The two-day conference, or indaba, includes current South Africa coach Allister Coetzee as well as his predecessors Ian McIntosh, Carel du Plessis and Rudolf Straeuli plus the country’s six Super Rugby coaches and former Springboks captains Gary Teichmann and John Smit.
“In New Zealand, all 180 players are contracted to New Zealand Rugby, but in South Africa we have six different franchises, each with their own different methods of playing the game,” Alexander told delegates.
“This system is clearly not proving to be an efficient and effective way to manage our players well and get the best out of them.
“This indaba aims to find a solution to the challenges we face - with collaboration and input from all our franchises.
“Hopefully in a few years’ time we will look back at this indaba with a sense of achievement - knowing that this was where the new direction was forged, this was the turning point for South African rugby, and this is where we adopted our shared winning mind-set.”
Coetzee said the conference was not a knee-jerk reaction to South Africa’s struggles this season - struggles that culminated in a record 57-15 home loss to the All Blacks earlier this month.