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The Conference Board

The Conference Board, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) non-profit business membership and research group organization. It counts over 1,000 public and private corporations and other organizations as members, encompassing 60 countries.

The Conference Board
Formation1916; 108 years ago (1916)
TypeBusiness membership and research organization
Legal status501(c)(3) nonprofit
Headquarters845 Third Avenue
New York City, United States
Region
Global; regional offices in New York, Brussels, Beijing, Hong Kong, Singapore
Key people
Steve Odland, President and CEO
Staff
300
Websitewww.conference-board.org
845 Third Avenue, Manhattan

The Conference Board convenes conferences and peer-learning groups, conducts economic and business management research, and publishes several widely tracked economic indicators.

History edit

The organization was founded in 1916 as the National Industrial Conference Board (NICB). At the time, tensions between labor and management in the United States were seen as potentially explosive in the wake of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911 and the Ludlow Massacre in 1914. In 1915 presidents of twelve major corporations in the United States and six leading industry associations met in Yama, New York to formulate the business community's response to continued labor unrest and growing public criticism.[1]

After additional crisis meetings, the National Industrial Conference Board was officially founded on May 5, 1916, at the Hotel Gramatan in Bronxville, New York.[2] Although many of the organizations’ founders—including former AT&T president Frederick P. Fish and General Electric executive Magnus W. Alexander, its first president—had supported the open-shop movement, by 1916 they regarded national unions such as the American Federation of Labor as permanent fixtures of the American economy, and urged negotiation and concord.[3]

When the United States entered World War I in 1917, the National War Labor Board formed by President Woodrow Wilson asked the NICB to formulate plans that would keep war industries running and strife-free. Its recommendations—based on cooperation between representatives of employers, employees, and government—were adopted in full.[2] Though often mistrusted in its early years as an “employers union” funding studies against the labor movement,[4] the non-profit NICB was also seen “as a spokesman for the so-called progressive wing of the business community [and] produced hundreds of research reports on economic and social issues facing the United States.”[3]

Pioneering research published in this period include Woman Workers and Labor Supply,[5] The Eight-Hour Day Defined,[6] U.S. Cost of Living Index, and a series of reports on Workers' Compensation Acts in The United States.[7]

The organization today remains funded by the contributions of members, often Fortune 500 companies. By the 1930s, however, it had already lost most of its character as an industry lobby. Virgil Jordan, a writer and economist who replaced Alexander as president on the latter's death in 1932, established a Bureau of Economic Audit and Control to offer members and the public an independent source of studies on unemployment, pensions, healthcare, and related issues in the midst of the Great Depression, when many questioned the credibility of the government's economic statistics.[2] Unions soon joined the NICB alongside corporations for access to its research, conferences, and executive network.

The organization is considered an unbiased "trusted source for statistics and trends, second only to perhaps the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics".[8] After World War II, it expanded to non-U.S. members for the first time. In 1954, it founded The Conference Board of Canada in Montreal, which was spun off as an independent non-profit in 1981. In 1959, its first overseas CEO-level was held in Torquay, England, bringing together executives and board presidents from the US, UK, and Canada.

On January 1, 1970, the National Industrial Conference Board officially changed its name to The Conference Board. This followed the launch in 1967 of the U.S. Consumer Confidence Index, a monthly survey of households that remains its flagship economic indicator. In 1976, it added the Measure of CEO Confidence, which tracks the attitudes of chief executives regarding economic conditions overall and within their industry.

In 1996, the US Department of Commerce selected The Conference Board to produce and distribute the US leading economic indicator series.

In 2002, after an epidemic of business scandals, The Conference Board Commission on Public Trust and Private Enterprise was convened. Composed of leaders from both the private and the public sectors, the Commission published a report with recommendations for best practices in corporate governance.[9]

In 2006, The Conference Board established its China Center for Economic and Business in Beijing as a resource for senior executives of multinational companies.[10]

In 2015, the Committee for Economic Development (CED) merged with The Conference Board as its US public-policy center.[11]

Today, The Conference Board has offices in New York, Brussels, Beijing, Hong Kong, and Singapore. [citation needed]

Regional Centers edit

The Conference Board produces research, convenes conferences, and organizes executive peer-learning councils through topical Centers based in business hubs around the globe. In the United States, it currently operates five Centers from New York City:

In Europe, The Conference Board hosts three Centers:

  • Economy, Strategy & Finance
  • Human Capital
  • Sustainability

In the Asia-Pacific region, the organization hosts three Centers:

  • Economy, Strategy & Finance
  • Human Capital
  • Sustainability

Additionally, The Conference Board operates a China Center for executives of multinational companies.

