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Company Secretary Meetings Scheduling Agendas Exec. Liaisons Presentations Corp Sec Line Corp Sec Line Annual Filings Resolutions Group Structure EGM / AGM Co. Sec. Team Records IP Transfer / Creative

Introduction

“A presentation from the company secretary isn’t just slides and numbers - it’s how the board and shareholders see corporate governance in action.” – Matt Glynn

For a company secretary, presentations are not an occasional extra; they’re a central part of the job. Every major governance process - from AGM presentations to board meeting presentations - is anchored by the information you prepare, present, and file. This station sets out the main corp secretarial presentation types, then shows how to deliver them effectively so you meet compliance obligations and respect stakeholder time.

Corp Secretarial Presentation Types

Board Meeting Presentations
◼️ Overview: Covers agenda items, company performance highlights, governance updates, and key resolutions for decision.
◼️ Audience: Board of Directors, Company Chair, CEO, selected senior executives.
◼️ Frequency: Typically quarterly, or as per board schedule.
◼️ Key Content:
- Company performance metrics (financial & operational highlights).
- Governance and compliance status.
- Strategic project updates.
- Resolutions requiring board approval.

Annual General Meeting (AGM) Presentations
◼️Overview: Reports statutory matters, summarises annual results, outlines resolutions, and provides shareholder updates.
◼️Audience: Shareholders, Board of Directors, senior executives, external auditors.
◼️Frequency: Annually, within statutory timelines.
◼️Key Content:
- Annual report highlights and financial performance.
- Director elections or re-elections.
- Dividend proposals.
- Shareholder resolutions and voting process.

Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) Presentations
◼️Overview: Focuses on specific approvals such as capital raising, corporate restructuring, or constitutional amendments.
◼️Audience: Shareholders, Board of Directors, relevant senior executives.
◼️Frequency: Ad hoc, as required.
◼️Key Content:
- Background to the proposal.
- Rationale and benefits for the company.
- Voting mechanics and procedural requirements.

Committee Meeting Presentations
◼️Overview: Delivered to Audit, Risk, Remuneration, Nomination, or ESG committees; reports compliance status, governance developments, and relevant KPIs.
◼️Audience: Committee members, board observers, relevant executives.
◼️Frequency: Quarterly or as per committee charter.
◼️Key Content:
- Committee-specific updates (e.g., audit findings, remuneration benchmarking, ESG targets).
- Regulatory compliance status.
- Action plans for issues identified.

Regulatory Compliance Updates
◼️Overview: Summarises changes in corporate, securities, or listing rules and their impact on company operations.
◼️Audience: Board of Directors, senior management, compliance teams.
◼️Frequency: Ad hoc, or when significant regulatory changes occur.
◼️Key Content:
- New laws/regulations and their applicability.
- Required changes to company policy or operations.
- Compliance deadlines and next steps.

Corporate Governance Training
◼️Overview: Educates directors and senior management on governance principles, fiduciary duties, and best practices.
◼️Audience: Board members, senior management, functional heads.
◼️Frequency: Annually or upon director onboarding.
◼️Key Content:
- Roles and responsibilities under corporate law.
- Best practice governance standards.
- Case studies of governance failures and lessons learned.

Risk & Compliance Reporting
◼️Overview: Highlights key risks, compliance breaches, remedial actions, and assurance activities.
◼️Audience: Board of Directors, Risk Committee, senior executives.
◼️Frequency: Quarterly or as determined by the risk management framework.
◼️Key Content:
- Risk heatmaps and trend analysis.
- Compliance status against KPIs.
- Incident reports and remediation measures.

Entity Management Updates
◼️Overview: Reports on the status of group subsidiaries, filings, licences, and ongoing legal obligations.
◼️Audience: Board of Directors, legal team, relevant executives.
◼️Frequency: Quarterly or semi-annual.
◼️Key Content:
- Entity register and ownership structure.
- Filing and licence compliance status.
- Corporate structure changes.

Corporate Transactions Briefings
◼️Overview: Explains governance processes, shareholder approvals, and documentation for M&A, IPOs, or other strategic transactions.
◼️Audience: Board of Directors, senior management, shareholders (where relevant).
◼️Frequency: As required by transaction timetable.
◼️Key Content:
- Deal overview and objectives.
- Approval requirements and timelines.
- Impact on governance and capital structure.

