The NRC Call — When the Message Comes from the Company Secretary
Company Context
- Sector: Auto Manufacturing (Passenger & Commercial Vehicles)
- Structure: Professionally managed, non-promoter driven
- Market Cap: ~₹85,000 – ₹1,10,000 crore
- Core Strategy: Predictable scale, cost efficiency, and disciplined capital allocation
In such companies, leadership is not inherited.
It is identified, evaluated, and institutionally placed.
Scene: Monthly Operations Review Meeting
The presentation is routine.
Production numbers.
Capacity utilization.
Cost pressures.
Arjun is midway through his slide when a voice interrupts.
Not the CFO. Not the CEO.
The Company Secretary (CS).
“Arjun, after this meeting, please coordinate with my office. The Nomination & Remuneration Committee has scheduled an interaction with you next week.”
And just like that — the meeting continues
No formal reaction.
No acknowledgment.
But something shifts.
Every experienced leader in that room understands exactly what just happened.
The slides keep moving — but the air in the room is no longer the same.
Why the Message Comes from the CS
This is not a business decision.
This is a Board process.
Structurally, this sits with the Company Secretary
Under the Companies Act, 2013:
- Section 203 → Company Secretary is a Key Managerial Personnel
- Responsible for ensuring Board and committee compliance
Under the SEBI (LODR) Regulations, 2015:
- The CS facilitates:
- Board processes
- Committee interactions
- governance communication
When the Nomination & Remuneration Committee (NRC) reaches out,
it does not come through business leadership.
It comes through the Company Secretary.
After the Meeting
Arjun walks to the CS’s office.
“Is this for a specific role?”
The Answer is Measured
“This interaction is part of the ongoing succession evaluation process undertaken by the Nomination & Remuneration Committee.”
Why So Controlled? (The Legal Nuance)
This is not just about confidentiality.
It is also about regulatory discipline.
- Board-level appointments can qualify as sensitive information
- Premature clarity or signaling may trigger concerns under Insider Trading norms
👉 The CS is not being vague.
He is being legally precise.
What This Actually Means
Arjun is not being “promoted.”
He is being evaluated for succession.
Inside the NRC’s Mandate
The Nomination and Remuneration Committee:
- Identifies potential directors
- Evaluates leadership pipeline
- Aligns candidates with future Board needs
Legally Anchored
Under the Companies Act, 2013 (Section 178):
- NRC must assess skills, experience, and suitability
Under SEBI (LODR) Regulations, 2015:
- Board composition must ensure:
- continuity
- competence
- governance strength
Later — A Brief Corridor Conversation
Arjun:
“I’ve been called by the NRC.”
Ravi:
“That means you’re in the succession pool for an Executive Director role.”
Why Arjun Was Identified
Not because of designation.
Not because of tenure.
Because he aligned with the company’s strategy
1. Predictable Production Capacity
- Stable output across cycles
- Reliable delivery commitments
- Reduced operational volatility
👉 Enabled market confidence
2. Margin-Conscious Operations
- Focus on cost per unit, not just volume
- Avoided overproduction in weak demand
- Balanced efficiency with cost absorption
👉 Protected profitability
3. Capital Discipline Alignment
- Questioned expansion timing
- Linked capex decisions with demand visibility
- Avoided idle capacity
👉 Supported Board-level capital strategy
4. Cross-Functional Thinking
- Integrated production with finance and sales
- Understood working capital impact
- Connected operations with financial outcomes
👉 Became Board-relevant
5. Cultural Fit and Trust
- No noise, no overstatement
- Escalated what mattered
- Built credibility over time
👉 Became reliable without supervision
6. Strategic Contribution to Vision
Arjun didn’t just run production.
He made it predictable, efficient, and capital-aligned.
Which directly supported the company’s vision of:
- scalable manufacturing
- cost efficiency
- disciplined growth
What Happens Next (Reality Check)
- NRC will interact with multiple candidates
- Internal and external profiles may be compared
- Evaluation will include:
- strategic fit
- Board readiness
- long-term alignment
There is no guarantee of appointment
Only structured consideration.
Author’s Note
This is how Executive Director appointments actually begin in institution-driven companies:
- No announcements
- No applications
- No visible process
Just one signal
A message from the Company Secretary
…and a room full of people who understand what it means — without saying a word.
Final Thought
If the message comes from business leadership,
it is about performance.
If it comes from HR,
it is about role.
But when it comes from the Company Secretary:
It means the Board is looking at you — not for what you do, but for what you can carry.

When the Company Secretary interrupts, it’s not about performance—it’s about the Board. Succession isn’t given; it’s institutionally placed. Are you ready for the call?

Disclaimer: This content is fictional and intended solely for creative expression. Any resemblance to real companies, organizations, or individuals is purely coincidental and unintended. The creator disclaims any liability arising from such resemblance.
Connect on Linkedin www.linkedin.com/in/smita-hegde-90595b1b5
Leave a comment