Why Hiring a CIO Doesn’t Remove Board Accountability

A common misconception in governance discussions:
“We hired experts. We’re covered.”
Expertise is essential.
But delegation does not eliminate accountability.
Boards delegate management.
They do not delegate oversight.
If a cybersecurity incident occurs, investigators will not stop at the IT department.
They will examine:
• Whether reporting structures existed
• Whether escalation thresholds were defined
• Whether material risks were discussed
• Whether resource decisions were documented
• Whether minutes reflect informed engagement
Hiring a CIO is prudent.
Outsourcing to a managed security provider may be wise.
Purchasing cyber insurance may be necessary.
None of those actions transfer fiduciary duty.
Just as directors remain responsible for financial oversight despite having a CFO, they remain responsible for cyber oversight despite having technical leadership.
The standard is not technical mastery.
The standard is reasonable governance.
If you serve on a board, consider this question:
Are we receiving operational updates — or exercising structured oversight?
That distinction becomes decisive when risk materializes.
#BoardGovernance #FiduciaryDuty #CyberRisk #DirectorResponsibility