Perspective of a Swedish Investor – Practical Differences in Structure, Liability and the Exercise of Shareholder Influence

Introductory remarks

From the perspective of a Swedish investor planning to establish operations in Poland or to invest in a Polish company, one of the key areas requiring analysis already at the structuring stage is the corporate governance model. This is not merely an organisational or formal matter. The chosen structure determines not only how decisions are made, but also the extent of shareholder influence, the relationship between shareholders and management, the level of autonomy granted to local executives, the way supervision over the company is exercised, and the scope of liability of individuals serving on corporate bodies.

In practice, differences in corporate governance are among the most frequent sources of misunderstanding in Polish-Swedish business relationships. This results from the fact that both systems use similar terminology – board, CEO, management, supervisory body – while assigning different legal meaning, different powers and different responsibilities to those bodies.

Management board in Poland as a corporate body

The Polish limited liability company is based on the continental European concept of separation between shareholders and the corporate bodies of the company. Under Article 201 §1 of the Polish Commercial Companies Code, the management board manages the affairs of the company and represents the company.

This principle is fundamental in Polish corporate law.

The management board represents the company itself as a separate legal entity. It does not represent the shareholders. It does not act as agent of the investor or as an extension of shareholder instructions. Once appointed, a member of the management board becomes part of the statutory governing body of the company and is legally required to act in the best interests of the company itself.

This distinction is often particularly important for foreign investors. Even where one shareholder holds all shares in the company, the management board does not legally represent that shareholder. It represents the company.

For Swedish investors, this often comes as a surprise, as in the Swedish governance structure shareholder influence is usually exercised more directly through the board.

The Swedish model: shareholders – board – CEO

In Sweden the chain of authority is structured differently. Shareholders appoint the board of directors at the general meeting. The board is responsible for the organisation of the company, strategic direction, governance and overall supervision of the business.

The board then appoints the CEO (verkställande direktör / VD). The CEO is therefore not appointed directly by shareholders, but by the board, and manages the day-to-day operations of the company within the framework determined by the board.

In practical terms, the structure can be summarised as follows: shareholders appoint the board, the board appoints the CEO, and the CEO manages the daily operations.

As a result, the Swedish board remains the central instrument through which shareholder influence is exercised and stays closely connected to strategy and leadership of the company.

Polish supervisory board versus Swedish board – two different governance models

A particularly important distinction for Swedish investors is that the Polish supervisory board (rada nadzorcza) is not the equivalent of a Swedish board of directors.

Although the terminology may suggest a similarity, these are structurally and functionally different corporate bodies.

In Poland, the supervisory board is a body of supervision and control. Its role is to supervise the company’s activities and oversee the management board. It may review company documents, request information, assess management activities, examine financial statements and exercise supervisory powers resulting from law or the articles of association.

However, it does not manage the affairs of the company. It does not conduct day-to-day operations and, as a rule, does not issue operational instructions to the management board concerning the running of the business.

This differs fundamentally from the Swedish board. The Swedish board combines strategic, organisational and supervisory functions. It appoints the CEO, determines the framework within which the CEO operates and remains much closer to the business and strategic decision-making process.

For a Swedish investor this distinction is highly relevant in practice. Assuming that a Polish supervisory board functions in the same way as a Swedish board may lead to an incorrect understanding of where actual control over the company is exercised.

Articles of association and the exercise of shareholder influence

In Poland, actual shareholder influence is exercised primarily through corporate rights and through the articles of association.

Members of the management board are appointed and removed by shareholders’ resolution unless the articles of association provide otherwise. This reservation is particularly important from an investor’s perspective.

In practice, the articles of association are the key legal instrument shaping shareholder relations and the real governance framework of the company. They may regulate appointment and dismissal rights, individual nomination rights, veto rights, reserved matters requiring shareholder or supervisory board approval, reporting obligations, transfer restrictions and broader governance mechanisms.

