In this episode, Bill Clendenen, Charlie Talbot, and Michael Burcham explore how CEOs can turn their boards into true strategic assets. They share practical guidance on building trust through transparency, setting realistic goals, and engaging board members outside the boardroom. The conversation focuses on how effective CEOs pressure test strategy, avoid surprises, and translate strategic plans into clear operational execution. Throughout the discussion, they emphasize that strong CEO board relationships are built on consistency, preparation, and open dialogue, enabling boards to support leadership, execution, and long-term value creation actively.
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Welcome to Bigger.
Anderson Williams:Stronger.
Anderson Williams:Faster.
Anderson Williams:the podcast exploring how Shore Capital Partners brings billion-dollar resources to the lower middle market space.
Anderson Williams:This episode is part of a series in which I talk with Bill Clendenon, Charlie Talbot, and Michael Burcham about what makes a great Shore Capital board member.
Anderson Williams:This is a follow up to our series featuring Bill and Michael on what makes a great Shore Capital CEO.
Anderson Williams:Bill, Charlie, and Michael know what a good board member and a good board look like from deep experience, not just serving on boards, but working as Lead Independent Directors for numerous Shore companies, in addition to being executives who have led and had to manage multiple boards themselves over their respective careers.
Anderson Williams:In this episode, they get really practical about how a CEO can best leverage their board for strategy, talent, and execution.
Anderson Williams:They talk about what to do, what not to do, and how to turn a board into a real strategic asset.
Anderson Williams:In other words, how does a CEO use their board?
Anderson Williams:Well, so Bill, from your experience, when we say use the board well, what does that look like?
Anderson Williams:What's a CEO doing or not doing that's using the board well?
Bill Clendenen:So one of the things I think a CEO's primary job is in his or her relationship with the board, is to not only protect your own personal and professional credibility, but also your teams.
Bill Clendenen:And so I think being able to talk about the hard issues without necessarily rose colored glasses, that transparency not only gives you credibility as you have these difficult discussions.
Bill Clendenen:Over 20 plus board meetings, setting this foundation early is really important.
Bill Clendenen:So I think that's the first thing you need to do.
Bill Clendenen:In my experience, CEOs often get into trouble when they set unrealistic or unreasonable goals.
Bill Clendenen:And so as you think about Shore, and its focus on setting annual quarterly goals, setting an annual budget, be realistic.
Bill Clendenen:And so as I think about boards that I've been on, oftentimes if the CEO and management team create unrealistic objectives, goals, and a budget, it's often very hard for management to get ahead of the future.
Bill Clendenen:And so as I think about a great way for a CEO to use the board well is have the board pressure test your budget pressure, test your objectives.
Bill Clendenen:What does that look like?
Bill Clendenen:The other thing I would say in using a board, and I encourage all of my CEOs that I am a LID for is to create board profiles.
Bill Clendenen:So when I was CEO, I had essentially a dossier on all of my board members.
Bill Clendenen:And what I would do is if I was struggling with something or had a question about something, I could have, a quick sheet that I could refer to is maybe they had an experience that could help me here.
Bill Clendenen:So that was one.
Bill Clendenen:The second thing I would do is I would create quarterly check-ins with each and every one of my board members.
Bill Clendenen:And what I would do is I'd create a mini agenda.
Bill Clendenen:I'd block off 30 to 45 minutes for each call.
Bill Clendenen:I would send it to them a couple days in advance, ask for their input and insight on a quarterly basis.
Bill Clendenen:What that allowed me to do is develop strong relationships with my board, which actually then translated in the boardroom, right?
Bill Clendenen:Because a board member could say, I've been working with Bill.
Bill Clendenen:He's been struggling with this.
Bill Clendenen:This is where I think he's at.
Bill Clendenen:It really helps build your and your team's credibility if you lean there.
Bill Clendenen:So, I'd say a couple of the things that have been very successful to me is leveraging your board in a meaningful way, and that means pressure testing your budgets and your objectives and your strategic plan.
Bill Clendenen:Then also bringing the board under the tent with you as a CEO.
Bill Clendenen:What are your challenges?
Anderson Williams:Charlie, when you think about what Bill's describing there, how does a CEO think about prioritizing that time?
Anderson Williams:As compared to the infinite other seeming priorities in a way that sounds great, but I suspect when you're sitting in the CEO seat, it's really hard to think about managing and scheduling 30 to 45 minutes with your board.
