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Not just any broiges. An M&S broiges

July 2, 2009 10:21

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

3 min read

To mark the 125th anniversary of Marks & Spencer, executive chairman Sir Stuart Rose commissioned a glossy “coffee table” history, replete with accounts of the retailer’s innovations down the decades.

Fascinating is the section at the back, with pen portraits of M&S leaders down the decades. In the century from 1894 to 1999, when Sir Richard Greenbury stepped aside, there are just seven names. In the following decade, the company has consumed, and in some case spat out, a further seven names. The transition from family company — dominated by the Marks and Sieff families — to a more conventional corporate governance has been marked by turmoil and strife at the top, and tens of millions of pounds of shareholders’ funds have been paid out in fees for loss of office.

One might have thought that by now the squabbling M&S board had learnt its lessons and put in place a smooth succession process. No chance. Once again, at a time when efforts ought to be devoted to maintaining market share in the slump, the directors are fighting like ferrets in a sack. The origins of the current dispute date back to 2006 when (Lord) Paul Myners (now City Minister) was forced off the board after a bitter dispute with another former non-executive director, Kevin Lomax.

Together, Mr Myners and Sir Stuart, the chief executive, had fought off the takeover challenge from retail supremo Sir Philip Green, rebuilt the M&S brand and helped to restore profits to £1 bn a year — a level last reached in Sir Richard’s final year of 1999-2000.

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