Konica Minolta

Tackling innovation from the top: understanding the board's position on reward and risk

18 Feb 2022
Tackling innovation from the top: understanding the board's position on reward and risk


Meet Sue O’Connor

Professional Director, Mercer Superannuation

Sue O’Connor serves as a professional non-executive Chair, Director and senior business leader with ASX Top 10 and global listed companies, as well as high profile statutory authorities. Here she demystifies how Boards set strategic priorities and inculcate cultural change.

"When looking to grow, particularly if you’re in start-up, decision making should have a global perspective..."

From Sue O'Connor's description, Board members must be part juggler, part tightrope walker because being responsible for direction and change takes a certain courage. While motivating organisations to seek constant improvement is not straightforward, she says "staying still is even harder, it's the most dangerous place to be. Besides, if it was easy, they wouldn't need us!" 

Board professionals combine general commercial acumen and deep expertise in specific areas. Sue, as an example, spent 25 years in executive leadership within the technology sector including as a senior executive at Telstra. With her finely-honed interests in digital transformation and cyber resilience, Sue focusses her Board contributions on highly regulated, customer facing, technology dependent organisations. These currently include Yarra Valley Water, Mercer Superannuation, State Trustees Victoria, ClimateWorks Australia and Monash Sustainable Development Institute.  

For those not familiar with how Boards are formed, it is useful to understand that roles like Sue’s are typically for set terms and she will be appointed to perhaps six quite different organisations at any one time. Newly selected directors have little time to ease into the Board's agenda: "I have to learn very quickly about each specific environment. It takes an open mind and a commitment to making a positive contribution," Sue explains.

diversity brings wider foresight, insight and oversight - you can’t succeed with clones of yourself
- Sue O’Connor



All individuals interviewed for this series were selected based on their professional standing and experience, and are wholly independent of any commercial relationship with Konica Minolta. Their comments and insights were provided freely without any form of payment. None of the comments provided constitute an endorsement of Konica Minolta products or services.

Subscribe

Please provide your first name.
Please provide your last name.
Please provide your email address.
Please provide a valid email address.
Please provide your phone number.
Please provide your company name.
Please provide a valid Australian postcode.
Postcode must be numeric.
Please acknowledge.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Left header

Left subheader lorem ipsum

Buy now

Buy now lorem ipsum