Title: How to Strengthen the Performance of your Board
1How to Strengthen the Performance of your Board
- Thomas P. Holland, Ph.D. Professor and Director,
Institute for Nonprofit Organizations - The University of Georgia
- Athens, GA
2 Old vs. New Approaches
- 1.Management defines problems and solutions
board listens and approves - 2. Board structure parallels administrative
functions - 3. Meetings driven by standard procedures,
emphasizing reports - 4. Board is collection of stars, talented
experts
- 1. Board and management identify key issues
together - 2. Board structure is based on strategic
priorities - 3. Meetings are goal-driven, emphasizing
strategy and learning - 4. Board is strong constellation with growing
teamwork
3Effective Boards
- Keep their attention focused on strategic
priorities, not operations - Identify and work together on what matters most
to the long-term future of organization - Understand trends and changes in the environment
and what they mean for the organization and its
future - Think together out loud about issues before they
become problems, preventing fire-fighting - Develop means for monitoring organizational
performance in key areas
4Practices of Effective Boards
- 1. Mission and Values
- develop and sustain strong, shared understanding
of the organizations ends,
purposes, mission and values - make active use of them in the boards work
- 2. Planning and Priority Setting
- identify strategic directions
- set clear priorities and criteria
- stick to them in the boards work
5 More Effective Practices
- 3. Teamwork
- grow from collection of individual stars into
a strong constellation - develop group inclusiveness and cohesion
- use feedback to strengthen teamwork skills
- 4. Board Education
- continue to learn about the organization, its
environment, and strategic issues - evaluate the boards own work periodically
- strengthen the groups skills in problem-analysis
and in leadership
6 Strategy vs. Operations
- Most board members (like most people) come from
positions of responsibility for operational
decisions. Thats familiar territory for us. - Most board members (like most people) have little
understanding of or experience with governance,
strategic thinking, or planning for the future. - As a result, board meetings slide into familiar
territory-- operations. - Senior staff unwittingly foster such slides.
7 Governance
- Governance isnt just big management
- The board is responsible for
- identifying the mission, purposes, ends
of the organization who it serves and why - translating them into strategies that lead to
successful accomplishment of those ends - monitoring managers implementation management
involves means to the ends - ensuring that the organization has resources
to carry out its purposes - adding value to the organization
8Group Culture of the Board
- Culture that set of unspoken habits, norms, and
practices that guide how a group goes about doing
its work - Group culture develops over time, emerging
from the work habits of founders - It typically focuses on operational issues
- Newcomers are socialized into cultural
assumptions about how this group does its work - These assumptions and habits are resistant to
change, continuing to guide work even when
outside conditions change - Staff continue supplying operational data
9Learning new ways to do the boards
work
- Move from old habits to new, more effective
practices. Old assumptions become choices among
alternatives. - Identify options, new possibilities for doing the
work of the group. - Board must stay focused on goals and ends, not
operations and means. - Experiment with new practices, substituting
better approaches for old ones. - Learn by reflecting on experiences together.
- Demonstrate accountability the board should
model the behaviors it desires in others.
10 How do we get started?
- Take advantage of common situations to reflect on
roles of the board in them and learn from its
experiences, such as - departure of the CEO, board chair, or any senior
person - completion of a campaign
- success or failure in achieving a goal
- attendance shortfalls or complaints about board
or staff meetings - change in relationship with a donor, funding
source, partner organization, consumers - any event that has major impact on organization
11Questions for group reflection
- What were the major factors that led
up to this situation? - What were our goals, assumptions, and
actions going into it? - In what ways did we influence the sequence of
events? - What could we have done differently to
make the outcome more positive? - Lessons we should take into the future?
12CEO is often the introducer of change
- Many boards comfortable with status quo
- Someone must raise ambitions and stir discontent
We can do better than this. - Allies among board leaders are vital.
- Change always involves anxiety. Dont
avoid it or let others sidetrack efforts. - Offer examples of how other boards do their work
and add greater value to organization. - Keep at it. Change takes time.
13Make Learning an Expectation
- Initiate regular evaluative discussions as the
last 15 minutes of every meeting - Did we work on the most important issues?
- What went well? What didnt?
- What should we do differently next time to
be more productive in our future meetings? - Carry out more extensive assessments of
the groups performance annually. - Discuss findings in a retreat, drawing lessons
and group goals for the coming year. - Demonstrate how accountability works.
14Restructure Boards Committees so form
follows function
- Traditional committee structure follows
management divisions, inviting micro-managing
operations undermining CEO - Instead, focus on strategic goals
- Identify what board will add to staff work
- Create ad hoc work groups focusing on each goal
- Groups bring options best ideas to board
- Group ends when goal accomplished
15 Screen the Meeting Agenda
Youre not ready for air time until you have
clearly answered each question
- What is the purpose of this meeting?
of this agenda item? - What specific things do we want to accomplish?
- How will that move us toward a major goal that
will strengthen the organization in the future? - Are the questions sharply defined and understood?
