Encyclopedia of Leadership

(sharon) #1

4.8


REVITALIZING THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS


IN A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION


Inspired by John Carver.

Leaders in nonprofit organizations benefit considerably when their Board of Directors is well


designed, has a clear role and process for governing, and has a clearly defined relationship with


the management team. It’s a mistake to think that a strong Board will get in your way as a lead-


er. It’s most often the weak Boards that meddle in operations. Strong leaders need strong


Boards. Organizational success starts with clear roles and accountabilities for both. This tool


outlines a systematic approach to Board design, and emphasizes the central role of the Board


in developing and overseeing policy in the four areas listed.


SECTION 4 TOOLS FORDESIGNINGPRODUCTIVEPROCESSES ANDORGANIZATIONS 129



  1. Define a clear mission.

  2. Clarify the relationship between the Board and the Chief Executive Officer (CEO).


Things to clarify:


  • Power that is passed to the CEO (or Executive Director) in the form of expectations, limitations, and
    accountabilities.

  • How the CEO’s use of that power is evaluated; what will be evaluated and how.
    Key elements of the Board’s role:

  • The Board is responsible for its own development, job design, discipline, and performance.

  • One of the most important tasks of a Board is the choice of CEO.

  • The CEO has a right to expect the Board to be clear about its expectations and limitations, and to speak with one
    voice.
    Key elements of the CEO’s role:

  • The CEO is responsible to the Board for achievement of organizational goals and for following Board policies.

  • The CEO needs a strong Board, strategic direction and goals, but a free hand for managing operations, within
    policies and parameters.

  • The CEO must influence the organization’s culture, must set a high level of ethics and prudence, and must achieve
    results. [☛4.5 Culture]
    Potential pitfalls:

  • Ensure there is no overlap of tasks for which management is accountable. Shared accountability is often shirked.
    [☛13.3 Accountability]

  • If boundaries aren’t defined, the Board will likely forage in whatever individual interests and fears occur to them.


What is a clear mission?


  • A mission is the organization’s contribution to the world. What products and services are provided and to what
    customers?

  • The mission statement is brief and worded in terms of results, not activities. It drives all goals and activities. [☛2.3
    Directional Statements]
    Some tips and pitfalls:

  • Aim for practical and cost-effective measures of success. However, the fact that results are measurable doesn’t make
    them valuable. Imprecise measures of the right things beat highly precise measures of the wrong things.

  • The Board should focus on the why,not the how; on ends (mission and high-level goals), not on means (operational
    activities). Boards that meddle in means disempower their CEO and management team.

Free download pdf