Economic indicators and data edit

The Conference Board publishes a number of regular indicators for United States and international economies that are widely tracked by investors, business leaders, and policy makers. They include:

  • U.S. Consumer Confidence Index – Begun by The Conference Board in 1967, this monthly survey of 5,000 households is widely established as the leading measure of American consumer confidence.[12] Results from the household survey are tabulated to provide a barometer of the U.S. economy (currently indexed to the year 1985 = 100).
  • CEO Confidence Survey – The quarterly Measure of CEO Confidence gauges the outlook of chief executives in their own industries and the economy as a whole.[13] The survey also runs every six months in Europe - in cooperation with the European Round Table for Industry - and in China.[14][15]
  • CHRO Confidence Index – The quarterly CHRO Confidence Index gauges the hiring and retention outlook of US chief human resource officers.[16][17]
  • CCO+CMO Meter – A recurring tracker of marketing and communications leaders’ sentiment as to the impact they are having on their businesses and the value they are creating.[18]
  • US Job Satisfaction Survey – Annual survey launched in 1987 that acts as a barometer of US worker satisfaction, based on workers’ perceptions of their current role and their workplace environment. The latest survey tracks satisfaction across 26 components, from wages, promotion policy, and bonus plan to work/life balance, commute time, to physical workplace environment.[19]
  • US Salary Increase Budgets Survey – Since 1985, The Conference Board has been surveying compensation executives across industries and sectors on how much it plans to offer in annual salary increased. The survey asks about two main components of compensation: salary increase budget and salary structure movement. This year, 409 organizations completed the survey fielded between June 21 and July 17, 2023.[20]
  • Leading Economic Indexes – In the 1960s, the U.S. Department of Commerce began researching and releasing business cycle indicators, which use composite data points (including manufacturing, construction, and stock market indicators) to time economic expansions, recessions, and recoveries. In December 1995, The Conference Board took over the business indicator program from the government and continues to publish leading, coincident, and lagging indexes for the U.S. economy each month.[21] The program was also expanded to other economies; beyond the U.S., The Conference Board currently publishes leading, coincident, and trailing indexes for the Australia, Brazil, China, the Euro Area, France, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Spain, and the U.K.
  • Employment Trends Index – Created in 2008, the Employment Trends Index aggregates eight separate indicators and “offers a short-term, forward look at employment [that] gives economists and investors a new forecasting tool. It also helps business executives sharpen their short- to medium-term hiring and compensation planning.”[22]
  • The Conference Board-Lightcast Help Wanted OnLine® (HWOL) Index measures changes over time in advertised online job vacancies, reflecting monthly trends in employment opportunities across the US. The HWOL Data Series aggregates the total number of ads available by month from the HWOL universe of online job ads. Ads in the HWOL universe are collected in real-time from over 50,000 online job domains. The online program is the successor of the Help Wanted Advertising Index program, which was based on counts of help-wanted job advertisements in major newspapers across the nation.[23]

Additional research edit

The Conference Board's research reports and experts are often featured in a wide range of global business media—from specialist trade publications to the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, CNBC, Bloomberg News, Forbes and Fortune.

Notable examples include:

  • C-Suite Outlook – Annual survey of the most pressing challenges and responses facing CEOs and other C-Suite executives across industries and regions.[24]
  • Toward Stakeholder Capitalism – the implications of this shift for the C-Suite.[25]
  • Board Effectiveness – an annual report, done in collaboration with PwC, on how boards can become more effective.[26]
  • ESG benchmarking reports that reveal emerging trends in areas including CEO succession,[27] executive compensation,[28] corporate board practices,[29] and shareholder voting.[30]
  • Annual survey on US salary increase budgets across industries and seniority.[31]
  • Surveys of chief human resource officers on various workforce and workplace matters.[32]
  • Analyses on national public policy issues, including Social Security,[33] infrastructure,[34] cybersecurity,[35] health care,[36] labor shortages,[37] national debt,[38] energy transition,[39] child care[40]

Benchmarking data edit

The Conference Board's TCB Benchmarking software allows US public companies to benchmark their practices in various ESG areas, including environmental, human capital management, CEO and director compensation, board composition and governance, and shareholder voting.[41]

Membership and professional development edit

The Conference Board's corporate membership includes the majority of the Fortune 500.