Shareholder Communications
◼️Overview: Presents investor engagement strategies, voting results, and key shareholder feedback trends.
◼️Audience: Board of Directors, senior executives, investor relations team.
◼️Frequency: Annually or as needed after major shareholder events.
◼️Key Content:
- Shareholder meeting results.
- Investor feedback summaries.
- Engagement plans for future.|

Director Induction Presentations
◼️Overview: Onboards new board members with governance framework, company structure, and regulatory obligations.
◼️Audience: Newly appointed directors.
◼️Frequency: Upon appointment.
◼️Key Content:
- Company overview and strategic priorities.
- Governance structure and key policies.
- Director duties and compliance expectations.

Policy & Procedure Rollouts
◼️Overview: Explains newly adopted governance policies or corporate codes of conduct.
◼️Audience: Board of Directors, senior management, employees.
◼️Frequency: As required by policy changes.
◼️Key Content:
- Policy purpose and scope.
- Key compliance obligations.
- Implementation and monitoring process.

PAA: How often does a company secretary present?
 It depends on the compliance calendar; in most active companies, expect monthly as a baseline and weekly during high-activity periods.

Why This is Important

This is an important stage of the start-up journey because;

◼️Compliance assurance: Clear, accurate presentations ensure statutory disclosures are made.

◼️Decision velocity: Concise visuals: drive faster, better board decisions.

◼️Stakeholder trust: Professional delivery: signals disciplined corporate governance.

◼️Audit trail: Filed decks: become part of the official meeting pack.

◼️Risk control: Complete content: reduces omissions and challenges.

◼️Time efficiency: Structured flow: respects busy director calendars.

◼️Investor readiness: Consistent reporting: reassures current and prospective investors.

◼️Reputation benefits: High-quality slides: elevate the company’s image.

PAA: Who signs off a governance presentation?
Typically the chair signs off content flow; the company secretary owns accuracy and completeness.

Consequences of Not Addressing This Issue

Legal Implications
- Missing required disclosures in AGM presentations can invalidate resolutions.
- Inaccurate or incomplete compliance updates may attract regulatory findings.

Founder Relationship Issues
- Confusing decks erode confidence in management and the company secretary.
- Misaligned messaging fuels board-shareholder friction.

Commercial Implications
- Investors discount valuation if reporting quality looks weak.
- Deals stall when board meeting presentations don’t surface critical approvals clearly.

Operational Implications
- Meetings overrun due to poor structure, wasting executive time.
- Rework spikes as teams fix preventable presentation errors.

Biz Valuation Issues
- Weak corporate governance signalling depresses multiples.
- Higher due diligence costs to reconstruct clean reporting.

The above lists are indicative issues – the relevance of which will depend on your circumstance

How These Risks Can Play Out

The AGM Blind Spot – The company secretary presents year-end slides but omits the auditor’s report, assuming it’s “in the annual report.” Shareholders refuse to vote; the AGM must be reconvened. Cost: legal fees, venue rebookings, and a six‑week dividend delay. The episode dents confidence in the company’s corporate governance.

The Board Data Dump – Quarterly board meeting presentation packs are 150+ slides of raw exports. Directors cannot isolate decisions, so a crucial financing approval is missed. The facility lapses; the company scrambles for replacement funding on worse terms, burning management time for months.

The EGM Slide Mishap – An EGM presentation on a restructure includes outdated regulatory references. A shareholder raises the error; counsel advises deferral. Media coverage brands the company “sloppy,” and the target insists on tighter warranties, increasing deal cost and risk.

Final Thoughts

If the agenda sets the route, the presentation is the vehicle. Mastering content, structure, and delivery is a core company secretarial skill. Do it well and you discharge obligations cleanly, drive faster decisions, and project professionalism; do it poorly and you invite delays, challenges, and credibility damage.

How GLS Can Help You

We offer:

◼️Branded presentation templates for all meeting types.

◼️Content structuring aligned to agenda and resolutions.

◼️Compliance reviews of slides and speaker notes.

◼️Visual design upgrades for clarity and impact.

◼️Speaker coaching for company secretaries.

◼️Full meeting pack assembly and filing.

◼️Post‑meeting debriefs and continuous improvement.

◼️Rapid‑turn support for urgent AGM and EGM decks.

◼️Playbooks for board meeting presentations and compliance updates.

◼️Governance communications training.

GET IN TOUCH

Not sure how we can help? We’d love to talk to you.

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