I. Board’s Basic Responsibilities
a. Basic duties:
i. Care--Conserve and protect the assets
ii. Loyalty--Fulfill mission
iii. Obedience--Accordance with State & Federal Law
b. Overriding duty is fiduciary (duty to act for the good of others), although specific responsibilities vary by
i. Size and scope of organization
ii. Developmental stage
iii. Method of Board selection
iv. Method of management (staff vs. volunteer)
c. Major Board responsibilities:
i. Determine organization’s mission & purpose
ii. Select and support the chief executive
1. understand organization’s current strengths
2. clear description of duties
3. engage in a systematic search
4. allow executive to assume responsibility and assert leadership
5. outline expectations of executive, but take at least some responsibility for difficult decisions
6. provide renewal and professional development for executive
iii. Review the executive’s performance
iv. Plan for the future
v. Approve and monitor organization’s programs and services
1. If we were starting today, would we do it this way?
2. Do our actions match our mission statement?
3. How are we like and unlike the best in our field?
4. What do our intended beneficiaries think of our performance?
5. How are the next five years likely to be different?
vi. Provide sound financial management
vii. Enlist financial resources (“Give, get, or get out”)
viii. Advance the organization’s public image
1. public relations strategy
2. policy in place to handle crises
ix. Strengthen it own effectiveness as a board
II. Using Board Development to Apply Theory to Practice
a. Characteristics of Board development program:
i. Continuous process rather than a single event
ii. Board chair & chief executive must be committed to it
iii. Board must be willing to invest in its own development
b. Specific activities
i. Orientation for new Board members
ii. Retreats, workshops, conferences
iii. Keeping job descriptions current
iv. Developing a systematic selection process for new Board members
v. Maintaining a governance information system
vi. Conduct periodic self-assessment
vii. Provide opportunities for Board to observe and participate directly in organization’s services
c. Reasons for neglecting development
i. Relentless pace of business
ii. General uncertainty about how to proceed
iii. Fear of change
iv. Literature overload
d. Remember: “A good board is a victory, not a gift.”
III. Governance vs. Management
a. “One of the best things that a board can do for the nonprofit it governs is to look ahead.”
b. Policy and administration are often interconnected.
c. Problems with micromanagement:
i. Lowers staff morale and productivity
ii. Little time left for issues that will have greatest impact
Bonus Material
The Carver Model : Basic
Principles of Policy Governance
Cf. Boards that Make a Difference, 2nd Ed. John Carver (Jossey-Bass,
1997)
I. Trusteeship
a. Board speaks for the “owners,” who are not present at the table.
b. Can be difficult to decide who the owners are (who “owns” KGAC? Or the Red Cross?)
II. The Board speaks with one voice or not at all
a. Votes are not necessarily unanimous—but once vote is taken, there is a single decision
b. Beware of “letting the officers do it” or “death by committee”
c. Three principles:
i. Establish written policy that no single Board member has authority over the executive
ii. Allow assessment of executive performance only against criteria established by the Board
iii. “Courteously disregard” a renegade Board member who persists speaking alone
III. Board decisions should be predominantly policy decisions: Four types:
a. Ends (which “consumer” results are to be achieved, for whom, at what cost)
b. Executive limitations (of means)
c. Board-staff linkages and assessment
d. Governance process (philosophy, accountability, and specifics of the Board’s job)
IV. Formulate policy by determining the broadest values before progressing to more narrow ones
V. Define and delegate, rather than react and ratify
VI. Determination of Ends is the pivotal duty of governance
a. “An issue is an ends issue if—and only if—it directly describes what good, for whom, or at what cost.”
VII. Board’s best control over staff means is to limit, not prescribe
VIII. Board must explicitly design its own products and processes
IX. Board must forge a link with management that is both empowering and safe
X. Performance of the executive must be monitored rigorously, but only against policy criteria
© 2004 A.J.Filipovitch
Revised 5 July 2004