Board Excellence: Beyond the Usual Suspects
Arguably, the Board has a bigger role to play in a company’s success than ever before. Innovation, diversity and sustainability present significant opportunities to well-led businesses, and challenging headwinds to those with weaker Board-level leadership.
Pipal Tree Board Search focuses on finding the best talent available rather than just recycling candidates from a limited network of established Board members. In this way we help our clients to build more diverse, and better-performing Boards.
Fresh Perspectives
By looking beyond the traditional director circuit, we bring genuinely new thinking to your boardroom.
True Diversity
Complementary Expertise Across The Board
We carefully consider how each board appointment enhances the collective capability of your governance team.
Elevating Governance for Tomorrow's Challenges
Our Board evaluation and search approach also encourages the bringing forward of first-time Board members where appropriate, to enrich the composition, diversity, and insights of a Board.
Building Boards for Modern Challenges
Strategic Board Construction
Director Identification & Assessment
Board Diversity Enhancement
First-Time Director Programs
Frequently Asked Questions on Board Services
Common questions on board and independent director services
How is board search different from executive search?
Executive search identifies leaders for operational roles inside the company. Board search identifies independent perspective – directors who can challenge management constructively, bring governance expertise, and represent stakeholder interests without being embedded in day-to-day operations.
The evaluation criteria are different: board candidates are assessed for independence, governance judgment, and the ability to add a perspective the existing board doesn’t already have, not for operational execution.
How long does a board or director search typically take?
A typical independent director search takes 8–12 weeks from mandate definition to appointment, depending on the specificity of the skills or sector expertise required and the candidate’s existing board commitments.
Searches for highly specialised expertise – a director with deep ESG, cybersecurity, or sector-specific regulatory experience, for example – can take longer.
What makes someone a strong first-time board candidate?
Strong first-time directors typically bring deep functional or sector expertise – financial, technological, regulatory, or operational – combined with the judgment to apply that expertise at a governance level rather than an operational one.
They don’t need prior board experience, but they do need to understand the difference between advising and directing, and the legal and fiduciary responsibilities that come with a board seat.
How do you think about board diversity beyond gender representation?
True board diversity includes cognitive diversity – different industries, functional backgrounds, geographies, and career paths – not just demographic representation.
A board where every director has a similar career trajectory will tend to reach similar conclusions, regardless of how demographically diverse it appears. Our search process is designed to surface candidates from outside the traditional director circuit specifically to avoid this.
Do you only search for independent directors, or also executive and non-executive board roles?
What does board advisory search involve, separate from a formal director appointment?
Some companies need governance expertise on an advisory basis before they are ready for a formal board structure – particularly growth-stage companies, family businesses professionalising their governance, or companies preparing for a future board expansion.
Board advisory search identifies the right advisor for that specific stage, with a path to a formal board role if and when that structure is established.
We are preparing for an IPO and currently working on our RHP - when should board composition be finalised?
Board composition needs to be IPO-ready well before the RHP stage – ideally 12-18 months ahead of a targeted listing, not during DRHP or RHP preparation. SEBI LODR Regulation 17 and Section 149 of the Companies Act require a defined mix of executive, non-executive, and independent directors, along with committee structures (audit, nomination and remuneration, stakeholder relationship) that meet independence and composition thresholds.
Companies that leave this until the DRHP stage typically find themselves making rushed director appointments under time pressure – exactly the dynamic that produces weak board fits and governance gaps regulators and institutional investors notice.
If your board composition work is happening in parallel with RHP preparation rather than well ahead of it, the search and the listing timeline are now competing for the same window, and that compression is where the wrong director gets appointed.