The long-awaited update of the King Report on Corporate Governance for South Africa, King IV, will be launched at the Sandton Convention Centre on 1 November 2016.
Interest in the conference is high: when online registrations opened on 6 July, the first registration was made after just three minutes. By the end of the day, 83 people had already registered along with additional confirmations from an international delegation representing 13 countries across the globe.
“King IV introduces some important updates to the landmark King III’s report. In addition, it breaks new ground by differentiating clearly between principles and practices, and linking practices to outcomes–all with a view to making implementation easier,” says Angela Cherrington, CEO of the Institute of Directors in Southern Africa (IoDSA). “Governance is ever evolving, and King IV provides closer, more practical guidance on how to integrate its principles into the way organisations do business.”
The conference will be addressed by a number of prominent South African figures, including Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng; Lynne Brown, the Minister of Public Enterprises; Reuel Khoza, president of the IoDSA; David Lewis, Executive Director of Corruption Watch; Thembekile Kimi Makwetu, the Auditor General; Mervyn King, the Chairman of the King Committee; and Ansie Ramalho, the King IV Project Lead.
An international panel of speakers includes Simon Arcus, chief executive of the IoD in New Zealand; Heloisa Bedicks, MD of the Brazilian Institute of Corporate Governance; Stan Magidson, CEO of the Alberta Securities Commission, Simon Walker, Director General of the IoD in the UK and Peter Dehnen, CEO of the German Directors Association.
Cherrington says that the IoDSA has also developed a mobile app for the conference. The app will mean that delegates can create a personalised schedule and import it into their calendars, access speaker profiles, and message speakers and other delegates.
“The app will reduce the paper generated by the conference while enhancing delegates’ experience,” Cherrington says. “Other green initiatives include sourcing produce locally, using beaded rather than real flower decorations, intensive recycling and providing carbon credits for purchase by delegates.”