Throughout her twenty years as a corporate director, Emily Liggett has served on 18 public, private and non-profit boards. She has served as board chair, chair of Nom/Gov committees and on Audit and Comp committees. She currently serves on the boards of Ultra Clean Technology and Materion Corporation. She also serves as Lecturer at Stanford GSB, where she teaches board leadership. We discuss board matters, CEO mistakes, AI governance, innovation, oversight, and teaching the next generation of governance leaders.
(0:00) Intro *Reference to the Boardroom Governance Summit at Limerick Lane Cellars, Healdsburg, California (Aug 26-27, 2026)
(2:12) About the podcast sponsor: The American College of Governance Counsel.
(2:59) Start of interview.
(4:00) Origin Story of Emily, and Stewardship
(6:15) From Engineer to CEO
(7:14) Companies that she led: Elo Touch Systems (97-00), Capstone Turbine (02-03), Apexon (04-07) and NovaTorque (09-17).
(9:50) Changing geopolitics of manufacturing
(10:49) First Boards and Public Company Lessons (first board experience in Japan) "The soft skills are the hard part to do."
(15:48) On serving in private VC-backed boards. "If you know one board, you know one board. I mean, they are all so different."
(22:43) On serving in non-profit boards. "It's one of the best possible ways to get governance experience."
(26:20) CEO Mistakes
(32:03) Board Succession for leadership and skills.
(35:33) Board Evaluations Done Right
(37:41) What Makes Great Directors. *reference to Leading Edge Stewardship, by Linda Riefler and Mayree Clark (Stanford Women on Boards). "Asking the right question, at the right time, in the right way."
(39:57) AI and the Boardroom.
(46:16) Innovation Versus Oversight. "The goal is informed oversight without operational interference"
(49:34) Teaching Governance to Stanford Students
(52:17) Boards need to have a long-term orientation in this short-term world.
(52:34) Books that have greatly influenced her life:
(54:12) Her mentors. "[T]hey told me things I needed to hear in a way that I could hear them because it's easy to get defensive."
(55:38) Quotes that she thinks of often or lives her life by. "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed, citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.' by Margaret Mead.
(56:43) An unusual habit or an absurd thing that she loves.
(57:30) The living person she most admires in governance: Bob Joss.
Emily Liggett serves on the boards of Ultra Clean Technology and Materion Corporation. She also serves as Lecturer at Stanford GSB, where she teaches corporate governance and board leadership.