Anderson Williams:Talk a little bit about how, maybe we can reframe the thinking about the value of that time and the importance of that time of for a CEO.
Charlie Talbot:Yeah.
Charlie Talbot:I view it as a really important investment for the team.
Charlie Talbot:One thing that derails us in terms of just sort of running a business and operating efficiently is when you have outside influences that start sort of pushing you in directions that you shouldn't be going.
Charlie Talbot:If you have those relationships with board members and you invest the time to bring them along with your thinking you reduce the chance of being pushed in a direction that will create, you know, sort of disruption in the business and ultimately waste time in what we're trying to accomplish.
Charlie Talbot:So I think as a rationale for making these calls and as, and building the relationships, taking the time to build the relationships, it's really viewed in my mind as an investment to making you more efficient as a team.
Michael Burcham:What Bill and Charlie are describing is this notion of taking time throughout your week to have at least a small window where you work on the business and not just in it.
Michael Burcham:And these conversations with board members are sacred time when you're actually working on your business, not just in it.
Michael Burcham:The job of a CEO is pretty lonely, I would think most CEOs, if they're really honest, have 1,000,001 things they can't talk yet to their management team about, 'cause they're just formulating in their mind whether it's a worry or even an opportunity.
Michael Burcham:Both have a timing sequence of when they're shared or otherwise they've become distracting of the work of the day.
Michael Burcham:So having a board member you can bounce some of those ideas off of is a really important part of the relationship.
Michael Burcham:I think some of my best interactions as a CEO is when I would schedule a time with a board member and I would just simply ask them to play devil's advocate with me that here's what I'm thinking.
Michael Burcham:In your experience, what could go wrong here?
Michael Burcham:How might I de-risk this?
Michael Burcham:What might I be missing?
Michael Burcham:How could I make this even better?
Michael Burcham:And I reserve the right to make my own call, but if I just give them permission to play devil's advocate, well ahead of the board meeting one, I won't get that kind of odd reaction in the meeting 'cause I've got it ahead of the meeting and I'm probably gonna be better prepared.
Michael Burcham:So to me, asking a board member to play devil's advocate on an issue you're worried about or an opportunity you're considering.
Michael Burcham:Can be some of the most fruitful conversations you can possibly have with any board member, 'cause they'll all have a slightly different view.
Michael Burcham:And if you hear them all out, you'll probably get a spectrum of ideas or thoughts that the truth for you is probably somewhere in the middle of all that.
Anderson Williams:You guys have each described the importance of alignment with the strategic plan.
Anderson Williams:How should a CEO think about proactively and actively keeping the strategic plan present in board communications in this board engagement conversations?
Anderson Williams:How do you keep the board not just sort of, we built the strategic plan, we present it to the board once and assume they're aligned over time until we refresh it.
Anderson Williams:But what do the most successful CEOs do to keep that strategic plan present in their board conversations?
Charlie Talbot:I think that it starts with how you organize the discussion and the materials around the org discussion.
Charlie Talbot:So I think it's a really great practice to remind, you know, board members come in quarterly, sometimes they're doing a lot of things in between, and so I think it's worth the time to just reacquaint everyone with the strategy that you're running against.
Charlie Talbot:Then I would just make sure that your board materials follow that strategy, and I think it's a good way to organize your thoughts and your team's thoughts around how you wanna present the business.
Charlie Talbot:It's also a really important way in the context of engaging board members to remind them what it is you're trying to accomplish.
Michael Burcham:You know, each of our companies will have three to five strategic initiatives or objectives for that year, that build over time, because our whole period's about five years and they become more sophisticated every year.
Michael Burcham:I think having that listing in the front of the deck and a status report on each initiative.
Michael Burcham:It doesn't have to be lengthy, but just where we are with that is a really good reminder.
Michael Burcham:Something I've seen a few of our CEOs do on the boards I sit on that I really appreciate is when each team member's giving an update, whether it's human capital or operations or finance, they refer to which of their strategic initiatives their update is addressing.
Michael Burcham:That's really powerful because even before they start talking about their update, I get a subtle reminder, oh, this ties to this growth initiative.
Michael Burcham:So as I give feedback, I should keep in context of that when I'm giving thoughts, so I don't just give random suggestions that aren't tied to the strategy.
Michael Burcham:Those are two I've seen that work really well is a really concise right up front in the deck.
Michael Burcham:Says, here are three to five we've agreed on and a status of where each is.
Michael Burcham:And then as each team member is presenting their functional area, a general reminder to the board, here are the two or three strategic initiatives that my report today reflects.