The organization is considered a pioneer in professional councils, which were "created as a way to guide business leaders through boom and bust cycles."[42] Each council is a invitation-only, self-governed group of executives. Each year, around 2,500 executives participate in The Conference Board councils. These range from networks organized for specific C-suite titles—including multiple councils for chief financial officers, chief human resources officers, chief legal officers, and corporate treasurers—to those focused on narrower areas of expertise or emerging business challenges, such as artificial intelligence. [43]

Awards edit

The Conference Board has received multiple awards.

  • Best Companies to Work for in New York State 2024[44]
  • Crain's Best Places to Work in NYC 2023[45]
  • Best Company Outlook in 2023 and 2024 [46]
  • Best Places to Work: New York 2023 [47]
  • Best Company Perks & Benefits 2023 [48]
  • Happiest Employees 2023 [49]
  • Best Compensation 2023 [50]
  • Best Company Culture 2023 [51]
  • Best Leadership Teams 2023 [52]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tranger, James. The New York Chronology: The Ultimate Compendium of Events, People and Anecdotes from the Dutch to the Present. ISBN 978-006052341-1. p. 356
  2. ^ a b c "Conference Board timeline" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2022-02-22. Retrieved 2012-09-10.
  3. ^ a b "Collection: National Industrial Conference Board (NICB) records". Hagley Museum and Library Archives. Retrieved 2022-09-29.
  4. ^ Laue, J. Charles (1926-10-31). "LABOR AND CAPITAL TO BATTLE OVER UNIONISM; Campaign of American Federation of Labor to Combat Company Unions and To Organize Open Shop Industries Is Fought by Anti-Union Employers". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
  5. ^ Board, National Industrial Conference (1936). Women Workers and Labor Supply. National industrial conference board, Incorporated.
  6. ^ Board, National Industrial Conference (1918). The Eight-hour Day Defined. The Board.
  7. ^ Board, National Industrial Conference (1917). Workmen's Compensation Acts in the United States: The Legal Phase. National Industrial Conference Board.
  8. ^ "CONFERENCE BOARD A TRUSTED RESOURCE". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
  9. ^ "The Conference Board Commission on Public Trust and Private Enterprise" (PDF).
  10. ^ "The Conference Board Launches China Center in 2006".
  11. ^ Board, The Conference. "The Conference Board to Merge with the Committee for Economic Development". www.prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  12. ^ “Consumer Confidence: An Online NewsHour Special Report.” The Newshour with Jim Lehrer. PBS. May 2001. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/economy/jan-june01/confidence_5-29.html 2013-03-25 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Staff, Investopedia (19 June 2005). "CEO Confidence Survey". from the original on 31 May 2021. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  14. ^ "European business confidence hits rock bottom". Financial Times. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  15. ^ "China's CEOs have spoken, and new confidence index shows how multinationals' hopes turned 'sobering' in mere months". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  16. ^ "Almost all CHROs say they're responsible for employee well-being, but most aren't investing in it, survey says". HR Brew. Retrieved 2024-04-08.
  17. ^ "The top priority for HR leaders in 2024". Fortune. Retrieved 2024-04-08.
  18. ^ "CMO+CCO Meter | The Conference Board".
  19. ^ "2023 Salary Budgets Projected to Stay at 20-Year High but Trail Inflation". www.shrm.org. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  20. ^ Weber, Lauren. "WSJ News Exclusive | Workers Are Happier Than They've Been in Decades". WSJ. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  21. ^ "Conference Board: Composite Index Of Leading Indicators". 12 April 2005. from the original on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  22. ^ "Press release" (PDF). www.conference-board.org. (PDF) from the original on 2022-02-22. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
  23. ^ "Help Wanted OnLine (HWOL) Overview | Lightcast Knowledge Base". kb.lightcast.io. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  24. ^ Gryta, Thomas (2022-01-13). "Inflation Surge Is on Many Executives' List of 2022 Worries". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. from the original on 2022-02-23. Retrieved 2022-02-23.
  25. ^ "A Tectonic Shift in Capitalism Is Underway. How Business Leaders Can Keep Up".
