• Jeff Epstein (Bessemer Venture Partners): Why Effective Boards Spend Time on Decisions Not Yet Made
    Jan 20 2026
    (0:00) Intro(1:45) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel(2:31) Start of interview(3:04) Jeff's origin story. Began career in investment banking at First Boston before transitioning to a 25-year run as CFO across media companies (King World, Nielsen) and tech (DoubleClick, Oracle).(7:16) Transitioning to Bessemer Venture Partners.(8:40) Focusing on his board career and audit committee member. ValueClick, Priceline (Booking Holdings).(11:06) Growth in Public vs. Private Markets(12:49) The State of European Entrepreneurial Ecosystem(13:41) The Role of BVP CFO Council(15:31) Understanding California and Silicon Valley's Unique Culture(18:44) AI's impact on the CFO role(20:54) Dynamics Between CEOs and CFOs(23:12) CFOs in Startups vs. Public Companies "We've observed that about 5% of the headcount of any co' at any size is in the finance dpt.")(25:25) CFOs as Board Members(27:35) Board decisions on CEO hiring and firing. "The CEO's role is to articulate an effective strategy, to hire a great team, and then to execute that strategy well using that great team." "If over five years the CEO has never changed their mind based on board input, you have the wrong board."(30:36) On effective Board Composition(32:41) Navigating Shareholder Activism, including his experience at Twilio(37:35) The Debate: Stay Private or Go Public. "There are three ownership structures: public companies, PE-owned companies (where PE controls CEO), and founder-controlled private companies" "I think you're going to see quite a few companies stay private forever or for decades."(39:30) Preparing for the Future of Venture Capital (41:13) Optimizing Board Meeting Content. "Effective boards: 2/3 of time on未made decisions. Ineffective boards: show and tell." "Best-run companies: CEO encourages board members to meet with executives outside board meetings."(45:50) Books that have greatly influenced his life:The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life by Alice Shroeder (2008)My Early Life by Winston Churchill (1930) How to Talk So Kids Will Listen & Listen So Kids Will Talk by Adele Faber and Elaine Mazlish (1980)(47:07) His mentors (50:50) Quotes that he thinks of often or lives his life by "You want to live your life to have a seamless web of deserved trust" by Charlie Munger(53:15) An unusual habit or an absurd thing that he loves. Reading adventure stories from G.H. Henty(54:01) The living person he most admires: Warren BuffettJeff Epstein is an operating partner of Bessemer Venture Partners where he leads BVP’s CFO Council. He is a former CFO of Oracle and currently serves on the boards of Autodesk, AvePoint, Okta, and Twilio (previously at Kaiser Permanente and Booking Holdings). You can follow Evan on social media at:X: @evanepsteinLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/__To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/__Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
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    56 min
  • Joe Grundfest (Stanford): 2026 Predictions and 2025 Reflections
    Jan 12 2026
    (0:00) Intro(2:00) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel.(2:45) Start of interview. *Reference to prior episodes with Joe (E1 from '20, E35 from '21, E84 from '23, E123 from '24 and E161 from '25)(4:43) IPO Environment. Reference to paper by Mark Roe: Half the Firms, Double the Profits(11:58) Elon Musk's $1 Trillion Pay Plan "We will pay you an outrageous amount if you achieve preposterous results."(14:40) Delaware's Supreme Court Decision Reversing the Chancery's Rescission of Elon's $56B (now $139B) Tesla comp (20:08) The AI Bubble "We're either in a bubble or a bubble is inevitable."(25:24) OpenAI's Restructuring *more about the restructuring in this article(28:18) Predictions on Elon Musk vs OpenAI trial(32:47) Delaware Exodus "I describe Delaware now as the prostate of corporate law" "it's too soon to make a move from Delaware"(36:16) Evolution of the Caremark Doctrine "the big enchilada"(38:09) Delaware Attorney Fee Awards. *Reference to Joe Grundfest's paper on this topic.(40:34) SEC enforcement focus (41:20) Biggest winner in business in 2025(42:42) Biggest loser in business in 2025(44:11) Biggest business surprise in 2025(44:46) Best corporate governance trend from 2025(46:00) Worst corporate governance trend from 2025(48:28) What’s the biggest corporate governance trend to watch out for in 2026(50:00) Thoughts on SEC (and other agencies) having Commissioners from a single party(54:34) The Chicken!Joe Grundfest is W.A. Franke Professor of Law and Business Emeritus at Stanford Law School, and Senior Faculty of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance You can follow Evan on social media at:X: @evanepsteinLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/__To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/__Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
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    56 min
  • David Berger: Year-End Reflections on Corporate Governance and the Road Ahead
    Dec 23 2025

