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EFFECTIVE BOARDS: Nonprofit Leadership and Governance. A Partner in Leadership for Sustainability Presentation by Scott T. Helm, Ph.D. Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership at UMKC. Sponsored by:. Board Activities. Fiduciary Strategic Generative. The Legal Duties of The Board.
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EFFECTIVE BOARDS: Nonprofit Leadership and Governance A Partner in Leadership for Sustainability Presentation by Scott T. Helm, Ph.D. Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership at UMKC The Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership at UMKC Sponsored by:
Board Activities • Fiduciary • Strategic • Generative The Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership at UMKC
The Legal Duties of The Board • Duty of Care • Duty of Loyalty • Duty of Obedience The Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership at UMKC
Governance and Policy • Govern • Is to guide, control, and or direct • Governance • Is the process by which community interests and values are translated into policies and actions • Policy • Is a guiding principle; a guide for action that is adopted by organization’s leadership to guide their own and others’ decisions and actions The Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership at UMKC
What areas do policies cover? • Board roles and responsibilities • Staff roles and responsibilities • Operating budgets • Revenue and expenditures • Reserves • Capital improvements • Debt management • Investments • Procurements • Risk management • Human resources • Accounting, internal/external audit/ reporting
Fundamental Dimensions of Policies • Formal v. informal • Accountability v. flexibility • Policy v. Procedures • Actionable v. Philosophical
Creating Financial Policies – Conventional Approach • Define the problem • Research policy alternatives • Create draft policy • Recommend to management • Review by board
The Carver Policy Governance Model • Four Types of Policy Areas under Carver: • Ends: Describes the goals of the board and mission of the organization. • Means: Describes the means by which staff may achieve the ends of the board. • Board-Staff Relationship: Board deals with CEO and delegates complete control to the CEO within limits. • Process of Governance: Board determines how it will operate to accomplish the group’s work.
Differences from conventional method • Board creates policy independent of staff • Policies are very broadly stated • Policies are not focused on departmental or functional levels but rather on public purpose and mission success measures • CEO is given wide discretion within executive limitations • Boards are focused on governance, oversight and community leadership
Differences from conventional method • Boards should be focused to accomplish high value strategic visioning, goal-setting, and leadership • Financial policies under Carver: • Define acceptable financial standards for management • What behavior is not acceptable and what is • Streamlines oversight • Deals with ethics and prudence rather than micro review of results • Board establishes general policies and goals and leave staff to determine how to achieve goals • Carver works best with a council-manager form of government and less well with a mayor-council form where the mayor is CEO.
Models • 2 Rules: • No perfect model • Model should meet your governance goals • Models help us effectively engage our board
Board of the Whole Task Force BOD Task Force
Board of the Whole • Strengths: • Small size- 3 to 12 • No committees, all task forces • Most nimble & quick for decisions • Usually a start-up structure • Volunteer driven, minimal staff needed • Tight teamwork • Founders influence • No executive committee
Board of the Whole • Weaknesses: • Over works members • Lacks diversity and talent • One person can dominate • Lacks perspective • Volunteer dominated • Too quick and bias • Task forces hard to staff
Two Committee Board BOD Task Force (s) Task Force (s) Committee X Committee Y
Two Committee Board • Strengths: • Size-10 to 30 • CEO can staff both • No executive committee • Clear assignments possible • Two Vice Chair system • Staff support good • Nimble and TF approach
Two Committee Board • Weaknesses: • Committees too autonomous • CEO or CVO can dominate • Task forces hard to staff • May have too many task forces • Roles and responsibilities may get confused
Entrepreneurial Board BOD Executive Committee Endowment Committee Operations Assessment Governance Vice Chair Members Task Forces Vice Chair Members Task Forces Vice Chair Members Task Forces
Entrepreneurial Board • Strengths: • Size- 9 to 21 • BOD talents evenly divided • Weak executive committee • 4 vice chair system • Work load evenly divided • Multi-tasked committees • Small enough to add outside talent • Task forces used as needed • CVO-CEO balance is required
Entrepreneurial Board • Weaknesses: • Requires a engaged board • Assignments/responsibilities sometimes confusing • Committee must communicate with each other • Multi-task Committee is harder to learn • Harder to staff • Everyone as a fund raiser is hard to achieve
Traditional Board BOD Executive Committee Finance Programs Membership Fund Raising Audit Strategic Planning Nominating Marketing
Traditional Board • Strengths: • Size- 15 to 100 • Clear Committee areas • Knowledgeable officers • Can accommodate more members • Members are not over worked • More fund raising positions • Most understood structure by volunteers • Can match specific member skills to committees
Traditional Board • Weaknesses: • Strong executive committee • Underworked non-officer members • Too narrow assignments for committees • Not everyone as a fund raiser • Too big • Lack of member ownership • CEO/Staff can dominate • 1/3 of the board is a ‘no show’
The Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership Building Healthier Communities Through Nonprofit Leadership Bloch School of Business and Public Administration University of Missouri – Kansas City 1-800-474-1170 www.mcnl.org The Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership at UMKC