Why worker representation is a strategic imperative, not a labor concession
Four Missing Bolts
On January 5, 2024, at 16,000 feet over Oregon, the fuselage of a brand-new Boeing 737 MAX 9 surrendered to physics. A door plug blew out into the night sky. The resulting explosive decompression did more than tear the clothes off a passenger — it ripped open yet another fault line in Boeing’s already fragile credibility. By sheer luck, no one was sitting in the seats adjacent to the gaping hole.
This was not a sophisticated software failure or a “black swan” event. It was a primitive manufacturing failure: an aircraft delivered to a customer with four critical retaining bolts missing.
Within days, the global fleet of 737 MAX 9s was grounded. Airlines canceled thousands of flights. Regulators froze production increases. Investigators confirmed what workers already suspected: the bolts were never installed. For Boeing, the costs mounted rapidly — halted deliveries, delayed certifications, furious customers, and renewed scrutiny of a company still reeling from the 737 MAX disasters that killed 346 people just years earlier. Market value fell by tens of billions of dollars. Trust, already fragile, eroded further.
But Boeing did have people who saw the risks coming.
What if the people who build the planes had a direct voice in the boardroom? What if engineers who raised concerns about safety systems before tragedy struck could escalate them to those with real decision-making authority? What if quality inspectors had an institutional channel to directors responsible for strategy, incentives, and risk — not just production targets?
This isn’t hypothetical. Board-level employee representation works in some of the world’s most competitive economies. It’s not a labor concession or government mandate. It’s a strategic imperative for resilience and value creation in complex environments where the gap between boardroom and factory floor can be measured in lives and billions in destroyed shareholder value.
Boeing’s crisis shows what happens when that voice is structurally absent.
The Boardroom that Couldn’t Hear the Factory Floor
Boeing’s recent history is a study in how governance blind spots can destroy value. Its crises are not just technical — they are cultural and structural, rooted in a boardroom that excluded the voices of those closest to the risks.
The 737 MAX disasters (2018–2019) were the first and most devastating signal. Two crashes — Lion Air Flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 — claimed 346 lives. Investigations revealed that safety concerns had been flagged internally but never reached the board. Engineers and technical staff raised alarms about software behavior, training assumptions, and production pressures, but those warnings were diluted in layers of management.
One voice stands out. In 2018, Ed Pierson, a senior manager overseeing the 737 factory in Renton, emailed the head of the program warning that the rush to produce aircraft was creating dangerous conditions. “I know how dangerous even the smallest of defects can be to the safety of an airplane,” he wrote. “Frankly right now all my internal warning bells are going off. And for the first time in my life, I’m sorry to say that I’m hesitant about putting my family on a Boeing airplane.” Pierson formally warned leadership before both crashes about the unstable operating environment in the factory. His warnings were ignored. The frontline possessed the signal; governance lacked the conduit.
The contradiction was sharpened by Boeing’s own rhetoric. In August 2019, just months after the MAX was grounded, then‑CEO Dennis Muilenburg joined 180 peers in signing the Business Roundtable’s statement redefining the purpose of a corporation to serve “all stakeholders — customers, employees, suppliers, communities, and shareholders.” Yet no corresponding governance reform followed. Workers were recognized rhetorically but remained structurally excluded.
The pattern continued. In January 2024, a brand‑new 737 MAX 9 suffered a mid‑air door plug blowout, exposing primitive manufacturing defects. Regulators grounded the global fleet, airlines canceled thousands of flights, and Boeing’s market value fell by tens of billions. Once again, workers had seen flaws but lacked a structural channel to escalate them to the board.
This failure reflects a profound shift in engineering culture. Following the 1997 merger with McDonnell Douglas, Boeing transitioned from a company of “engineers who manage” to one of “managers who manage engineers.” Meanwhile, the company spent $43 billion on stock buybacks between 2013 and 2019 — artificially inflating share prices while factory floor conditions deteriorated.
Labor relations deteriorated in parallel. Boeing is one of the most unionized U.S. manufacturers, with about one‑third of employees represented by unions — most prominently the International Association of Machinists (IAM) and the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA). In 2024, IAM organized Boeing’s largest strike in decades, halting production until workers secured a new four‑year contract with significant wage increases and benefit improvements. Yet despite this bargaining power, workers remain excluded from board‑level governance. The paradox is stark: unions can negotiate wages, but they cannot influence strategic decisions that determine the company’s future.