  26. ^ "Boards aren't shouldering increased corporate responsibility, executives say". Politico.
  27. ^ McGregor, Jena. "Analysis | Fewer companies are forcing CEOs to retire when they hit their golden years". The Washington Post. from the original on 2020-10-02. Retrieved 2020-08-24.
  28. ^ Murray, Alan. "After coronavirus, expect a 'new' Delta". Fortune. from the original on 2022-09-29. Retrieved 2020-08-24.
  29. ^ Fuhrmans, Vanessa (2019-04-24). "What's Keeping More Women From Board Seats: Little Turnover". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. from the original on 2020-08-10. Retrieved 2020-08-24.
  30. ^ Paine, Lynn S.; Srinivasan, Suraj (2019-10-14). "A Guide to the Big Ideas and Debates in Corporate Governance". Harvard Business Review. ISSN 0017-8012. from the original on 2020-09-02. Retrieved 2020-08-24.
  31. ^ Davidson, Paul. "Hey millennials, look out below! Gen Zers may already be catching up in the salary race". USA Today. from the original on 2020-02-24. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
  32. ^ McGregor, Jena. "Just 4% Of Employers Are Making Everyone Return To The Office Full-Time, Survey Finds". Forbes. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  33. ^ "Fix Social Security Now. Waiting Will Cost Us".
  34. ^ "America's infrastructure has reached a breaking point. It's time to fix it".
  35. ^ "To make US more cyber-resilient, government and business need far greater collaboration".
  36. ^ "Health care spending, Medicare, workforce issues should get policymakers' attention". Insurance News | InsuranceNewsNet. 2023-10-24. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  37. ^ Decker, Paul; Fluhr, Howard; Olson, Camille (2023-04-25). "Without Immigration Reform, America's Labor Shortage is Here to Stay | RealClearPolicy". www.realclearpolicy.com. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  38. ^ Morabito, Charlotte (2023-09-10). "U.S. debt is nearly $33 trillion. But some economists say not all debt is bad". CNBC. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  39. ^ Jacob Worenklein, Cynthia Warner and Lori Esposito Murray (2023-09-20). "The climate work we must do now to meet our 2050 goals". The Hill. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  40. ^ Cindy Cisneros, opinion contributor (2020-05-15). "Working parents could face lack of child care as the economy restarts". The Hill. Retrieved 2024-04-12. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  41. ^ Segal, Mark (2020-07-16). "The Conference Board Launches ESG Benchmarking Platform for US Companies". ESG Today. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  42. ^ "How the top CHRO networking groups for HR leaders stack up". Fortune. Retrieved 2024-04-23.
  43. ^ "How the top CHRO networking groups for HR leaders stack up". Fortune. Retrieved 2024-04-23.
  44. ^ Board, The Conference. "The Conference Board Named a Best Company to Work for in New York". www.prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  45. ^ "Crain's Best Places to work in NYC 2023". Crain's New York. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  46. ^ "Best Company Outlook 2024". Comparably. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  47. ^ "Best Places to Work 2023: New York Metropolitan Area". Comparably. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  48. ^ "Best Company Perks & Benefits 2023". Comparably. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  49. ^ "Happiest Employees 2023". Comparably. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  50. ^ "Best Compensation 2023". Comparably. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  51. ^ "Best Company Culture 2023". Comparably. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  52. ^ "Best Leadership Teams 2023". Comparably. Retrieved 2022-03-22.

External links edit

  • The Conference Board, Inc. website
  • The Conference Board of Canada website
  • Works by National Industrial Conference Board at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about The Conference Board at Internet Archive
  • Industrial Conference Board Records. 1953-1963. 200 items. At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
  • Online Books by National Industrial Conference Board at UPenn Library
  • Publications by National Industrial Conference Board at Hathi Trust Digital Library
  • Publications by Conference Board at Hathi Trust Digital Library
  • Mises Institute: American Affairs 1945-1950

Archives edit

  • Industrial Conference Board Records, 1953-1963. Approximately 200 items. At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.