Bill Clendenen:It's a great question and I agree with both what Charlie and and Michael said, and as a CEO, it's your job to translate the strategic plan into these operational initiatives that then tie to the budget, that then tie to the KPIs that tie to your annual goals, that tie to your quarterly goals.
Bill Clendenen:And so this is where the science of strategic planning translates into art.
Bill Clendenen:And so how you align not only the board but your management team in Shore along those initiatives is critical.
Bill Clendenen:And so I think as a board member, as a CEO, you have to cascade that strategic plan into actionable time-bound milestones with accountability to specific management team members who need to execute on those initiatives.
Bill Clendenen:And so translating the strategic plan into operational plans is one of the hardest things that new CEOs, do Michael and your team at Shore here help with that strategic initiative development.
Bill Clendenen:And then you have to execute it.
Bill Clendenen:So I think the challenge for CEOs, particularly new ones, is how to translate strategy into action.
Michael Burcham:Good point.
Charlie Talbot:To build on that.
Charlie Talbot:It's a great point because a lot of times N-1s don't necessarily have as much exposure as CEOs or people who have more experience in these settings, so it's really important for the CEO to coach their N-1s to make sure that what they're talking about is in alignment with how the strategy's been laid out.
Charlie Talbot:Really, really critical.
Anderson Williams:Fundamentally, as I listen to you all and think about the role of both the board and the CEO, you're establishing a really critical relationship for the success of the business.
Anderson Williams:And in addition to, you know, managing the meetings well, preparing and so forth.
Anderson Williams:When you're in a newly forming relationship with an often first time CEO and you're on the board, what are one or two things that you've observed a CEO do that are the things that really helped you build that confidence and that trust early that this person had things managed, or there are a couple of things that you've seen the best CEOs, regardless of age or experience or industry do that made you feel really confident as a board member.
Charlie Talbot:I'll start.
Charlie Talbot:I think the biggest thing for me is that the conversations that happen where the CEO's not talking as a board member, when I see the functional leaders, the N-1s are on the table talking about the business in a way that is fully aligned with the strategy and focused on execution with the right KPIs in place, then I know that things have been dialed in pretty well from the CEO chair.
Charlie Talbot:That's, to me, is the biggest tell.
Michael Burcham:So consistency of behavior is the first thing I look for.
Michael Burcham:Inconsistency destroys trust.
Michael Burcham:Consistency builds trust.
Michael Burcham:And that's true with the team and that's true with the board.
Michael Burcham:If I'll observe a CEO inconsistent in the way they follow up, in the way they reach out to me, in the way they run their meeting, I know that it's 10x amplified with their team and I'm worried.
Michael Burcham:So consistency to me is the number one thing I look for because if that CEO is.
Michael Burcham:Really consistent with the board, I feel like they're probably consistent with their team and that consistency will create a bond of trust, that they're really open, honest, and transparent with one another.
Michael Burcham:I think the second thing that builds my confidence is when things aren't going well, rather than a litany of excuses.
Michael Burcham:I hear actions.
Michael Burcham:This is what I plan to do.
Michael Burcham:This is what happened.
Michael Burcham:We did not expect it to happen.
Michael Burcham:Yeah, it's bad, but here's what I'm doing about it.
Michael Burcham:That to me is like, alright, I can get behind that.
Michael Burcham:But if all I hear is excuses of why it didn't go well and nothing that says, this is what I plan to do going forward.
Michael Burcham:I get nausea really fast as a board member.
Michael Burcham:'cause excuses are cheap.
Michael Burcham:Action and taking action is what's gonna get rewarded.
Anderson Williams:On the flip side of that, when you think about CEOs you've struggled with in terms of leading the board, building that kind of trust or that kind of confidence or otherwise, what are some of the kind of anti-patterns that are those red flag concerns?
Anderson Williams:Michael, you just mentioned inconsistency would be one of those patterns.
Anderson Williams:Are there other patterns that are kind of red flags or watch outs for you?
Michael Burcham:Yeah, so the biggest one is the CEO who always has all the answers 'cause none of us, even us board members don't have all the answers.
Michael Burcham:So when you've got the answer to every single question or you're even interrupting your team with a more eloquent answer, I worry for you 'cause nobody's that smart.
Michael Burcham:And if you think you're that smart, you're probably not listening to good counsel.
Michael Burcham:So that's a red flag for me.
Michael Burcham:Also, any CEO, particularly our first time CEOs who put on this persona that everything is.