- Have we provided members appropriate information
needed to address questions? - How will we assess our success?
16Use Alternative Meeting Formatsaccording to
goals for each meeting
(again, form follows function)
- Moderated discussions or educational sessions
- Small group brainstorming and discussions
- Thematic meetings focused on a single topic of
overarching importance
(Roberts Rules useful in very
young or disorderly groups, but less so later)
17Strengthen TEAMWORK
- Most boards are composed of individual stars
- Go beyond to focus on the constellation
- Strengthen group performance by
- screening nominees for teamwork skills
- orientation and mentoring
- setting goals for the group itself
- speaking with one voice
- ongoing board education
- regular evaluations and feedback
- taking time to reflect and learn
from experience and feedback
18Information is essential to learning, but most
board members experience
- Data overload
- Inappropriate levels of detail
- Administrative vs. governance perspective
- Lack of strategic relevance
- Unresponsive to members
time constraints - Lack of interpretive context
19Information must be infused with
Meaning
- Governance information, not management
- Strategic, not operational
- Selective, not exhaustive
- Normative, comparisons
over time and with peers - Senior staff should guide and support such
distinctions by the information provided to the
board.
20Sample DashBoard Dialsabout Organizational
Performance
- Percent of revenue by sources, over time
- Expenses by major categories or priorities
- Percent of consumers completing service
- Discounts as percent of price charged
- Percent of professional staff with highest degree
- Deferred maintenance/ replacement value
21One Organizations Dashboard
22Another boards Dashboard focuses
on
- Program Mix Are the organizations activities
focused on our priorities? - Program Quality Are they being done well?
- Resource Acquisition Are we bringing in
sufficient resources to meet the budget? - Resource Management Are we keeping our budget
balanced and in line with priorities?
23That Boards Dials, Part 1
- Program Mix Are the organizations activities
focused on our priorities? - Staff time allocation, by program, quarterly
- Expenditures by program, , quarterly
- Program Quality Are they being done well?
- Feedback from those receiving program efforts
- donors, sponsors, granting foundations
- community organizations, volunteers, chapters,
- consumers and staff
24That Boards Dials, Part 2
- Resource Acquisition Are we bringing in
sufficient resources to meet the budget? - Income by source
- amount and of board members giving annually
- income by other sources, over time (quarterly,
annually) - compared with peer organizations
- Are we diversifying our sources of income?
- amounts by sources over time
- new sources, amounts
- comparisons with peer organizations
25That Boards Dials, Part 3
- Resource Management Are we keeping our budget
balanced and in line with priorities? - Set tolerance limits (plus or minus 10) for each
line or category - Report total expenditures by program and priority
- Comparisons over time (quarterly, annually, over
past 5 years) - Justifications for exceeding limits
26Additional Qualitative Information
- Views of key constituencies and stakeholders
- Informal views and concerns of Executive and
staff - Information from experts inside and outside
27Task Invite your Board to Design its own
Dashboard
- What are our top priorities for this
organization? - What key, selective aspects of the organization
do we want to monitor? - What are the best ways to display each?
- What comparisons would be most informative?
(over time, with peers) - When do we want to receive reports?
- What will we do when exceptions occur?
28Assess how well the board itself is
performing regarding
- Clarity of mission and purpose
- Staying focused on important strategic issues
- Evaluation and support of the Executive
- Raising funds and managing financial resources
- Involvement in planning for the future
- Orientations for new members
- Board-staff relationships
- Communications with constituencies
- Risk management
- Board operations, use of members time and talents
29Task Board creates own
self-assessment tool
- Begin with clarifying expectations
of the team, both as a group and individual
members - Identify goals for group for the coming year
- List all expectations and goals in a series of
statements - Add a response format to each statement
How well did we do in this area in this
meeting? over the past year? - Provide space for comments suggestions
30Sustaining Attention to Board
Performance
- Expand duties of Nominating Committee to
include ongoing board development - This group oversees regular evaluations and uses
findings to - plan educational events for whole board
- identify learning opportunities for individuals
- help chairperson improve meeting procedures
- refine nomination criteria
- guide continuous improvement of board work
31Continuous Improvement is a major part of
the boards ongoing responsibility
- Identify and announce annual goals publicly
- Keep them posted in conspicuous places
- Remind group about them at every meeting
- Link every agenda item to a goal
- Solicit feedback periodically from team members
and constituencies on progress - Review performance at end of each year
- Set goals for improvement in coming year
32 Summary
- Focus the groups attention on those few, key
issues that really matter most to the mission
and goals of the organization as it goes into
the future - Set priorities for the groups attention and then
keep meetings focused on them - Specify criteria for monitoring progress
- Use feedback to strengthen teamwork
- Work on priorities through better committee
structures and meeting formats
33For further information
- About the UGA Institute for Nonprofit
Organizations - web site http//www.uga.edu/nonprofit
- telephone 706-542-5463
- e-mail tholland_at_uga.edu
- About Holland, Blackmon Associates
- web site http//www.hollandblackmon.org
- telephone 706-548-4115