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For the Conference Board s Canadian counterpart see Conference Board of Canada This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources The Conference Board news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The Conference Board Inc is a 501 c 3 non profit business membership and research group organization It counts over 1 000 public and private corporations and other organizations as members encompassing 60 countries The Conference BoardFormation1916 108 years ago 1916 TypeBusiness membership and research organizationLegal status501 c 3 nonprofitHeadquarters845 Third Avenue New York City United StatesRegionGlobal regional offices in New York Brussels Beijing Hong Kong SingaporeKey peopleSteve Odland President and CEOStaff300Websitewww conference board org 845 Third Avenue Manhattan The Conference Board convenes conferences and peer learning groups conducts economic and business management research and publishes several widely tracked economic indicators Contents 1 History 2 Regional Centers 3 Economic indicators and data 4 Additional research 5 Benchmarking data 6 Membership and professional development 7 Awards 8 See also 9 References 10 External links 10 1 ArchivesHistory editThe organization was founded in 1916 as the National Industrial Conference Board NICB At the time tensions between labor and management in the United States were seen as potentially explosive in the wake of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911 and the Ludlow Massacre in 1914 In 1915 presidents of twelve major corporations in the United States and six leading industry associations met in Yama New York to formulate the business community s response to continued labor unrest and growing public criticism 1 After additional crisis meetings the National Industrial Conference Board was officially founded on May 5 1916 at the Hotel Gramatan in Bronxville New York 2 Although many of the organizations founders including former AT amp T president Frederick P Fish and General Electric executive Magnus W Alexander its first president had supported the open shop movement by 1916 they regarded national unions such as the American Federation of Labor as permanent fixtures of the American economy and urged negotiation and concord 3 When the United States entered World War I in 1917 the National War Labor Board formed by President Woodrow Wilson asked the NICB to formulate plans that would keep war industries running and strife free Its recommendations based on cooperation between representatives of employers employees and government were adopted in full 2 Though often mistrusted in its early years as an employers union funding studies against the labor movement 4 the non profit NICB was also seen as a spokesman for the so called progressive wing of the business community and produced hundreds of research reports on economic and social issues facing the United States 3 Pioneering research published in this period include Woman Workers and Labor Supply 5 The Eight Hour Day Defined 6 U S Cost of Living Index and a series of reports on Workers Compensation Acts in The United States 7 The organization today remains funded by the contributions of members often Fortune 500 companies By the 1930s however it had already lost most of its character as an industry lobby Virgil Jordan a writer and economist who replaced Alexander as president on the latter s death in 1932 established a Bureau of Economic Audit and Control to offer members and the public an independent source of studies on unemployment pensions healthcare and related issues in the midst of the Great Depression when many questioned the credibility of the government s economic statistics 2 Unions soon joined the NICB alongside corporations for access to its research conferences and executive network The organization is considered an unbiased trusted source for statistics and trends second only to perhaps the U S Bureau of Labor Statistics 8 After World War II it expanded to non U S members for the first time In 1954 it founded The Conference Board of Canada in Montreal which was spun off as an independent non profit in 1981 In 1959 its first overseas CEO level was held in Torquay England bringing together executives and board presidents from the US UK and Canada On January 1 1970 the National Industrial Conference Board officially changed its name to The Conference Board This followed the launch in 1967 of the U S Consumer Confidence Index a monthly survey of households that remains its flagship economic indicator In 1976 it added the Measure of CEO Confidence which tracks the attitudes of chief executives regarding economic conditions overall and within their industry In 1996 the US Department of Commerce selected The Conference Board to produce and distribute the US leading economic indicator series In 2002 after an epidemic of business scandals The Conference Board Commission on Public Trust and