As a result, the real level of investor control in Poland often depends not only on the percentage of shares held but on the quality and precision of the constitutional corporate documentation.

Entering the Polish market – S24 incorporation, shelf companies and the role of the notary

Polish law provides considerable flexibility when entering the market. A limited liability company may be incorporated online through the S24 electronic registration system with a minimum share capital of PLN 5,000. If the filing is properly prepared, registration may be completed within a very short timeframe.

At the same time, in transactional practice it is also common to acquire so-called shelf companies – entities already incorporated and prepared for acquisition. This solution is typically used where timing is critical, where certain corporate history is required, or where a company must be immediately ready for closing or restructuring.

Where such business reasons do not exist, a newly incorporated company is often the more practical solution.

Regardless of the chosen route, adapting the corporate documentation after incorporation or acquisition is usually essential, particularly the articles of association, as standard template documentation rarely reflects the governance needs of a specific investor structure.

The role of the notary also remains significant in Poland, particularly with respect to amendments to the articles of association, share transfers and many ownership or restructuring transactions.

Liability of management board members in Poland

Liability of management board members remains one of the most important practical issues for investors.

As a general rule, the company itself is liable for its obligations as a separate legal entity. However, Polish law also provides situations in which liability may extend personally to members of the management board.

Particularly important is Article 299 of the Polish Commercial Companies Code. If enforcement against the company proves ineffective, members of the management board may become jointly and severally liable for the company’s obligations.

Although this does not automatically mean personal liability in every case, it creates real financial exposure for management board members and remains one of the most important legal risk factors connected with serving on a Polish management board.

In litigation practice it is also common for claims to be brought not only against the company itself but also – in parallel or alternatively – against members of the management board. In practice, the full management board is often included in disputes together with the company already at an early procedural stage.

Delegation of responsibilities and internal allocation of authority

Given the scope of liability, internal governance organisation becomes particularly important.

In practice, companies frequently adopt management board resolutions, internal regulations or a matrix of authority assigning responsibility for specific business areas to individual board members or functional directors responsible for finance, sales, procurement, compliance, operations or HR.

Such allocation does not automatically remove statutory liability. However, it has major practical value. It helps evidence the actual division of responsibilities within the organisation, supports internal governance and supervision and may also be relevant in litigation.

Where a board member can demonstrate that a particular area was assigned to another responsible person, that they had no decision-making authority in that area and no actual influence over the relevant conduct, this may be taken into account when assessing liability.

A properly documented allocation of authority therefore remains one of the key practical tools for managing governance and reducing management risk in Poland.

Discharge from liability and annual approval of actions of corporate bodies

Another important governance comparison concerns the annual approval of the actions of corporate bodies.

In Sweden, shareholders at the general meeting resolve on discharge from liability (ansvarsfrihet) for members of the board and the CEO. This serves as an important shareholder governance mechanism through which shareholders formally assess performance of those responsible for strategic management and operational leadership.

In Poland, the equivalent mechanism is absolutorium.

At the annual shareholders’ meeting, shareholders adopt resolutions granting discharge to members of the management board and – where established – members of the supervisory board in respect of performance of their duties during the previous financial year.

This reflects the dual structure of the Polish corporate governance model, where shareholders separately assess the performance of the management board as the body managing and representing the company, and the supervisory board as the body supervising the company’s activities.

Liability of the board and CEO in Sweden

In Sweden liability is structured differently because the allocation of functions is different.

The board remains responsible for the organisation of the company, strategic direction and supervision. The CEO remains responsible for day-to-day operational management within the framework established by the board.

Although certain responsibilities may be delegated, the board retains overall responsibility for supervision and governance of the company.

Liability is therefore assessed in light of board instructions, CEO instructions, delegation principles, decision-making processes and internal reporting lines between the board and the CEO.

Employee representation

A further structural difference concerns employee representation.

