chronicle since 2021. Learn more There was a bloke called Jim Rohn. He was an entrepreneur, author and motivational speaker. I think I would have liked Jim. Jim struck me as a cup-half-full kind of guy. He also had one of the most brilliantly simple quotes I've ever heard. 'If you don't like where