We're bringing Lori L. Jacobwith to Kansas City on May 29 to share how to create a culture that enourages board involvement in fundraising. Learn more and save your seat here.
How many of these are true for you and your nonprofit board?
1. You make assumptions that are incorrect about board members knowledge, skills, or comfort level.
2. You make board members wrong, mostly behind their back, and they feel it.
3. Board members, especially the new ones, are nervous about making a mistake or overstepping their bounds.
4. Board members want to do a great job, but they forget the “when” or the “how” so they don’t do anything.
5. Some of your board members are bored and feel disconnected from your mission.
This list could be much longer. Add to it if you’d like. Especially if it will make you feel better.
What I find most often when I work with board members: their intentions are good. BUT you or your staff can make it look like you really don’t need them to do more than show up to a meeting now and then and rubber stamp the financials. And frankly, they find your board meetings less than stimulating.
So, they start to miss meetings and some seem to stop caring.
The truth might be much closer to any or all of the five reasons I’ve listed here.
What to do?
Stop “running the show” and invite them to do specific tasks. And then provide them the tools, systems, and support to do what you asked them to do. That will take you far to creating a better nonprofit board.
True Story
I delivered an planning session for more than 22 board members and key staff leadership for an organization doing incredibly important work. An outcome and agreed upon action from the session was the board would start to make thank you calls to current donors, the following week. For the foreseeable future, thank you calls would be made within one week of receiving the gift.
At our debrief call 3 weeks after the working session, no one on staff had taken any action to:
On our call the board members complained that they didn’t have the tools to do what we all agreed was an important task for increasing donor retention.
While staff complained that the board was getting “too much in the weeds” for the staff to keep up with them and they didn’t have time to do all “that work.”
What!?
Fortunately I was on a conference call and no one could see my stunned face.
Engaged board members were asking for lists and the tools to do what was asked of them.
One or two well-meaning staff poured water on the board enthusiasm and allowed a tone of complaining into their voices on the call. With some candid comments, questions, and promises with deadlines attached we got things back on track. But it wasn’t pretty for a few minutes.
I truly believe most board members show up wanting to do excellent work on your board.
If they aren’t shown how to do things they’ve never done before, they start to tune out or worse yet, they stop showing up.
I’m extremely committed to shifting the working relationships between board and staff.