Doing Good Better: How to be an Effective Board Member of a Nonprofit Organization
By Edgar Stoesz
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About this ebook
First, Stoesz identifies two failings common to many boards of nonprofit organizations that are often overlooked:
1. A board’s governance role is very different from the role of management. Making this distinction requires a reorientation for most board member, because in their day jobs, they are managers or employees.”
2. Boards often fail at two matters: a.) preparation of their members, and b.) regular evaluations of their own effectiveness and focus.
In short, pointedly-written chapters, Stoesz covers:
Helping Directors Understand Their Governance Role
A Plan to Fulfill the Purpose
Reporting Back to the Members
Planning Effective Meetings
Great Boards Have a Good Fight (occasionally)
Working Your Way Through a Crisis
Great Boards Celebrate
Leaving Right
Stoesz deftly interweaves background philosophy, vision, and razor-sharp specific ideas. "Discussion/Action Questions” conclude many of the chapters. In addition, Stoesz offers a Board Evaluation Form,” a Director’s Self-Evaluation Form,” and an outline for the Executive Director Annual Review.”
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Doing Good Better - Edgar Stoesz
Preface to the Revised and Updated Edition
In this little, highly readable book are my learnings from a lifetime of service in a variety of nonprofit and for-profit boards, sometimes as director, often as chair, sometimes as a CEO responsible to a board.
Doing Good Better is a pragmatic book, dealing with boardroom realities, enriched by what I’ve drawn from other scholars and practitioners. In 26 short chapters and six exhibits, the book covers the whole gamut of a board’s governance responsibility, from servicing the membership to delegating board decisions to the CEO for implementation.
Nonprofits, and many other organizations, are about doing good. Doing Good Better is about helping them do it better and enjoy it more. May you find ideas and suggestions here that make your board work more effective.
This revised and updated edition is a complete re-write of my earlier books dating back to 1994. Readers of the earlier editions will find it a useful review, while new readers will find it to be a more complete and renewed presentation.
More than a recitation of boardroom best practices, Doing Good Better is infused with an attitude of board service. Serving on a board is seen as a privilege, and we should do it with joyful spirits. The benefits of board service accrue to the cause being served, as well as to the director. Those who are willing to serve on the board of a worthy cause are a unique and beautiful class of people who have an other orientation.
At the same time, board service provides an opportunity to discover and develop new skills while making lifelong friendships. It is truly in giving that we receive.
So welcome aboard. Roll up your sleeves. Join in Doing Good Better!
Edgar Stoesz
Summer, 2015
CHAPTER 1
Organizational Greatness Begins with Great People
Great organizations begin with great people. Apart from people, an organization is only an empty shell. It knows nothing. It can do nothing. It is people that imbue an organization with greatness.
The only way anything ever runs itself,
said one successful leader, is downhill. Trees—have you noticed?—die from the top. That is true also of organizations.
In his highly acclaimed book, Good to Great and the Social Sectors, Jim Collins suggests that the formula for organizational greatness is: (a) getting the right persons on the bus; (b) getting the wrong persons off the bus; and (c) positioning them on the bus for maximum effectiveness. Organizational greatness is all about people.
Building a great board
Building a better board begins with an objective examination of your current board membership, including the following qualifications:
Competencies: Do you have on your board the skills needed to give direction to the organization you are directing? This includes professional skills in the field of your endeavor, financial savvy, proven leadership ability, human relations competence, and just plain common sense. What do your directors know? What can they do?
Representation: Is your board more or less representative of the membership/constituency? Does it include women and men, young and experienced, and persons representing your ethnic and religious diversity? When your supporters see a picture of your board, you want them to say, We feel well represented by them.
Proven performance: Are there directors on your board who are not pulling their weight or whose attendance record is lacking? Harboring dead wood is not just an inert place at the table. It is a negative. It suggests that poor performance is tolerated at the highest organizational levels.
When the results of this self-analysis are known, you need to act on your findings. The Board Service Committee, an expansion of what was previously known as the Nominating Committee, usually handles this task. It is arguably the most important committee on your board since it holds the key to your future effectiveness.
A frequently asked question is How large should a board be?
