Organizational development practitioners would often raise eyebrows about the imbalance of the human capital condition being discussed in boardrooms. Inasmuch as the inevitable topics on business strategy, capital investments, financial performance, market expansion, and technological capability are typical in the agenda, the most critical asset of any corporation — the one that ultimately determines whether strategies succeed or fail — seems to pale in comparison in terms of interest. Rarely viewed through a formal governance lens is the most critical asset of any corporation — the people. It is a core governance responsibility.
For boards and senior leadership, the oversight of people should not be seen as a purely operational matter. Every strategic initiative, risk control mechanism, compliance framework and sustainability objective is executed by individuals. Revenue growth is driven by the competence and motivation of employees. Cost efficiency depends on discipline, productivity and sound supervision. Risk exposure is shaped by employee behavior, ethical judgment and adherence to internal controls. In this context, the HR function becomes central to the integrity and effectiveness of the entire governance system.
The Governance Committee’s initiatives — codes of conduct, ethics programs, whistleblowing mechanisms, and accountability frameworks — gain real traction only when embedded in HR processes. Recruitment standards determine who enters the organization. Performance management systems influence behavior and priorities. Training programs shape competencies and values. Compensation structures signal what performance is rewarded. Disciplinary procedures reinforce accountability. Without HR translating governance principles into these daily people practices, governance remains theoretical rather than operational.
Despite this central role, human resources remain invisible on the balance sheet. Unlike physical assets or financial instruments, people do not appear as line items in financial statements. However, they influence nearly every figure reported there. Salaries and benefits often represent the largest expense category. Employee productivity and service quality drive revenue performance. Errors, misconduct, and poor oversight can lead to financial losses, regulatory sanctions and reputational damage. Thus, while HR may not be capitalized as an accounting asset, it is undeniably a strategic asset from a governance and sustainability perspective.
As corporations expand — in workforce size, transaction volumes, geographic reach and regulatory exposure — the complexity of managing people increases significantly. Informal structures that may have been sufficient in earlier stages become governance vulnerabilities. Inconsistent hiring practices, unclear job roles, weak performance management, and inadequate succession planning create risks that can undermine long-term stability. Growth also heightens exposure to labor disputes, workplace safety issues, data privacy concerns and ethical breaches. A structured, well-governed HR function becomes essential not only for operational efficiency but for enterprise risk management and corporate resilience.
For this reason, HR oversight warrants sustained attention at the board level. The Board of Directors, often through a Governance, Nomination, or Compensation Committee, should ensure that the Head of HR is positioned as a strategic partner to management, with clear authority and accountability. Oversight should extend beyond executive remuneration to include workforce planning, leadership development, culture assessments, and engagement metrics. Regular reporting on succession readiness, talent pipelines, training effectiveness, and diversity indicators enables the board to monitor whether the organization’s human capital is aligned with long-term strategic objectives.
The HR head should always have the guidance of the Board of Directors with the following in mind:
First, fostering an ethical and governance-aligned culture, embedding values and accountability throughout the employee lifecycle.
Second, ensuring leadership continuity through structured succession planning, reducing key-person risk and strengthening organizational resilience.
Third, developing future-ready competencies, aligning workforce capabilities with evolving strategic and technological demands.
Fourth, establishing fair, transparent and performance-based reward systems, promoting responsible conduct and discouraging excessive risk-taking.
Fifth, safeguarding employee well-being and engagement, recognizing that a healthy and committed workforce underpins sustainable performance.
The governance of human resources is, in effect, the governance of the enterprise itself. Corporations that elevate HR to a board-level priority strengthen not only compliance and control, but also their capacity for enduring, responsible growth.