Private Enterprise was convened Composed of leaders from both the private and the public sectors the Commission published a report with recommendations for best practices in corporate governance 9 In 2006 The Conference Board established its China Center for Economic and Business in Beijing as a resource for senior executives of multinational companies 10 In 2015 the Committee for Economic Development CED merged with The Conference Board as its US public policy center 11 Today The Conference Board has offices in New York Brussels Beijing Hong Kong and Singapore citation needed Regional Centers editThe Conference Board produces research convenes conferences and organizes executive peer learning councils through topical Centers based in business hubs around the globe In the United States it currently operates five Centers from New York City Economy Strategy amp Finance including global economy innovation and digital transformation labor markets consumer dynamics Marketing amp Communications corporate communications consumer dynamics marketing Environmental Social amp Governance corporate governance sustainability corporate citizenship and philanthropy Human Capital leadership learning and development talent acquisition employee engagement and experience diversity and inclusion HR technology human capital analytics labor markets coaching and mentoring Committee for Economic Development Public Policy regulation healthcare policy education infrastructure tax reform fiscal health immigration In Europe The Conference Board hosts three Centers Economy Strategy amp Finance Human Capital Sustainability In the Asia Pacific region the organization hosts three Centers Economy Strategy amp Finance Human Capital Sustainability Additionally The Conference Board operates a China Center for executives of multinational companies Economic indicators and data editThe Conference Board publishes a number of regular indicators for United States and international economies that are widely tracked by investors business leaders and policy makers They include U S Consumer Confidence Index Begun by The Conference Board in 1967 this monthly survey of 5 000 households is widely established as the leading measure of American consumer confidence 12 Results from the household survey are tabulated to provide a barometer of the U S economy currently indexed to the year 1985 100 CEO Confidence Survey The quarterly Measure of CEO Confidence gauges the outlook of chief executives in their own industries and the economy as a whole 13 The survey also runs every six months in Europe in cooperation with the European Round Table for Industry and in China 14 15 CHRO Confidence Index The quarterly CHRO Confidence Index gauges the hiring and retention outlook of US chief human resource officers 16 17 CCO CMO Meter A recurring tracker of marketing and communications leaders sentiment as to the impact they are having on their businesses and the value they are creating 18 US Job Satisfaction Survey Annual survey launched in 1987 that acts as a barometer of US worker satisfaction based on workers perceptions of their current role and their workplace environment The latest survey tracks satisfaction across 26 components from wages promotion policy and bonus plan to work life balance commute time to physical workplace environment 19 US Salary Increase Budgets Survey Since 1985 The Conference Board has been surveying compensation executives across industries and sectors on how much it plans to offer in annual salary increased The survey asks about two main components of compensation salary increase budget and salary structure movement This year 409 organizations completed the survey fielded between June 21 and July 17 2023 20 Leading Economic Indexes In the 1960s the U S Department of Commerce began researching and releasing business cycle indicators which use composite data points including manufacturing construction and stock market indicators to time economic expansions recessions and recoveries In December 1995 The Conference Board took over the business indicator program from the government and continues to publish leading coincident and lagging indexes for the U S economy each month 21 The program was also expanded to other economies beyond the U S The Conference Board currently publishes leading coincident and trailing indexes for the Australia Brazil China the Euro Area France Germany India Japan Mexico South Korea Spain and the U K Employment Trends Index Created in 2008 the Employment Trends Index aggregates eight separate indicators and offers a short term forward look at employment that gives economists and investors a new forecasting tool It also helps business executives sharpen their short to medium term hiring and compensation planning 22 The Conference Board Lightcast Help Wanted OnLine HWOL Index measures changes over time in advertised online job vacancies reflecting monthly trends in employment opportunities across the US The HWOL