-
Deals Services
The financial advisors of Grant Thornton offer customized solutions to their clients through personalized methods and services.
-
Technology
Our goal is to redefine how clients do business. With expertise in digital strategy, AI, data insights, and automation, we create personalized solutions to enhance productivity and drive innovation.
-
Strategy and Investments
The Strategy and Investments department supports businesses at strategic, operational and financial level.
-
Environmental, Social, Governance, Risk & Compliance
In the current business and regulatory environment, businesses aspire to meet today's requirements effectively, and to create value on sustainable terms.
-
Audit Services
The dedicated staff of Grant Thornton provide you with audit services such as financial statements for your business by using the HORIZON methodology.
-
Business Growth Advisory
At Grant Thornton, we recognize the need to align financial data with regulatory change, as well as the requirement for accurate financial data and consulting services.
-
Corporate Taxation
Grant Thornton's tax professionals offer Corporate Taxation Services to provide advice and solutions to any issues your business may have.
-
Corporate tax compliance
The Grant Thornton corporate tax compliance specilaists possess long experience in both multinationals and Greek companies in all business sectors.
-
International tax services
Grant Thornton supports all businesses operating at the European and international level with advice on international tax matters.
-
Transfer pricing
Grant Thornton offers comprehensive pricing policy planning and tax audit support for domestic, multinational and corporate tax executives.
-
Tax Controversy
Grant Thornton provides tax audit and risk services because tax disputes are unavoidable in numerous businesses.
-
Private Client Services
In case you are an individual, Grant Thornton provides services like tax returns, transfer of wealth to future generations and expatriate taxation services
-
Indirect taxes
Learn more from Grant Thornton about our services for indirect taxes such as real estate taxes, customs, VAT and stamp duties.
-
Tax restructuring
Grant Thornton provides tax advisory services to companies undergoing tax restructuring or a change in their strategic direction.
-
Diagnostic Tax Review
Diagnostic tax review is a tax service offered by Grant Thornton to assist your organisation in identifying and assessing potential tax exposures.
-
Tax efficient supply chain planning
Get informed about tax efficient supply chain planning and how to improve your company's productivity model by reorganizing your productivity activities.
-
Global mobility strategy
In a globalized world, businesses must work seamlessly across borders. Organizations operate in multiple countries and view international expansion as a strategic objective.
-
Accounting & Tax Compliance Services
Transferring non-core, yet important, activities outside the company and assigning them to specialists - external partners (Business Process Outsourcing) is the best practice applied by companies seeking to maximize efficiency and cut costs.
-
HR & Payroll services
Grant Thornton provides specialized services in payroll management and human resources management for any type of company.
-
Banking
Grant Thornton has a dedicated financial services team that provides banking services such as tax and non-bank accountancy advisory services.
-
Insurance
Here you will find all the financial assurance services that Grant Thornton can offer to your company and the pillars that are included.
-
Asset management
In Grant Thornton, asset management is a business approach that concerns assurance and control services and regulatory compliance services.
-
Banking
Banking & Securities
-
Insurance
Insurance
-
Asset management
Asset management
-
Central Government
Central Government
-
Public Corporations and Organizations
Public Corporations and Organizations
-
Local Government
Local Government
-
NSRF Managing Authorities and Special Services
NSRF Managing Authorities and Special Services
-
Public Health Services
Public Health Services
-
Social Security Services
Social Security
-
Hotels & tourism services
Hotels & tourism services
-
Transportation
Transportation
-
Information Technology
Information Technology
-
Media
Media
-
Telecommunications
Telecommunications
Your board has a crucial role to play in steering your company to long-term success. To be the best it needs to focus on three Ds: diversity, digital and development
History has something important to tell us about the difficulties of steering a business to long-term success – through seismic shifts in technology, consumer demands and product development. With that in mind it’s unsurprising that over half the world’s largest companies in the early 1900s had shut their doors by the late 1990s. Some, however, have endured.
US car manufacturer Ford began operating in 1903. And more than 100 years later, Ford is the second largest carmaker in the US[1] and the fifth largest in the world[2] by sales. The finance sector has its success stories too. After more than two-and-a-half centuries in operation, the UK’s Lloyds Bank is the 22nd largest bank in the world[3] by assets and part of the fourth largest banking group in the UK.[4]
These companies have not only survived, they have continued to thrive and compete with the best in the world. So what is their secret? Companies that enjoy long-term success tend to have strong corporate governance, particularly on issues that will win them a competitive advantage. That governance starts at board level and cascades through every tier of leadership within the business.
What wins companies a competitive advantage is their ability to hit a moving target. Our conversations with business leaders tell us that those in charge of corporate governance must focus on two current priorities: ensuring diversity of thinking and boosting digital capability.[5] This will help them to tackle a complex blend of challenges – technological advances, increasing regulation, demographic changes, and globalisation – that will gather force over the coming decade.
