Hats off to Sheppard, the shareholders' crusade
BY REBECCA STEVENSON
Relevant offers
Former Shareholders' Association chairman Bruce Sheppard was the chairman of silly hats.
It all began with a tin hat spontaneously worn at a Brierley Investments meeting that set out to "dick everyone" and shift control of the company offshore.
Held in Auckland on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1999, Mr Sheppard was successful in getting two minutes silence for Remembrance Day and "bucket loads" of media coverage of the issues besetting Brierley's Kiwi shareholders.
It also set Mr Sheppard on a sartorial course now as well-known as the organisation he chaired for 10 years.
"It dawned on me that if we can be a little bit flamboyant we can get an outcome," he said at yesterday's annual meeting – his final as chairman.
"I tried to make the issues funny and amusing and entertaining because New Zealanders have no time for business or capital markets. This was about making investment meetings and business activities humorous and pointing out the idiocy and malfeasance."
Capturing the attention of the media and commentators was crucial in shining a light on the actions of boards and companies, he said. "The hats underlined the issues."
The hats included the tin one worn to the BIL meeting, a lumberjack one to Fletchers, a Viking helmet worn to a Tower meeting in a nod to chairman Olaf O'Duill's Norwegian heritage, and a clown hat to a Rubicon meeting because Sheppard thought company management was a "circus" and the board a "bunch of clowns".
The headgear now sit on his bench at work and new association chairman John Hawkins is welcome to borrow them, he says.
Reviewing his time with the corporate watchdog, Mr Sheppard noted the association's many successes in bringing higher levels of accountability to boardrooms.
While the triumphs were "drops in the bucket over time" collectively the association's activism had altered the thinking of directors and shareholders. The Shareholders' Association had "changed the world", empowering shareholders to exercise their rights, exposing corporate greed and had finally drawn long overdue attention to the sad state of New Zealand's capital markets.
Members also paid tribute to his efforts.
Stephen Lindsay described him as an inspiration. "Behind the scenes and his freakish efforts, he has been a great achiever."
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
Salary stress increases in New Zealand
Kiwis land big Aussie contract
Roll on 2050 - New Zealand economy to rise
Local council blowouts hit $200m
Auckland Airport is flying high
Fish expert challenges green lobby
Lawyers heading for security laws stoush
Made in NZ to win Chinese hearts
Quake city assets set to be popular
EU courts Kiwis for science grants
ERA awards restructured employee $21,000
Government blamed for Psa entry
Search for missing Huntly teen scaled down
Man critically injured in Hauraki crash
Pop music star Whitney Houston dies
Gay pride parade may return to Auckland
Phoenix lose game and second place to Roar
Piri Weepu stakes his claim for No 10
Kiwis land big Aussie contract
Ryan Nelsen debuts in Tottenham win
England fight back to edge Italy in Six Nations
Suarez a 'disgrace to Liverpool' in loss to United
Police arrest five at Murdoch's Sun newspaper
Oceania, Fifa roles end in disgrace
Pop music star Whitney Houston dies
Ethnic rights advice stuns communities
Daily trivia quiz: February 12
Dotcom accused van der Kolk 'flabbergasted'
Roll on 2050 - New Zealand economy to rise
Prison officers 'turned into mules'
Pop music star Whitney Houston dies
Quake city assets set to be popular
Welly whiz-kid sees hi-tech future for education
CERA report prompts mall evacuation
Prime Minister John Key wins hearts if not minds
Do you think a milk price war will erupt?
Related story: Another shot fired in milk price battle



