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Maintaining a Board of Directors

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Maintaining a Board of Directors What is a Board of Directors? It is often: a watchdog a cheerleader a manager a planner a communicator The governing group that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Maintaining a Board of Directors


1
Maintaining a Board of Directors
2
What is a Board of Directors?
  • It is often
  • a watchdog
  • a cheerleader
  • a manager
  • a planner
  • a communicator

3
The governing group that governs an organization
is called
  • a Steering Committee
  • an Executive Committee
  • a planning group
  • Trustees

4
Why should you maintain a strong Board?
  • It ensures that the mission of the organization
    will continue to be well understood by those who
    are in a position to further it.
  • It helps to pave a smoother relationship between
    paid staff members and the Board.
  • It helps to keep the Board from getting into
    legal problems and helps to extricate it if it
    does.
  • It paves the way for easier fundraising for the
    organization.
  • It helps ensure a steady supply of new Board
    members, the lifeblood of most nonprofit and
    small community organizations.

5
How do you maintainan effectiveBoard of
Directors?
6
  • 1. Develop a system to assist Board members in
    understanding the Board and their roles on it.
  • Making sure Board members have a clear, written
    understanding of the way things are and why
  • Furnishing clear job descriptions for members

7
  • 2. Design a process for welcoming, training, and
    mentoring new members.
  • 3. Maintain a healthy, effective relationship
    with paid staff.
  • Inviting staff members (and even interested
    volunteers) to meetings
  • Making sure the staff is getting the support they
    need
  • Creating other opportunities for the Board to
    better understand the work done by staff members

8
  • 4. Hold effective meetings.
  • Try an unconventional place to meet
  • Make sure new members have the opportunity to get
    to know one another
  • Put together a readable, relevant, interesting
    Board packet
  • Bring in experts
  • Make sure everyone says something during the
    meeting.

9
  • 5. Maintain a sensible work level for Board
    members.
  • Try to maintain a balance for staff
    responsibility
  • 6. Develop a policy for dealing with urgent
    matters between meetings.
  • Popular ways often include
  • Phone trees -- these are especially helpful for
    small, local Boards
  • Communication by E-mail can be a lifesaver for
    larger groups that are spread out geographically.
  • Having a designated "point person" who
    distributes information to everyone
  • Developing a small internal newsletter to be sent
    out to Board members regularly or as needed

10
  • 7. Define terms of membership.
  • How will you choose your officers?
  • Will your Board be staggered?
  • Will your Board have term limits?
  • How will you ensure a diverse membership?
  • 8. Be aware of state and national laws that will
    affect the Board and the organization.
  • There are many different laws that will determine
    what you can or cannot do
  • Have a lawyer familiar with nonprofit law as a
    Board member
  • Remember you want to know the rules before you
    play the game

11
  • 9. Develop and maintain a conflict-of-interest
    policy.
  • Review the policy.
  • Sign a paper that acknowledges that they have
    read and will comply with the policy.
  • 10. Organize an annual retreat.
  • Evaluate the Board's work over the past year
  • Ask the Board to decide the year's agenda
  • Offer Board members which organizational programs
    or community issues they'd like to learn more
    about over the coming year

12
  • 11. Have regular (if infrequent) formal
    evaluations.
  • Discuss how things are going both among the Board
    as well as with the organization the Board serves
  • Look at the organization's by-laws
  • 12. Celebrate your accomplishments!
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