Boeing is now attempting a “war for quality” turnaround, including weekly 737 MAX factory shutdowns for meetings where workers can flag problems and suggest fixes. It is a cultural reset aimed at dismantling a toxic top‑down hierarchy. But these remain management initiatives — subject to the pressures of quarterly performance. They can be scaled back, deprioritized, or abandoned when financial targets tighten.
The governance imbalance is glaring. Out of twelve current directors (December 2025), only two bring deep aerospace manufacturing experience: CEO Robert K. Ortberg, formerly of Rockwell Collins, and independent director David L. Joyce, former head of GE Aviation. Boeing’s board refreshment continued in December 2025 with the addition of Bradley Tilden, former CEO of Alaska Air Group — ironically, the airline whose aircraft lost a door plug in January 2024. The expanded 12‑member board now includes an airline customer perspective, alongside expertise in finance, investment management, biotech, utilities, accounting, technology, complex manufacturing, and defense — but still offers no direct representation for the workers who build the aircraft.
This is not a criticism of individual director competence. It is an observation about institutional design. When capital allocation and strategic priorities are set by a board fluent in financial metrics but structurally disconnected from production realities, the organization optimizes for the language spoken in the room — and production speed and margin expansion speak louder than half‑finished door plug installations or factory floor chaos.
Frontline workers possessed the signal. Governance lacked a voting conduit. The board optimized for speed and financial metrics. Risks were mispriced. Organizational learning collapsed. Trust eroded. Talent pushed back. Value was destroyed.
When Workers Sit at the Table
If Boeing illustrates the cost of a missing voice, Siemens AG shows what happens when that voice is structurally embedded.
Siemens is one of Germany’s largest industrial companies, spanning energy systems, healthcare technology, industrial automation, and digital infrastructure. Like Boeing, it operates in safety‑critical, capital‑intensive businesses where quality failures carry outsized human, financial, and reputational consequences. It employs a highly skilled workforce, manages long product lifecycles, and must continuously balance innovation, cost discipline, and operational reliability.
The difference lies in governance design. Siemens operates under Germany’s codetermination system. Its 20‑member supervisory board is evenly split: ten shareholder representatives and ten employee representatives, elected through works councils and unions. These employee directors are not symbolic. They include senior workforce leaders with deep operational experience — often drawn directly from factories and engineering organizations — who participate fully in strategic oversight, capital allocation decisions, major restructurings, and executive appointments.
The benefits are tangible. Long‑term innovation commitment has been sustained because workforce buy‑in stabilizes investment decisions. Siemens has consistently invested in R&D and digital transformation, knowing that employees are part of the strategic consensus rather than adversaries to be managed. Resilience through crisis was evident during COVID‑19 and subsequent supply chain disruptions, when board‑level worker insights helped adapt operations and maintain productivity. Cultural cohesion has been strengthened by the presence of employee representatives, fostering trust, transparency, and shared purpose — critical assets in volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous (VUCA) conditions. And workforce transformation has been smoother: Siemens’ pivot toward digital industries and smart infrastructure was accelerated by early and ongoing worker involvement in strategic decisions, reducing resistance and aligning skills with new business models.
This isn’t socialism. It is pragmatic governance design for environments where the gap between boardroom assumptions and operational reality can destroy billions in value before anyone with voting power notices.
The contrast with Boeing is instructive. Both companies faced crises. One had a governance structure designed to hear warnings from the factory floor. The other did not.
Two Boardrooms, Two Realities
The contrast between Boeing and Siemens is not simply a matter of national culture; it is a clinical trial of two governance models under pressure. One relies on managerial discretion to filter operational risk; the other institutionalizes a voting conduit for it.
At Boeing, frontline signals were repeatedly silenced. Warnings were diluted through management layers or dismissed because they conflicted with production targets. Without a board‑level mechanism to escalate these life‑critical concerns, directors remained blind until 346 people had died. At Siemens, employee board representatives provide a direct escalation path. Signals from the factory floor are not treated as “suggestions” to be managed, but as part of strategic oversight — triggering early intervention before a defect becomes a disaster.
This structural divergence is most visible in capital allocation. Between 2013 and 2019, Boeing’s board, dominated by financiers and cross‑sector CEOs, authorized $43 billion in stock buybacks while production quality and engineering rigor declined. At Siemens, profit‑sharing and a long‑term innovation mandate are structurally protected because those who understand technical risks have a seat at the table.