    (0:00) Intro

    (1:31) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel.

    (2:18) Start of interview. *Reference to prior episodes with David (E24 from Nov 2020 and E159 from Dec 2024)

    (3:22) 2025 highlights from the American College of Governance Counsel

    (4:55) The Rome Conference on AI, Ethics, and the Future of Corporate Governance

    (6:52) The Dual-Class Share Debate (reference to his paper Performance Leads Governance)

    (12:06) Emerging Governance Structures in AI companies, including Public Benefit Corporations (PBCs) "mission driven"

    (23:02) The AI Bubble Debate ("from a technology standpoint, I don't think we're in a bubble. From a valuation standpoint, we may be very well in a bubble.") Reference to my article on AI Washing Goes Criminal.

    (27:00) Big Tech vs. Little Tech Dynamics "We're going to have, at some point, a shakeout. It's impossible for all of these companies to be successful."

    (29:55) The Shift to Private Markets

    (34:15) Delaware's Governance Challenges (*reference to E194 on Silicon Valley 150 Report) "Since TripAdvisor, about 50 companies have left Delaware."

    (39:45) AI and Cybersecurity in the Boardroom

    (40:42) On Mandatory Arbitration

    (42:03) Biggest winner in business in 2025: Tech broadly, Silicon Valley particular.

    (43:40) Biggest loser in business in 2025: Delaware

    (45:15) Biggest business surprise in 2025

    (47:19) Best corporate governance trend from 2025: Renewed and strong focus on ethics.

    (50:00) Worst corporate governance trend from 2025: Partisanship

    (50:58) What’s the biggest corporate governance trend to watch out for in 2026: the role of politics in the boardroom

    (51:35) One piece of advice for directors heading into 2026: the role of AI in the boardroom and in the company

    David Berger is a partner at Wilson Sonsini and the President of the American College of Governance Counsel.

    You can follow Evan on social media at:

    X: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

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    53 min
  • Richard Blake: Key Takeaways from the 2025 Silicon Valley 150 Governance Report
    Dec 15 2025

    (0:00) Intro.

    (1:27) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel.

    (2:14) Start of interview. *Reference to prior episodes/reports with Richard (E126 from Feb 2024 and E158 from Dec 2024)

    (3:11) AI dominance in public and private markets

    (4:14) About WSGR's 2025 SV150 Corporate Governance Report. Major Findings in DEI Disclosure (impact on board diversity)

    (12:25) Broader ESG Changes and Challenges to SEC Climate Disclosure Rule

    (16:03) California approach to climate risk disclosures (SB 253 and SB 261) and greenhouse gas emissions disclosure

    (19:04) State vs. Federal Regulatory Landscape

    (21:13) On SEC's change of policy relating to mandatory arbitration bylaws

    (23:41) SEC Changes Under Chair Atkins: changes in exec comp disclosures and removing quarterly reporting

    (27:18) SEC Changes to Rule 14a-8 proposals

    (29:23) On Lack of Minority Party SEC Commissioners

    (32:30) Delaware vs. Other States on Corporate Incorporations

    (39:26) Other findings from the 2025 report. Including on dual-class shares and sunset provisions.

    (41:12) The State of Private Markets, IPOs and VC

    (49:55) Biggest winner in business in 2025

    (50:55) Biggest loser in business in 2025

    (53:00) Biggest business surprise in 2025

    (54:32) Best and worst corporate governance trend from 2025

    (58:18) What’s the biggest corporate governance trend to watch out for in 2026

    Richard Blake is a partner at Wilson Sonsini and the leader of the firm's public companies’ practice.