Data Series aggregates the total number of ads available by month from the HWOL universe of online job ads Ads in the HWOL universe are collected in real time from over 50 000 online job domains The online program is the successor of the Help Wanted Advertising Index program which was based on counts of help wanted job advertisements in major newspapers across the nation 23 Additional research editThe Conference Board s research reports and experts are often featured in a wide range of global business media from specialist trade publications to the Financial Times the Wall Street Journal CNBC Bloomberg News Forbes and Fortune Notable examples include C Suite Outlook Annual survey of the most pressing challenges and responses facing CEOs and other C Suite executives across industries and regions 24 Toward Stakeholder Capitalism the implications of this shift for the C Suite 25 Board Effectiveness an annual report done in collaboration with PwC on how boards can become more effective 26 ESG benchmarking reports that reveal emerging trends in areas including CEO succession 27 executive compensation 28 corporate board practices 29 and shareholder voting 30 Annual survey on US salary increase budgets across industries and seniority 31 Surveys of chief human resource officers on various workforce and workplace matters 32 Analyses on national public policy issues including Social Security 33 infrastructure 34 cybersecurity 35 health care 36 labor shortages 37 national debt 38 energy transition 39 child care 40 Benchmarking data editThe Conference Board s TCB Benchmarking software allows US public companies to benchmark their practices in various ESG areas including environmental human capital management CEO and director compensation board composition and governance and shareholder voting 41 Membership and professional development editThe Conference Board s corporate membership includes the majority of the Fortune 500 The organization is considered a pioneer in professional councils which were created as a way to guide business leaders through boom and bust cycles 42 Each council is a invitation only self governed group of executives Each year around 2 500 executives participate in The Conference Board councils These range from networks organized for specific C suite titles including multiple councils for chief financial officers chief human resources officers chief legal officers and corporate treasurers to those focused on narrower areas of expertise or emerging business challenges such as artificial intelligence 43 Awards editThe Conference Board has received multiple awards Best Companies to Work for in New York State 2024 44 Crain s Best Places to Work in NYC 2023 45 Best Company Outlook in 2023 and 2024 46 Best Places to Work New York 2023 47 Best Company Perks amp Benefits 2023 48 Happiest Employees 2023 49 Best Compensation 2023 50 Best Company Culture 2023 51 Best Leadership Teams 2023 52 See also editThe Conference Board of CanadaReferences edit Tranger James The New York Chronology The Ultimate Compendium of Events People and Anecdotes from the Dutch to the Present ISBN 978 006052341 1 p 356 a b c Conference Board timeline PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2022 02 22 Retrieved 2012 09 10 a b Collection National Industrial Conference Board NICB records Hagley Museum and Library Archives Retrieved 2022 09 29 Laue J Charles 1926 10 31 LABOR AND CAPITAL TO BATTLE OVER UNIONISM Campaign of American Federation of Labor to Combat Company Unions and To Organize Open Shop Industries Is Fought by Anti Union Employers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 02 25 Board National Industrial Conference 1936 Women Workers and Labor Supply National industrial conference board Incorporated Board National Industrial Conference 1918 The Eight hour Day Defined The Board Board National Industrial Conference 1917 Workmen s Compensation Acts in the United States The Legal Phase National Industrial Conference Board CONFERENCE BOARD A TRUSTED RESOURCE Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2023 02 25 The Conference Board Commission on Public Trust and Private Enterprise PDF The Conference Board Launches China Center in 2006 Board The Conference The Conference Board to Merge with the Committee for Economic Development www prnewswire com Retrieved 2024 04 12 Consumer Confidence An Online NewsHour Special Report The Newshour with Jim Lehrer PBS May 2001 https www pbs org newshour bb economy jan june01 confidence 5 29 html Archived 2013 03 25 at the Wayback Machine Staff Investopedia 19 June 2005 CEO Confidence Survey Archived from the original on 31 May 2021 Retrieved 26 September 2012 European business confidence hits rock bottom Financial Times Retrieved 2024 04 12 China s CEOs have spoken and new confidence index shows how multinationals hopes turned sobering in mere months South China Morning Post Retrieved 2024 04 12 Almost all CHROs say they re responsible for employee