Title: Building the Board Your Organization Needs
1Building the Board Your Organization Needs
- Presented by Indiana Youth Institute
- Community Foundation of Howard County 3/8/2007
2Non-Profit The Life Cycles Model
Advancing
Operational
Decline
Turnaround
Developing
Terminal
Idea
Life Cycles Model
3(No Transcript)
4Who owns the Organization?
- According to the state of Indiana and the US
Government, the board of directors are the
Owners of the organization. - Board members are the gate keepers and assure
that the mission, vision and values are in line
with community needs and expectations.
5The Board
- Authorized by the state and the organizations
supporters, the board governs the life of the
club - establishes mission and direction, ensures the
necessary resources, and develops guiding
principles. - retains ultimate responsibility and power
- is accountable to the public trust and to the
clubs constituencies.
6BOARD DEVELOPMENT IS THE KEY!!
7The Chief Professional Officer
- Authorized by the board, the chief professional
officer manages the daily affairs of the
organization. - supports the board with strategic information,
ideas and connections - manages the affairs of the organizaton by
ensuring appropriate planning, coordination and
implementation of the program established by the
board to support the mission - retains immediate, or operational responsibility
and power.
8CPO (Executive Director, President, CEO)
- Recommend Annual Objectives.
- Plan Implement Programs.
- Prepare Budget.
- Manage Budget.
- Employ Supervise Staff.
- Implement Board Community Decisions.
- Coordinate Resource Development Effort.
9Board Responsibilities
- Set Policy.
- Resource Acquisition.
- Assurance of Effective Leadership Planning.
- Interpret Agency to Community.
- Recruit New Board Members.
- Sign Legal Documents.
- Approve Budget.
- Employ and Evaluate CPO.
10Board Development Process
- Identify Board profiling requires the board to
assess its skill sets and characteristics to
learn where there are gaps that need to be
filled. - Recruiting Once the board identifies the gaps,
a list of prospective board members is developed
and reviewed based on the needs of the
organization.
11Board Development Process
- Orientation New board members need an
orientation to learn about the agency and also
what the expectations and responsibilities of
being a board member are. - Engage Board members need to be and feel
connected to the organization and the mission.
12Board Development Process
- Education All board members need continuing
education. The board leadership, staff and
volunteers need to continue being educated on
trends, new programs and legislation that impacts
their agency or funding streams.
13Board Development Process
- Evaluate Your Organization is only as strong as
its board. Constant evaluation of programs,
funding sources and staff and board effectiveness
is critical to long term survival. - Celebrate Board volunteers deserve to be
recognized personally and publicly for their
efforts.
14Roles of the Board
- Duty of Care Using your best judgment. It does
not mean being perfect or not making mistakes.
Have you used reasonable caution in making
decisions? - Duty of Loyalty Putting your personal and
professional interests aside for the good of the
organization.
15Roles of the Board
- Duty of Obedience Using funds for the purposes
for which they were given. Stay true to mission
and focused on program development. Follow all
laws and regulations that apply to non-profit
work.
16In a nutshell
- Determine mission/Identity
- Select/Evaluate CPO
- Ensure strategic planning process
- Ensure adequate resources
- Manage resources effectively
- Enhance community standing
- Ensure legal/ethical integrity
- Board is self-perpetuating
17Rule of thumb
- Good Program Results
- Build and attract great boards
- Which raise lots of dollars
- Which are then re-invested back into program
expansion.
18Top Ten Key Characteristics of Strong Boards
- Strong Committees that do the work of the board
- Outstanding Board orientation/engagement
- Establish a planning culture.
- Develop strong community leaders who have skill
sets to grow organization - Keep board meetings focused and meaningful
19Top Ten Continued
- CEO-Board President must communicate
- 100 of the board gives financially
- Mission/Vision/Value statements are read before
each board meeting. They guide your decision
making process - Be an ambassador. Keep the agency in your
Frontal Lobes. - Own dont rent.
20Engaging the Board Member
- Make the time to attend meetings and programs.
- Become a learner. Trends, non-profit work,
funding issues. - Respect the staff and hold them accountable for
results. - See the big picture
- Have Courage