    You can follow Evan on social media at:

    X: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    1 ora e 1 min
  • Michelle Leder (Footnoted): Uncovering Hidden Risks in SEC Filings
    Dec 8 2025

    (0:00) Intro

    (1:21) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel

    (2:08) Start of interview

    (2:36) Michelle's origin story

    (4:33) The Origins of Footnoted (started in 2003)

    (6:36) Understanding SEC Filings and Disclosures

    (7:20) The "Friday Night Dump"

    (9:34) The State of Public vs. Private Markets

    (12:40) The Rise of Private Markets and Challenges of Public Markets

    (18:43) Red Flags in SEC Filings

    (22:03) The Evolution of Executive Compensation and Elon Musk's Comp

    (28:53) Egregious Corporate Governance examples: Sketchers.

    (30:08) The problem of Related Party Transactions.

    (31:37) Independence and Compensation of Board Members

    (32:36) Quote of Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett on this topic

    (36:33) Are we in a AI bubble? Similarities with Enron/Worldcom era?

    (40:18) Reference to my article on AI washing

    (41:43) The Importance of SEC Changes (only 3 commissioners from a single party)

    (43:22) The Role of Markets in Everyday Life

    (47:45) Books that have greatly influenced her life:

    1. The Jungle by Upton Sinclair (1906)
    2. Germinal by Émile Zola (1885)
    3. Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner (2021)

    (48:20) Her mentors: Nell Minow, Diana Henriques, and Thornton O'Glove.

    (49:19) Quotes that she thinks of often or lives her life by: "Don't Postpone Joy"

    (50:52) An unusual habit or an absurd thing that she loves.

    Michelle Leder is the founder and editor-in-chief of footnoted.com, a source for uncovering important information hidden deep in SEC filings.

    You can follow Evan on social media at:

    X: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    53 min
  • Erik Lie: Catching Cheats, Fraud Detection, and the Board’s Evolving Role
    Nov 24 2025
    (0:00) Intro(1:30) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel(2:16) Start of interview(3:01) Erik's origin story(6:10) His role at the Tippie College of Business at the University of Iowa.(7:49) Exploring his book Catching Cheats(9:39) About the field of forensic economics(11:00) The Challenge of Private Market Data and Fraud *Reference to our Startup Litigation Digest(16:24) Board Responsibilities in Fraud Detection(19:03) Challenges for private company boards(21:22) Insights and red flags from the Madoff Case(26:30) Insider Trading and Its Challenges(31:29) The Role of Whistleblowers in Fraud. Reference to E142 with Tyler Shultz and E130 with Mary Inman (whistleblower attorney)(35:44) Cultural Perspectives on White-Collar Crime(39:59) The Intersection of Vision and Fraud(41:27) Fraud problems in academia(44:00) The Impact of AI on Fraud Dynamics *suggested read: The Trillion Dollar Governance Reckonings(49:46) The role of directors in the stock backdating scandals "they were happy beneficiaries"(51:03) Books that have greatly influenced his life:Animal Farm by George Orwell (1945)Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer (1997)(53:45) His mentors *discussion about the Norges Bank Investment Mgmt Fund ($2T AUM) and its ethical issues.(56:23) Quotes that he thinks of often or lives his life by.(57:10) An unusual habit or an absurd thing that he loves. (58:08) The living person he most admires: Bill Gates.Erik Lie is the Amelia Tippie Chair in Finance and Professor at the Tippie College of Business at the University of Iowa. His new book, Catching Cheats: Everyday Forensics to Unmask Business Fraud, offers a compelling look at how forensic economics and data-driven analysis can help identify wrongdoing that remains hidden in plain sight. You can follow Evan on social media at:X: @evanepsteinLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/__To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/__Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
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    1 ora
  • Sue Siegel: Innovation, Life Sciences, and Governance in a Changing World
    Nov 10 2025
    (0:00) Intro(1:55) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel(2:42) Start of interview(3:56) Sue's origin story(5:42) The Rise of Biotech and her Career Journey (BioRad, Dupont, Amersham and Affymetrix)(12:04) Transition to Venture Capital (Mohr Davidow Ventures, GE Ventures)(14:55) Evolution of Corporate Venture Capital (since ~2010) "They [now] represent about 28% of all VC dollars going into startups."(19:32) Her Board Membership Journey (since 2000, as a board member at Affymetrix where she was an executive)(21:12) The Impact of AI on Governance(21:53) Cultural Differences in Boardrooms between founders and investors: "if you do governance right, it should be an enabler, not a suffocator."(29:24) Navigating Geopolitical Risks. Example: Align Technology: We moved about 90% of our Russia based developers to Armenia.(33:01) Challenges in Life Sciences Funding(34:52) The AI Investment Boom(37:16) Activism's Influence on Corporate Boards. "They punish the lack of communication. They punish obscuring things." Reference to E189 with Joele Frank and Anne Chapman.(42:36) The Evolution of Compensation Structures "I think one of the key topics around comp is aligning pay, performance, and purpose."(45:34) Other relevant board topics: human capital, innovation, data and board culture.(47:57) The Importance of Board Refreshment (digital and IA natives that can govern in the boardroom)(49:12) Books that have greatly influenced her life:Passages by Gael Sheehy (1976)Mountains Beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder (2003)(52:00) "People that helped her along"(54:23) An unusual habit or an absurd thing that she loves. (54:59) The living person she most admires: Francis Collins.(56:39) Quotes that she thinks of often or lives her life by.Sue Siegel is a highly accomplished executive, investor, and board member who has been at the forefront of innovation across life sciences, healthcare, and technology for more than three decades. You can follow Evan on social media at:X: @evanepsteinLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/__To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/__Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
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    58 min
  • Karen Page: Venture Boards, Founder Governance, and the Path from Startup to Scale
    Nov 3 2025