The human and financial outcomes are dramatic. Boeing’s adversarial labor relations culminated in a punishing eight‑week strike in 2024, a breakdown reflecting years of eroded trust and toxic top‑down culture. Siemens, by contrast, has navigated global crises through negotiated “employment pacts”. During the 2008 crash and the COVID‑19 pandemic, this collaborative model facilitated shared sacrifice and temporary wage adjustments in exchange for job guarantees — preserving the technical capabilities that underpin Siemens’ global competitiveness.
Ultimately, Boeing’s board composition created a culture where financial metrics and production speed dominated because that was the only language spoken in the room. Siemens demonstrates that when workers sit at the table, strategic coherence, quality focus, and adaptability are not policy choices — they are structural guarantees.
The Strategic Case for Worker Voice at the Top
Board‑level employee representation is not a concession to labor politics, but a structural advantage. It reshapes the flow of information, improves the quality of decisions, and strengthens organizational resilience under pressure.
Information flow. Workers possess operational intelligence that management layers often filter, distort, or suppress — particularly when it conflicts with financial targets or executive incentives. Quality inspectors see defect patterns. Engineers identify design risks. Machinists know when production speeds exceed safe capacity. Conventional governance treats this knowledge as “noise” unless it escalates through hierarchies designed to mute dissent. Board‑level representation creates a direct conduit, closing the gap between operational reality and strategic oversight. At Boeing, Ed Pierson’s warnings never reached voting directors. At Siemens, such warnings reach the supervisory board by design.
The trust dividend for transformation. In an era defined by disruptive change, success depends on winning the willing participation of the workforce. When workers share in governance decisions — including difficult ones like temporary wage cuts or facility closures — they are more likely to accept the rationale and comply with implementation. They see financial constraints firsthand rather than hearing management’s filtered interpretation. This transparency reduces mistrust and the transaction costs of enforcing unpopular decisions. Siemens’ employment pacts during the 2008 crisis and COVID‑19 succeeded because workers trusted the necessity; Boeing’s 2024 strike reflected the opposite.
Long‑term investment. Unlike equity holders who can liquidate positions in seconds, employees invest decades in a company. Their “human capital” is illiquid, making them the stakeholder group most naturally aligned with the firm’s multi‑decadal survival. This alignment fosters ownership and long‑term commitment, incentivizing the development of highly specialized skills — an essential asset for high‑integrity sectors like aerospace or digital infrastructure.
The strategic benefits are clear: board‑level employee representation improves risk detection, strengthens motivation, facilitates transformation, and builds trust. The lesson is simple: when workers sit at the table, organizations see further, decide wiser, and endure longer.
A Governance Pilot for Boeing — and for America
America does not need to import the German model wholesale. But it must embrace its core principle: structured, empowered worker insight at the highest level is a competitive advantage.
Boeing’s board should act now. The company is attempting a “quality transformation” through management initiatives that can be deprioritized when quarterly pressures mount. What’s missing is structural permanence — a governance mechanism that cannot be silenced when it becomes inconvenient.
The solution is straightforward: authorize a three-year pilot program adding two employee directors to Boeing’s board.
- One seat elected by Boeing’s 57,000 union members (IAM and SPEEA jointly nominating candidates)
- One seat elected by all non-union Boeing employees
- Full voting rights on all matters, identical to other directors
- Standard director compensation
- Protected status: Cannot be terminated or retaliated against for board service; two-year protection period after board term ends
- Quarterly workforce briefings: Employee directors report to the workforce on strategic discussions, major decisions, and concerns they’ve raised
Eligibility: Current Boeing employees with minimum five years’ tenure and deep operational experience — engineers, quality inspectors, machinists, technical staff who understand how aircraft are actually built.
Would this solve everything? No. But it would create what Boeing desperately lacks: an institutional mechanism for frontline intelligence to reach strategic decision-makers before catastrophe strikes.
Boeing doesn’t need federal legislation. The board could vote tomorrow to implement this pilot. If successful, expand it. If other companies see value, they’ll follow. That’s how governance innovation spreads — through competitive advantage, not mandate.
Board-level employee representation is not a labor concession or government overreach. It is a governance innovation proven across decades in Europe’s most competitive economies to reduce blind spots, build trust, enable transformation, and create long-term value in volatile, complex environments.
The next crisis will not wait. The question is whether boards will continue flying blind — or finally give workers a seat at the table. Employee directors are not there to protect jobs. They are there to protect companies from themselves.
If Boeing pilots this model, it will not only safeguard its future — it could redefine American corporate governance, proving that resilience and competitiveness are built not by silencing the factory floor but by institutionalizing its voice at the very top.