Michael Burcham:Perfect worries me because I know on a daily basis they deal with anxiety, disappointment, let down, fatigue.
Michael Burcham:I know the sacrifices they're making for their family.
Michael Burcham:Most first time CEOs are filled with imposter syndrome, and if I don't see a little humility coming through and someone who has that sense of self-awareness.
Michael Burcham:I know that their emotional intelligence even of themselves is pretty low, so I'm going to assume that that insight to their team and their customers and everyone around them is equally low, and that's another big red flag.
Bill Clendenen:For me, to follow up on Michael's comments, I want to see the CEO with their hand on the helm.
Bill Clendenen:I want them to be in charge of the meeting.
Bill Clendenen:The Shore look, the buck stops with them.
Bill Clendenen:The CEO's in charge and so how do you create trust, develop relationships?
Bill Clendenen:A lot of it boils down to time, right?
Bill Clendenen:And so as you progress through this five year partnership, time will help you develop those things.
Bill Clendenen:But there's some things that I think you can watch out for, right?
Bill Clendenen:Things that I watch out for in the ones addition to Michael talked about are surprises.
Bill Clendenen:CEOs who keep their cards tight and don't get ahead of problems, lack humility.
Bill Clendenen:And avoid having the hard discussions.
Bill Clendenen:That's a watch out.
Bill Clendenen:Sandbagging the, you know, the opposite of, you know, oh, we're gonna downplay the budget and they're always hitting the number.
Bill Clendenen:You're probably not being pushed or stretched enough.
Bill Clendenen:And so at the end of the day, I don't think they will be as successful as CEO, uh, at the end.
Bill Clendenen:I see this also in some board meetings, particularly in the early stages where we're only getting what I call headline only updates.
Bill Clendenen:I don't see the work behind the headline.
Bill Clendenen:And so as a board member, not only do I wanna see the headline and the conclusions have been made from that, but I also wanna see their work.
Bill Clendenen:And so what are they providing to help me understand the problems that they're facing?
Bill Clendenen:And the last one, because I've been a board member, an LID, and a Shore CEO, I think it's really important that the Shore, CEO, own the relationship with the board.
Bill Clendenen:Don't delegate that relationship to the CFO.
Bill Clendenen:Don't delegate that relationship to the LID.
Bill Clendenen:Don't delegate that relationship to the investment team.
Bill Clendenen:This is your board.
Bill Clendenen:These are your people.
Bill Clendenen:They are behind you a hundred percent until they're not.
Bill Clendenen:So use him as effectively in developing your strategy and execution plan.
Anderson Williams:I have to believe that when you're thinking about trust and relationships and the opportunity for red flags or otherwise to surface, that's often in some of the more complex decisions that you're facing as a CEO, where maybe you're tested in ways that you haven't been tested.
Anderson Williams:Maybe you don't feel as confident as you would in other decisions.
Anderson Williams:You mentioned avoiding surprises.
Anderson Williams:Bill, if I'm sitting in the CEO seat and thinking about navigating my board, how do I pre-wire complex decisions to make sure there aren't surprises, but also to make sure we have the right transparency, we have the right amount of debate and so forth.
Anderson Williams:How do I get ahead of those kind of more complex decisions?
Bill Clendenen:Some of those things we've talked about is tips for managing those relationships.
Bill Clendenen:So if you have quarterly calls with your board members, if you have effective monthly calls with the board as it relates to financials or M&A, your weekly calls with Shore, all those things should avoid those surprises, but you'd be surprised that sometimes that always isn't the case.
Bill Clendenen:And so one of the tips that I find really useful, Michael talked about it earlier, talk to your board 72 hours before the board meeting, they've received the deck pre-wire, or let them know, Hey, this is gonna be an issue.
Bill Clendenen:Let's talk about it.
Bill Clendenen:The way that I most effectively manage these things is what we call the pre-board meeting dinner.
Bill Clendenen:So you get your board in a social setting and you personally work the room to identify issues that either you or your team is facing and just pre-wire before the meeting even starts.
Bill Clendenen:Another technique that I've seen CEOs use effectively is having a pre non-executive board meeting where most non-executive sessions occur after the meeting, the CEO can ask the board and the chairman to have a pre non-exec session where you can identify some of the issues privately with the board before opening that issue up in the middle of a board meeting.
Bill Clendenen:So those are some techniques and tips that I found useful.
Charlie Talbot:A couple things to add to that.