    (0:00) Intro

    (1:25) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel

    (2:12) Start of interview

    (3:01) Karen's origin story

    (3:44) Early Career and Transition to Technology

    (5:40) The Dot-Com Era and her time at Brobeck and later at Orrick.

    (8:50) Her transition to Prosper Marketplace (Chris Larsen's company)

    (9:40) Her time at Box, Inc. and Apple *Reference to E179 with Jack Lazar

    (13:14) Her journey to Venture Capital.

    (14:16) Joining B Capital (in 2019) and the firm's investment focus

    (16:16) The nature of B Capital's partnership with the Boston Consulting Group (BCG)

    (19:32) Governance in Early Stage Companies

    (20:42) Her role as a board partner of her firm. *Reference to VCBA program

    (23:22) Building Trust in Governance "It starts on day one. And that trust is just, is literally earned through every conversation, every interaction, and certainly every board meeting."

    (25:41) Founder-Friendly Terms and Market Changes

    (28:43) The Importance of Governance During Crisis

    (31:52) CEO Succession and Leadership Transition

    (37:45) Advisory Boards vs. Fiduciary Boards

    (40:06) On board observers

    (44:08) Board Committees and Their Evolution

    (48:10) The Debate: Stay Private or Go Public

    (51:37) Books that have greatly influenced her life:

    1. Annie Duke's Thinking in Bets (2018)
    2. Ray Dalio's Principles (2017)
    3. Shoe Dog by Phil Night (2016)

    (52:00) Her mentors: David Geyer (Brobeck), Aaron Levie (Box), Howard Morgan (B Capital)

    (52:48) Quotes that she thinks of often or lives her life by: "never cut what you can untie". And the other is "never confuse motion with progress."

    (53:03) An unusual habit or an absurd thing that she loves.

    (53:25) The people she most admires

    (55:50) Diversity on Boards in Venture Capital

    Karen Page is a General Partner and Board Partner at B Capital. As a Board Partner, she collaborates with portfolio company leadership, B Capital’s investment team and the firm’s network of advisors to provide best-in-class strategic guidance

    You can follow Evan on social media at:

    X: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    To support this podcast you can join as a subscriber of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter at https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    58 min