In larger Swedish companies employees may have representatives on the board. In practice, however, such representatives usually remain in the minority compared with shareholder-appointed members and generally do not determine the outcome of board decisions.

In a Polish limited liability company, employees do not typically participate either in the management board or the supervisory board. Employee interests are generally represented outside the corporate body structure, primarily through labour law mechanisms and trade unions.

Practical conclusions for Swedish investors

For Swedish investors, entering Poland requires more than choosing the appropriate legal vehicle. It requires careful and deliberate governance design.

The key practical point is understanding that the Polish management board is not the equivalent of the Swedish CEO, the Polish supervisory board is not the equivalent of the Swedish board of directors, and actual shareholder influence in Poland is exercised primarily through well-drafted constitutional documentation and carefully structured governance arrangements.

In practice, it is the articles of association, appointment mechanisms, allocation of powers, reporting framework and internal division of responsibilities that determine investor protection, effective shareholder control and long-term stability of operations in Poland.

Power couple model. Happiness and inspiration, strength and power

Why we are in partnership, why we want to be with another person?

We want to be happy and supported. We have a hope that other person will realize our needs and understand us. It will be good if we could communicate our needs in the way that other person understand. Love is nothing that is given forever, we need to care about it each day and able to give and communicate what we would appreciate to receive, celebrate small and big achievements together. If we do not realize partner’s needs then the other person will be depressed, unhappy and eventually will try to find these needs satisfaction outside the relationship. That is not surprising and in addition mutually caused. Blaming another person is the way how we want to then justify our lack of understanding and actions. We shouldn’t limit other person but support and appreciate his/her development. The couples who don’t have clear goals and visions and mutual understanding don’t last.20190304_142602

The power couple model gives a sense of security and space for joint and individual development of both partners. Together they are more stronger and powerful. One supports the other in being himself, it does not limit him/her. They both know what they want in life and they’re willing to help each other to get there. Everyone works on their emotions and behaviors, knowing that he/she is responsible for them.

She does not look for a knight on a white horse or a hero in him. He does not need a princess…They build trust, strength, conscious communication. Such relationship stimulates one’s own actions to achieve much more being together. Partners in power couple are more productive, motivated and creative. They have greater attitude towards empathy, emotion control, positive thinking, developing gratitude  and being thankful to the partner.

Be honest and faithful

Your insecurities, your worries, your failures, your weaknesses. Let it out and don’t hold back. Honesty will help you be your true, authentic selves. And the only way you’re going to reach the heights you’re aiming for is if you can be who you really are. It’s only by revealing your deepest insecurities that you’ll be able to protect each other through the dark times and rise the ladder of success together.20190222_172351

The power couple understand each other’s goals and dreams and don’t hide any insecurities and fears. They’re each other’s biggest fans, supporting one another through thick and thin. They motivate each other to reach their potential. They’re in love with each other, but they don’t “need” each other to survive. They’re perfectly okay spending time apart, because they know it’ll be even more special when they meet again.

They’re both optimistic. Their attitude pushes them through tough times together. When one of them is dealing with challenges, the other one helps them look on the bright side and see the best in every situation. This is what helps them succeed even when it feels like there’s no way out.

Does the relationship take more energy than it gives?

Trust comes from a sense of internal comfort. It emerges from within rather than as a result of trying to control everything your partner does. If you don’t trust your partner on some fundamental level, you’ve got some work to do for yourself. If you think it’s fine to jump on your partner’s phone the minute they exit the room, and if you’ve ever looked at your partner’s phone without their consent, you are getting time to exit.

Growth is obviously something we want from being with someone. But if your partner isn’t who you want him/her to be today, you’re not in the right relationship. Sure, people change and grow over their lives, but you’re going to ruin your partner’s if your happiness is contingent on them changing. If the price of being in your relationship means you can’t be who you truly are, that’s too high a price. The relationships should help you grow into the best version of yourself. If yours makes you feel like you’re playing a role instead of playing yourself, it’s time to jump a ship.