Charlie Talbot:One is, and this is where you can really use your Lead Independent Director to support what you're asking about Anderson.
Charlie Talbot:So one of the things as a Lead Independent Director, I connect with our CEO weekly, but then a couple weeks before the board meeting, I have one-on-one reach outs with all the board members.
Charlie Talbot:Really, there's no agenda from my perspective.
Charlie Talbot:It's just a simple, what questions do you have around the business?
Charlie Talbot:This is in advance of them getting board materials.
Charlie Talbot:So it's really just basic, fundamental, general issues that are on their minds.
Charlie Talbot:And while I'm not trying to have the board meeting in advance of the board meeting, I am trying to gauge where their questions and potential concerns are.
Charlie Talbot:That way I can sort of, I can manage that back towards the CEO and make sure that he or she is aware of where the board members' heads are at.
Charlie Talbot:I think that's not hard to do, but it's a really easy way to get the conversation directed or to get in front of issues.
Charlie Talbot:In some cases that just the coaching of the CEO is, Hey, you might want to get in front of this with this potential board member in advance of the, of the meeting if there's a real concern.
Charlie Talbot:So I think there's this communication is critical.
Charlie Talbot:I think that use your Lead Independent Director, and I think that just making sure that, as we've all said, there's an attitude of no surprises when you get to a board meeting.
Michael Burcham:The issue of bringing a complex issue to the board requires some pretty thoughtful preparation.
Michael Burcham:Most of the time, if it's going to go poorly, it's because the CEO is taking too big a bite, and the board is learning about the issue and hearing a plan all within 10 minutes with no time to think about it.
Michael Burcham:You're gonna get emotional, visceral reaction if you do that as a CEO.
Michael Burcham:And it may not be pretty.
Michael Burcham:You would do better to talk to board members in advance, and then when you come to the board meeting to follow up on Bill and Charlie, say, today we're bringing this up because we're going to be assessing this.
Michael Burcham:We're not looking for a decision today, but this is how we plan to assess this.
Michael Burcham:And over the next few weeks, I'll be bringing you our assessment with a plan.
Michael Burcham:And if you've talked to board members, you should say, and I had the opportunity to talk to Bill ahead of the meeting, and here's how Bill asked me to think about this.
Michael Burcham:And I had the opportunity to talk to Charlie ahead of the meeting and here's how Charlie told me to think about it.
Michael Burcham:So you basically are validating your board members' support for how you're gonna proceed before you ever open it up for any discussion.
Michael Burcham:That kinda neutralizes the negative news if you've done it in advance and cut it at least into two parts.
Michael Burcham:We're gonna assess, we're gonna bring you back our findings, and then we're gonna propose a plan.
Michael Burcham:And even when I proposed a plan, I've done the same thing all over again.
Michael Burcham:And I know Charlie's already weighed in on the plan bill's already weighed in on the plan.
Michael Burcham:A different board member's already weighed in on the plan.
Michael Burcham:That's so much smarter than hitting the board with new concepts on a complex issue that could change the direction or course of the company.
Michael Burcham:That's never a good thing.
Anderson Williams:Well, and you, you led me, Michael right to my last question for this episode.
Anderson Williams:Uh, and thinking about CEO and best ways to engage with the board, when you brought up the emotional and visceral reaction that can emerge from a board, I mean, let's be honest, you've got experienced, knowledgeable, confident, probably pretty strong personalities in a boardroom.
Anderson Williams:It isn't like you always have complete control of the meeting or the conversation.
Anderson Williams:So to wrap this episode, what do you do as a CEO when you feel you're losing control of the conversation or the meeting and the board starts to take over?
Anderson Williams:Charlie, maybe I'll start with you, but any tips for just that reality where you've accidentally triggered a bigger question than you intended to trigger?
Anderson Williams:You've triggered emotions you didn't intend to trigger, stuff happens.
Anderson Williams:What do you do?
Charlie Talbot:Well, one thing is just to be open about it and just suggest that you may have triggered something that you didn't intend to, and you'd love to get the meeting back to the course that it was on before.
Charlie Talbot:That may or may not work, but it's, it's always at times worth a try.
Charlie Talbot:I think a couple things.
Charlie Talbot:One is this is where a Lead Independent Director can help to be that bridge between the board and the CEO and good Lead Independent Directors will sense that and they'll be able to redirect the conversation either by taking it offline or, or having a follow up or whatnot and getting the meeting back to where the CEO wants to take it.
Charlie Talbot:But you know, I think, so that's one option.
