TY - JOUR
T1 - Corporate governance at Pinterest
T2 - time for more changes?
AU - Shea-Van Fossen, Rita J.
AU - Stickney, Lisa T.
AU - Rovenpor, Janet
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Research methodology: Data for the case came from public sources, including legal proceedings, court filings, company press releases and Securities and Exchange Commission filings. Case overview/synopsis: In June 2020, former Pinterest employees made public charges of gender and racial discrimination. Despite changes implemented by the company, several Pinterest shareholders filed derivative lawsuits charging the company with breach of fiduciary duty, waste of corporate assets, abuse of control and violating federal securities laws. The case provides an overview of the company’s management, board and stock structures, as well as information on the shareholders who sued the company and their concerns. The case raises substantial questions about management’s and board member’s responsibilities in corporate governance, illustrates how stock structures can be used to impede governance and suggests ways to evaluate activist shareholders. Complexity academic level: This case is appropriate for graduate, advanced undergraduate or executive education courses in strategy, corporate governance or strategic human resources that discuss corporate governance, fiduciary responsibilities, designing workplace culture or management responses to shareholders. Instructors can apply two sets of theories and frameworks to this case: theories of corporate governance and Hirschman’s (1970) exit, voice or loyalty framework in the context of shareholder activism.
AB - Research methodology: Data for the case came from public sources, including legal proceedings, court filings, company press releases and Securities and Exchange Commission filings. Case overview/synopsis: In June 2020, former Pinterest employees made public charges of gender and racial discrimination. Despite changes implemented by the company, several Pinterest shareholders filed derivative lawsuits charging the company with breach of fiduciary duty, waste of corporate assets, abuse of control and violating federal securities laws. The case provides an overview of the company’s management, board and stock structures, as well as information on the shareholders who sued the company and their concerns. The case raises substantial questions about management’s and board member’s responsibilities in corporate governance, illustrates how stock structures can be used to impede governance and suggests ways to evaluate activist shareholders. Complexity academic level: This case is appropriate for graduate, advanced undergraduate or executive education courses in strategy, corporate governance or strategic human resources that discuss corporate governance, fiduciary responsibilities, designing workplace culture or management responses to shareholders. Instructors can apply two sets of theories and frameworks to this case: theories of corporate governance and Hirschman’s (1970) exit, voice or loyalty framework in the context of shareholder activism.
KW - Board responsibilities
KW - Boards of directors
KW - Corporate governance
KW - Shareholder activism
KW - Stock
KW - Tech industry
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U2 - 10.1108/TCJ-07-2023-0173
DO - 10.1108/TCJ-07-2023-0173
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85174808558
SN - 1544-9106
VL - 20
SP - 890
EP - 916
JO - CASE Journal
JF - CASE Journal
IS - 4
ER -