A Risk Worth Taking: Women Leaders are Good for the Bottom Line
“Risk is a mixture of danger and opportunity”—a quote by Sana Mohsni, Associate Professor, Finance—a person who is highly intrigued by corporate risk-taking behaviour.
Sana has many projects on the go with collaborators from around the world that look to uncover how changes in firms’ governance, policies, and organizational structure shape risk tolerance and appetite. For instance, she looks at how firm privatization influences firm risk behaviour, or in another study, if the establishment of corporate directors and officers insurance influences a firm’s risk behaviour.
Sana is certainly a numbers person and quantitative data, usually measured through profit maximization, is instrumental to evaluating the success of firms, but Sana is also tapping into an area of business that is quite noteworthy. In a concurrent collaborative project, Sana examines the impact of gender diversity on the performance of companies and their risk-taking behaviour. What is incredible is that their findings are substantiating the value of women as board members—and they have the numbers to prove it.
From Tunisia (where Sana was born and raised) to Canada, and the numerous countries in between, Sana has visited and collaborated with many scholars from around the globe; experiences that have allowed her to build a robust research program that fosters and infuses multiple perspectives from different corporate cultures. But it has also punctuated the reality of gender inequality and discrimination against women in business. Sana is keen to change this. Sana wants to better understand both the impact of gender diversity on the bottom line (profit maximization), as well as the impact to the risk-taking behaviour of firms when more women occupy board seats.