A Few Things NEVER to Do When Engaging with Institutional Investors
Recently, I blogged about the #1 thing to never do when engaging with ISS. Here are a few items you shouldn't do when engaging with your institutional investors: 1. Don't ask your investor a question that you could have answered for yourself if you had bothered to read their voting policies. Or could have otherwise been found with a simple Google search. 2. Don't ask your investor how they voted at your shareholder meeting last year (or the years before that). You can ask a proxy solicitor or other provider who has that data for that information, and institutional investors are increasingly posting reports on their voting decisions on their websites.
Print and share
Explore more in
Public Chatter
Public Chatter provides practical guidance—and the latest developments—to those grappling with public company securities law and corporate governance issues, through content developed from an in-house perspective.