Charlie Talbot:Other than that, you know, Bill, I'd love your perspective, given that you probably were in that situation before
Bill Clendenen:many times.
Bill Clendenen:You've never had it happen.
Bill Clendenen:I've never had that happen.
Bill Clendenen:Um, I, I have a more tactical approach.
Bill Clendenen:I call for a quick bio break and then redirect with a partner and the Lead Independent Director and say, how do we want to push this, right?
Bill Clendenen:Because oftentimes, you know, Michael talked earlier about really what we value and board members and sometimes, board members have a perspective from the rear view mirror that they bring to bear onto the company.
Bill Clendenen:And in that situation, if the Lead Independent Director, CEO, and board member, I mean, uh, investment team member wanna redirect, I think it's oftentimes the three together in partnership.
Bill Clendenen:Essentially putting a fence around.
Bill Clendenen:It's usually a board member with a particular experience that was negative for them that they're bringing to bear on this company.
Bill Clendenen:And so unless it is a true measure or experience that is of benefit that we want to table for a future time, I find that partnering with the LID and the investment team leader, the partner in corralling that situation is most effective.
Charlie Talbot:Yeah, I agree.
Michael Burcham:I usually would say something like this.
Michael Burcham:This topic clearly requires a good hour of our time, and we don't have that today, and my team is not completely prepared to answer the questions you have.
Michael Burcham:We'll be setting up a call next week for all of us to talk about this one issue and we'll all we'll be sharing information with you in advance.
Michael Burcham:That doesn't dismiss the topic, but instead it says it's worthy of time.
Michael Burcham:We just don't have time today.
Michael Burcham:Then before I do that next meeting, I'm certainly going to follow up with each board member, get their temperature on it so that I'm completely prepared.
Michael Burcham:Something that though this triggers for me to think about, and I think it's helpful as part of this podcast, is that people have patterns of behavior, whether you're a board member, an investor, a CEO, and if you've got a board member who constantly has this pattern of disrupting a board meeting.
Michael Burcham:By asking either questions that should be obvious, the answer or it's clear they did not read the material, or they're just naive to the whole business.
Michael Burcham:You'd be so much smarter as a CEO to go ahead and do your one-on-one with them as though it were their own little board meeting ahead and simply say, here are the three topics I plan to bring up in a few days.
Michael Burcham:What are your questions?
Michael Burcham:What do you need to know?
Michael Burcham:What are you worried about?
Michael Burcham:Can you get behind me and support me on this before they walk in the room?
Michael Burcham:Force them to be prepared.
Michael Burcham:And is it will likely avoid the disruption.
Michael Burcham:And I think my final thought on this is there are board members who just love to give you suggestions.
Michael Burcham:They just are like a big old suggestion box of to-dos.
Michael Burcham:I usually have somebody on my team keeping that list and then I will reach out and say, Bill, you made these 10 suggestions at the board meeting.
Michael Burcham:Let's go one by one.
Michael Burcham:Here's how we evaluate it.
Michael Burcham:Here's what we can and can't do.
Michael Burcham:And I go through it at nauseum.
Michael Burcham:If I start to do that.
Michael Burcham:Bill will be much more selective about his questions in the future, and it's just a great way to inversely teach someone how to be a good board member and stay in the lane of a board member and not trying to be your shadow as the CEO.
Anderson Williams:If you enjoyed this episode, be sure and check out our five part Bigger.
Anderson Williams:Stronger.
Anderson Williams:Faster.
Anderson Williams:series on What Makes a Great CEO.
Anderson Williams:Additionally, throughout our Microcap Moments series, you'll find interviews and profiles of successful CEOs, Executive Partners and Lead Independent Directors, including our one-on-one with Charlie Talbot.
Anderson Williams:This podcast was produced by Shore Capital Partners and recorded in the Andrew Malone Podcast Studio with story and narration by Anderson Williams.
Anderson Williams:Recording by Austin Johnson.
Anderson Williams:Editing by Reel Audiobooks.
Anderson Williams:Sound design, mixing, and mastering by Mark Galup of Reel Audiobooks.
Anderson Williams:Special thanks to Bill Clendenen, Charlie Talbot, and Michael Burcham.
Anderson Williams:This podcast is the property of Shore Capital Partners, LLC.
Anderson Williams:None of the content herein is investment advice and offer of investment advisory services, nor a recommendation or offer relating to any security.
Anderson Williams:See the Terms of Use page on the Shore Capital website for other important information.