well being but most aren t investing in it survey says HR Brew Retrieved 2024 04 08 The top priority for HR leaders in 2024 Fortune Retrieved 2024 04 08 CMO CCO Meter The Conference Board 2023 Salary Budgets Projected to Stay at 20 Year High but Trail Inflation www shrm org Retrieved 2024 04 12 Weber Lauren WSJ News Exclusive Workers Are Happier Than They ve Been in Decades WSJ Retrieved 2024 04 12 Conference Board Composite Index Of Leading Indicators 12 April 2005 Archived from the original on 31 March 2019 Retrieved 26 September 2012 Press release PDF www conference board org Archived PDF from the original on 2022 02 22 Retrieved 2012 09 26 Help Wanted OnLine HWOL Overview Lightcast Knowledge Base kb lightcast io Retrieved 2024 04 12 Gryta Thomas 2022 01 13 Inflation Surge Is on Many Executives List of 2022 Worries The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on 2022 02 23 Retrieved 2022 02 23 A Tectonic Shift in Capitalism Is Underway How Business Leaders Can Keep Up Boards aren t shouldering increased corporate responsibility executives say Politico McGregor Jena Analysis Fewer companies are forcing CEOs to retire when they hit their golden years The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2020 10 02 Retrieved 2020 08 24 Murray Alan After coronavirus expect a new Delta Fortune Archived from the original on 2022 09 29 Retrieved 2020 08 24 Fuhrmans Vanessa 2019 04 24 What s Keeping More Women From Board Seats Little Turnover The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on 2020 08 10 Retrieved 2020 08 24 Paine Lynn S Srinivasan Suraj 2019 10 14 A Guide to the Big Ideas and Debates in Corporate Governance Harvard Business Review ISSN 0017 8012 Archived from the original on 2020 09 02 Retrieved 2020 08 24 Davidson Paul Hey millennials look out below Gen Zers may already be catching up in the salary race USA Today Archived from the original on 2020 02 24 Retrieved 2020 09 11 McGregor Jena Just 4 Of Employers Are Making Everyone Return To The Office Full Time Survey Finds Forbes Retrieved 2024 04 12 Fix Social Security Now Waiting Will Cost Us America s infrastructure has reached a breaking point It s time to fix it To make US more cyber resilient government and business need far greater collaboration Health care spending Medicare workforce issues should get policymakers attention Insurance News InsuranceNewsNet 2023 10 24 Retrieved 2024 04 12 Decker Paul Fluhr Howard Olson Camille 2023 04 25 Without Immigration Reform America s Labor Shortage is Here to Stay RealClearPolicy www realclearpolicy com Retrieved 2024 04 12 Morabito Charlotte 2023 09 10 U S debt is nearly 33 trillion But some economists say not all debt is bad CNBC Retrieved 2024 04 12 Jacob Worenklein Cynthia Warner and Lori Esposito Murray 2023 09 20 The climate work we must do now to meet our 2050 goals The Hill Retrieved 2024 04 12 Cindy Cisneros opinion contributor 2020 05 15 Working parents could face lack of child care as the economy restarts The Hill Retrieved 2024 04 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first has generic name help Segal Mark 2020 07 16 The Conference Board Launches ESG Benchmarking Platform for US Companies ESG Today Retrieved 2024 04 12 How the top CHRO networking groups for HR leaders stack up Fortune Retrieved 2024 04 23 How the top CHRO networking groups for HR leaders stack up Fortune Retrieved 2024 04 23 Board The Conference The Conference Board Named a Best Company to Work for in New York www prnewswire com Retrieved 2024 04 19 Crain s Best Places to work in NYC 2023 Crain s New York Retrieved 2022 03 22 Best Company Outlook 2024 Comparably Retrieved 2022 03 22 Best Places to Work 2023 New York Metropolitan Area Comparably Retrieved 2022 03 22 Best Company Perks amp Benefits 2023 Comparably Retrieved 2022 03 22 Happiest Employees 2023 Comparably Retrieved 2022 03 22 Best Compensation 2023 Comparably Retrieved 2022 03 22 Best Company Culture 2023 Comparably Retrieved 2022 03 22 Best Leadership Teams 2023 Comparably Retrieved 2022 03 22 External links editThe Conference Board Inc website The Conference Board of Canada website Works by National Industrial Conference Board at Project Gutenberg Works by or about The Conference Board at Internet Archive Industrial Conference Board Records 1953 1963 200 items At the Labor Archives of Washington University of Washington Libraries Special Collections Online Books by National Industrial Conference Board at UPenn Library Publications by National Industrial Conference Board at Hathi Trust Digital Library Publications by Conference Board at Hathi Trust Digital Library Mises Institute American Affairs 1945 1950 Archives edit Industrial Conference Board Records 1953 1963 Approximately 200 items At the Labor Archives of Washington University of Washington Libraries Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Conference Board amp oldid 1224287360, wikipedia, 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