When a board is too large it becomes unwieldy. Seven to nine is a good number for a small or intermediate sized organization. Twelve is still workable, but anything beyond that becomes unwieldy. An organization with a diverse and scattered membership might feel compelled to have larger boards to achieve broad representation.
The Nominating Committee is arguably the most important committee on a board.
Drawing up the list of candidates—and checking it twice
Once you have identified how many new directors are needed, what competencies are needed, and what representational gaps need to be filled, you are ready to start drawing up the long list of candidates. The Board Service Committee should be in charge of this process. Throw the net out wide. Look for people with a stellar reputation, strong stature and few known negatives. The CEO might have names to suggest, but I caution against constituting a board made up of friends of the CEO.
In the second step, the long list is pared down to the short list, consisting of not more than three of the lead candidates who are then vetted thoroughly. The board should keep on record the files of any persons not making the short list in case it is necessary to re-open the selection process and/or for future openings.
The thoroughness of the vetting process depends on how well the candidates are known. A bad choice can cause havoc with board dynamics and raise questions in the public mind. Unseating a director is more difficult than discharging an unsatisfactory employee. When it is necessary to discharge someone to make room for new blood, do it with the utmost of sensitivity and empathy. Boards should never find themselves so desperate to fill a vacancy that they elect someone with whom they are not well acquainted.
Unseating a director is more difficult than discharging an unsatisfactory employee.
Even candidates who are thought to be well-known may have some dark spots in their pasts. It is good to do some discreet personal checking. At a minimum, you will want to do a Google search, examine the police record, and have a personal interview. Persons completely unknown should be screened more thoroughly, including, without fail, a personal interview.
Making the ask
Once the board has made its selection, its next challenge is to proposition the candidate in such a way as to increase the likelihood of an affirmative response. It is all an academic exercise until the candidate has confirmed acceptance. I find that when the right person is asked at the right time and in the right way, the likelihood of an acceptance is substantially increased.
Timing of your ask is important. Do not ask someone who is about to have surgery or who has just had a major job change. Do not ask a CPA to become your treasurer when they are in the throes of the tax season. Timing your ask can make all the difference.
Timing your ask can make all the difference.
Consider carefully how you ask. Do not be overly casual. Give it the air of importance it deserves. Always do it in person, not by telephone, and never by e-mail. In some cases, do it over a meal or at least a cup of coffee. Many deals are consummated on the golf course. Do whatever works for you, but set the stage for an affirmative reply.
Finally, consider who does the asking. I attended a meeting recently when one member volunteered, Permit me—he owes me big time!
He was deputized and got his trophy! Quid pro quo often works. If you have a really important candidate in mind, get your chairperson to do the asking. It communicates the importance you want to convey.
Big people respond to big challenges. Small bait only attracts small fish.
Whatever you do, do not dumb down the position, hoping to improve your chances of getting an acceptance. That only sets the stage for a lukewarm director. Big people respond to big challenges. Small bait only attracts small fish.
After meeting with a candidate, follow up your ask with a letter summarizing your invitation. Do it before he or she has had an opportunity to reply. Keep the momentum moving in your favor.
Seating the new director
When the election has occurred, you have one more challenge. That is to help your new member to become a contributing member of the board. A thorough orientation can be seen as an acceleration lane. The board chairperson and the CEO should meet with the newly elected member to learn her/his particular interests and abilities. They should provide a packet of materials, including recent board meeting minutes, a copy of the bylaws, and a board manual. The new director should be briefed on the organization’s history and current issues. A time of transition is a good time to effect change in your corporate culture and way of doing business.
Your board is now fully constituted, and you are ready to go to work. But before a board can be effective, it must understand its governance role as distinct from the role of management. That is the subject of Chapter 2.
A board must understand its governance role as distinct from management.
Use the Board Self-Assessment Form attached as Exhibit A. Tailor it to your particular circumstances if you wish.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Does your board have within its membership the needed competencies?
2. Is your board representative of the membership/supporting body?
3. Does your board have a succession plan to keep it strong and to avoid costly gaps in membership?
CHAPTER 2
Helping Directors Understand Their Governance Role
An organization is made up of two parts: governance, which is the responsibility of the board of directors, and management, or operations, which is delegated to the management under the direction of the CEO. To be effective and to discharge its responsibilities faithfully, a board must understand this distinction.