Some folks boost our energy reserves. Others drain us dry. In reality, we each have choices

We’re constantly looking for ways to find harmony on our plates, in our bodies and throughout our lives. It’s often more comfortable to stay in the broken places rather than risk the glorious (and terrifying) unknown. There are countless rational excuses that keep us stuck. One of my favorites: timing. This is the worst time to make a change. I’m too busy, too tired, too broke, too needy, too depressed, too not-enough. There’s another side to this story— the one that takes your well-being into account. Is it ever a good time to stuff your feelings and soldier on? To exhaust yourself mentally and physically? Is it ever a good time to operate from a place of shame or guilt? Or, continually repeat the same behavior that created the problems in the first place? Habitually attempting to fix the unfixable is crazy-making.

It is good to honor your uniqueness, listen to your heart, know and be loyal to yourself and be brave in order to find yourself and a power couple model, person, who would like to know your expectations, realize your needs and supports you in achieving joint and individual goals.

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If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have no love, I am only a ringing gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have absolute faith so as to move mountains, but have no love, I am nothing. If I give all I possess to the poor and exult in the surrender of my body, but have no love, I gain nothing.

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no account of wrongs.  Love takes no pleasure in evil, but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails.

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Storytelling

I was saying to my son goodnight today and it is always this miracle moment to which we are waiting for all day. I thought say to him my story about motivation and be inspired by one of my teacher to love biology and then how I have made my own choices seeking friends from which I could learn something and supporting others with quite clear approach what I want to achieve.

We need to create ourselves thinking who is the person that listen you. We cannot be the same for our kids, at work and for our life partner. We have different brands adjusted to different expectations and targeted groups. We cannot mix this up. Lecturer at University needs to switch to parent role and husband at home and not still teaching wife and kids at home. It is still authentic you, the same person but with different brands (different language, voice, look, cloths, behavior etc.).

Storytelling scheme: when, where, how, what, why, for what, who, with whom. Message, conflict, characters, plot.

Storytelling as a branding tool is not about telling stories just for the sake of it. Storytelling is about using stories to communicate messages that reflect positively on the brand. Therefore, first you must develop a clearly defined message.

Conflict is the driving force of a good story. No conflict, no story. As humans we instinctively look for balance and harmony in our lives. As soon as harmony is disrupted we do whatever we can to restore it. When faced with a problem, we instinctively seek to find a solution. Conflict forces us to act. Therefore, we need to get our message across through conflict and its resolution.

We have seen how conflict marks the turning point in the story, but in order for this conflict to play out, you need a cast of interacting and compelling characters. In order to get personally involved with a story, we must be able to identify with the characters. The audience must be able to identify with both the hero and the problem. Based on our need to have balance in our lives we will usually emphasise with a person faced with a conflict.

Once your message, conflict and cast of characters are all in place, it is time to think about how your story should progress. The flow of the story and its events are vital to the audience’s experience. Given the fact that we can only tell one thing at a time, and that a story exists only as a progression of events within a given time span, the sequence of events needs careful consideration. It must have a precise structure to run it forward and maintain audience interest.

Speak as if you were talking to a friend, give your power, be emotional, touchy, make you all, tell and leave.

Build your story for others

If you do not say someone about your problems but expecting him to help you, the other person cannot help you and satisfy her/his needs to help (self-realization). Therefore, both people feel bad. If your wife wants to support you then you need to tell her what is in your life. If you will say to her always that everything is fine so with such approach you cannot satisfy her needs to help….and she feel unnecessary. It doesn’t work and create conflict.

If you complain, you attract people like yourself and then you get the feeling that everyone is complaining (an isolated world that seems real to you). Then you only strengthen the story you tell yourself. Individual story, group story, collective story.

When you come back from work and always say that you are tired, your partner will never offer you sports activities at weekend, even if you would like it, because you have wrongly built your brand for her/him. The end is…because I thought that….. you are tired.