True to form for businesses with longevity, digital capability and diversity are two areas where Ford and Lloyds Bank are currently on top of their game.
How Ford is boosting digital capability
Earlier this year, Ford President and CEO Mark Fields said the company was "disrupting itself" by changing from solely being a car manufacturer to also being a mobility company that sells a transportation service.[6] The company that put millions of people behind the wheel is about to start building driverless cars.
Why? Because while its traditional rivals might be Chrysler or General Motors, in the future it’s likely to be Google or Apple, says Fields. The shift towards greater innovation means Ford is now embarking on a major overhaul of its production facility in its manufacturing heartland of Dearborn, Michigan, to make it more high-tech.
Ford has also established a presence in Silicon Valley so that it can participate and collaborate in the world’s leading technology cluster. In May it announced a US$182.2 million investment in Pivotal, a cloud-based software company headquartered in San Francisco, to "deliver outstanding customer experience at the speed of Silicon Valley", as Fields put it.[7]
Ford’s commitment to boosting its digital capability comes from the top. Field sits on the company’s board of directors alongside others who bring additional digital insight to the table. These include William Helman who is a general partner at Greylock Partners, a venture capital firm focused on early-stage investments in technology, consumer internet and healthcare companies. And William Kennard, who has a rich history of working and investing in the technology-led telecommunications and media sectors, and has been dubbed a consumer champion for the digital age.
This sort of digital expertise at board level will be increasingly crucial. If businesses are to benefit from disruptive technology, boards need to readjust their assumptions and thinking, and tackle digital innovation head on.
Building diversity at Lloyds Bank
At Lloyds Bank, the Group Executive Committee (GEC) is focused on what it believes to be one of its main competitive advantages: diversity.[8] The bank’s group inclusion and diversity strategy is led by the GEC and individual committee members each sponsor a key area of focus. These include gender, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation and agile working.
The bank consistently wins awards for its myriad diversity initiatives. In 2015, it was named a Top Ten Employer for Working Families and the Women’s Business Council gave it the Leadership and Innovation Award for its work on establishing the Agile Future Forum – a group of employers that supports workforce agility in the UK. Its Group Ethnic Minority Network, which aims to connect, support and develop colleagues from ethnic minority backgrounds, won the bank a finalist position at the 2015 Inclusive Network Awards. And this year, the company has retained its position as the top private sector business for LGBTQ people in the Stonewall Top 100[9] for the second year running.
Why does Lloyds Bank invest so much in diversity? As the UK’s population has become more diverse, the bank’s existing and potential customer base has changed too. It needs to reflect this diversity in its workforce if it is to retain and grow market share. People want to bank with an organisation that understands and can meet their needs, regardless of who they are.
Diversity at board level – in theory and in practice – boosts the peripheral vision of an organisation because it can lead to a wider input of thoughts and ideas. This can help it to monitor the current landscape but also be prepared for what may be looming ahead. While diversity covers myriad groups, the focus for individual organisations should be on building boards that reflect their markets, customers, people and organisational culture.
Developing routes to the board
Advocating digital capability and diversity of thinking at board level is all very well, but how do you get there? One thing is clear: it can’t happen overnight. Boards need to develop and signpost a clearer route to senior management and proactively nurture the directors of tomorrow.
In New Zealand, a national Mentoring for Diversity scheme has been established by its Institute of Directors (IoD). Now in its fifth year, the scheme links senior managers (mentees) with chairmen and senior directors of large company boards for a period of 12 months. It’s a way for senior managers, who may be finding it difficult to see a route to the board, to gain first-hand experience of how listed and large company boards work and glean advice on practical elements such as networking, presentation or conduct.
The scheme also aims to broaden the diversity of the available talent pool and increase visibility by forging new relationships between chairmen, directors and talented individuals who want to grow.
Shadowing and mentoring opportunities such as those offered by the New Zealand IoD is one of a number of tools that can be adopted to help talented people see how they can progress to the board. Another is putting in place specific development plans for potential board members from diverse backgrounds.
If businesses can get better at developing and signposting routes to their board, those boards are more likely to be made up of the best people for the business; people who are capable of anticipating changes heading their way rather than being caught off-guard.
Boosting digital capability, encouraging diversity of thinking, and developing and signposting a route to the top aren’t nice-to-haves; they are absolute priorities for boards today. If history is anything to go by, businesses that fail to embrace these changes may not survive. If only we could ask those top companies from 1912 that didn’t survive.
To find out how your company board can prepare for the challenges ahead contact Nick Jeffrey, global director of public policy, or read more in our corporate governance report.