Corporate Governance for Indian Companies: Basics Founders Should Not Ignore
Corporate governance sounds like something that only matters to listed companies and large conglomerates. In reality, **good governance is a survival tool** even for early‑stage and mid‑size Indian businesses.
Banks look at it. Serious investors look at it. Regulators reward it. And operationally, it reduces chaos.
This post focuses on **practical corporate governance basics** for Indian private limited companies and growing businesses—things you can implement without turning into a bureaucracy.
1. What Corporate Governance Actually Means (Beyond Jargon)
At its core, corporate governance is about **how decisions are taken and recorded** in your company.
Good governance ensures:
- Clear roles and responsibilities between promoters, board, and management
- Decisions are made in the **interest of the company**, not just individuals
- Investors, lenders, and regulators can **trust your numbers and processes**
In India, the stricter rules apply to **listed companies** (under SEBI and the Companies Act). But private companies benefit when they adopt governance disciplines earlier.
2. Board of Directors: Structure and Function in Practice
Even in a closely‑held company, your **board** is not a formality. It is the formal decision‑making body.
2.1 Board Composition – Getting the Basics Right
For a growing private limited company, think about:
1. **Promoter Directors** – founders who run the business.
2. **Investor Nominee Directors** – if institutional investors have board rights.
3. **Independent or External Directors** – trusted experts who are not part of day‑to‑day operations.
Even one truly independent voice on the board can:
- Improve the quality of discussions
- Help challenge risky decisions
- Provide comfort to future investors and lenders
2.2 How Board Meetings Should Actually Run
Legal minimums under the Companies Act are one thing. Practically, you should:
1. **Schedule regular meetings** – at least once a quarter, more if needed.
2. Circulate a **structured agenda** in advance, covering:
- Financial performance
- Major contracts and risks
- HR and key hires
- Compliance and litigation updates
3. Maintain **detailed minutes** that record:
- Key points discussed
- Options considered
- Decisions taken and votes, where applicable
Minutes are not just paperwork; they are your **defence file** if decisions are challenged later.
3. Committees and Internal Controls – Scaling Governance
As you grow, you can adopt simplified versions of the committees that listed companies must have.
3.1 Audit Committee (Even Informal)
An audit committee, formal or informal, can:
- Review financial statements before they go to the board
- Discuss major accounting policies and judgments
- Track internal and statutory audit findings
For private companies, this may just be:
- One independent/external director
- CFO/finance head
- One promoter director
3.2 Internal Controls and SOPs
You don’t need a thick policy manual. Start with:
1. **Approval Matrix** – who can approve what (payments, contracts, hiring).
2. **Segregation of Duties** – ideally, the person who approves payments is not the one who accounts for them.
3. **Maker–Checker System** – important transactions are reviewed by at least two people.
These basics dramatically reduce the risk of fraud and mistakes.
4. Related Party Transactions: How to Avoid Trouble
Related party transactions (RPTs) are often where governance problems start.
4.1 What Is a Related Party?
Under Indian law, this typically includes:
- Promoters, directors, their relatives
- Entities where they have significant influence
- Group companies under common control
4.2 Managing Related Party Transactions
For every RPT:
1. **Disclose it** clearly to the board.
2. Record how pricing has been determined (e.g., market‑based, cost‑plus).
3. Get proper **board approval**, and investor approval where required.
4. Avoid situations where a director **votes on a transaction where they are personally interested**, unless the law explicitly permits it.
Transparency is key. Hidden or informal arrangements create **distrust and legal risk**.
5. Documentation: Minutes, Policies, and Registers
Good governance leaves a **paper trail**.
5.1 Board and Shareholder Minutes
Ensure that minutes:
- Are drafted promptly after meetings
- Capture resolutions clearly
- Are signed and stored securely (physical or digital, as permitted)
5.2 Key Policies to Put in Place Early
Even a lean company should have basic written policies on:
1. **Code of Conduct** – expectations from directors and senior management.
2. **Conflict of Interest** – disclosure and handling of potential conflicts.
3. **Whistleblower or Grievance Mechanism** – at least a simple channel for raising concerns.
5.3 Statutory Registers and Records
Under the Companies Act, various registers (members, directors, charges, etc.) are mandatory. Work with your CS or compliance team to **keep these updated in real time**.
6. Role of Independent Directors and Advisors
Even if you are not legally required to appoint **independent directors**, consider bringing in at least one or two external advisors in a board or board‑observer role.
Good independent directors:
- Ask hard questions without hidden agendas
- Bring experience from other boards and industries
- Help you navigate investor and regulatory expectations
Be honest about what you expect from them and ensure they get **proper information and time** to contribute meaningfully.
7. Governance as a Competitive Advantage
Good corporate governance is not just about avoiding penalties; it can actually make your business **more valuable**:
1. **Investors trust you more** – faster deals, better valuations.
2. **Banks and lenders are more comfortable** – easier access to credit.
3. **Employees feel safer** – they see fairness and structure.
4. **Founders sleep better** – less firefighting, more predictable decision‑making.
If you treat governance as a **cost or a tick‑box**, you will always do the bare minimum and stay exposed. If you treat it as a **system for better decisions**, you’ll design your board, committees, and controls to help the company, not just keep regulators happy.
Start small:
- Clean minutes
- Clear approval matrix
- Transparent related party dealings
Then build up to more sophisticated structures as you grow. That’s how you move from being “just another private company” to being **institution‑ready**.