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Characteristics of School Foundation Leadership. An NSFA Production Prepared especially for the MASB Annual School Foundation Conference. Abbreviations & Terms. BOD: Board of Directors of the foundation BOE: Board of Education of the school
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Characteristics of School Foundation Leadership An NSFA Production Prepared especially for the MASB Annual School Foundation Conference
Abbreviations & Terms • BOD: Board of Directors of the foundation • BOE: Board of Education of the school • ED: Executive Director of the foundation, whether volunteer, part time, or full time • GWT: Generational Wealth Transfer • MD: Major donors • NPO: Not for profit organizations, foundations are NPO’s • PMO: Profit making organizations, most businesses exist as PMO’s • SF/EF/LEF: School foundation • Super: Superintendent
Value of School Foundations • Improves communication with the community • Raises awareness of school and district’s needs • Offers volunteer opportunities • Provides alternative funding sources for schools • Marshals community resources for the school • Offers an opportunity for the community to express its support for the community’s children…its future
8 Leadership Positions Discussed • ED: Executive Director, the person with whom I am speaking today. • BOD/Board of Directors of a K12 Foundation • Board Chair • Superintendent or Principal • BOE: Board of Education/School Board • Core Group of the board • Committees of the board • Advisory board • Consultants
What You Want! • The 3: W’s T’s, G’s • And…….. • Trustworthy • Donor • Creative • Bold • Influential • Well known
What They Want! • The 3: R’s • And….. • A vision of the future (for the children of the community) to follow • A mission to keep them on the correct path • An opportunity to do something significant, creative, leadership (Herzberg) • Volunteer psychology • JD/Work • Evaluations • Create expectations
What They Want…Continued • Board Exchange Theory by Marabella, Purdue U. 1991 • Have personal contact with each BOD member at least once a year. • Request feedback from BOD, give them an opportunity to express themselves. • Ask them why they are serving on the board • What are they expecting from their service
Leader Recognition Possibilities • Events, Signature Events • Pictures in the paper or foundation literature, annual report • Pictures on the wall (school, foundation, post office) • Recognition tree, recognition ladder • Welcome letter from the highest officials of the school or foundation • Call, text, e-mail (personal) on birthday or anniversary. • Ask for their opinion • Take them with you on a donor call or NSFA conference • Celebration dinner/night out • Personalized gift: pen, paper weight, etc.
1. The BOD • The Board of Directors (BOD) should be a powerful team, helping to build and develop the foundation. • The community will judge the foundation by the people on their board. • Foundation directors link the school and community.
Why Have a Board • Legally • Required by most states • IRS requirement for NPO's seeking or maintaining tax-exemption • Practically • Planning • Organization • Operations • Audits • Seek funding for projects • Successfully • Help achieve mission • Create better schools for students
BOD Performance Domains • Participates in developing and clarifying the K12 foundation’s mission • Articulates a vision for the future of the organization • Participates in strategic planning, developing clearly achievable 3-5 year goals.
BOD Performance Domains • Promotes viable and responsible board committees to help accomplish the goals of the board • Recruits and selects new board members and provides them with orientation and training
BOD Performance Domains • Participates in fundraising efforts by • Identifying donors • Cultivating donors • Soliciting donors • Donates annually to the school foundation The board must set an example by giving generously (seek three year commitments)
Average yearly amount raised over the past 3 years vs. BOD expectation to fundraise
Average yearly amount raised over the past 3 years vs. presence of an Executive Director
Board Recruitment (2 styles) • Financially strong, well known: financial movers and shakers of the community • Politically correct: develop a recruitment matrix, representing all interest groups of the community. • Age & gender • Occupations, CPA, attorney, • Prior NPO or college/university foundation experience • Those with connections • Interest groups represented • Fireball/go getter/shaker and mover/enthusiastic
Board Selection A 1999 Oregon school foundation study found the following as various methods used to choose members within its state: • 12% Appointed by school board • 85% Appointed by the existing foundation board members • 12% Selected by their respective representative group • 3% Others • 0% Elected
Improving Board Performance • Duty of Care: act in a reasonably informed manner and help oversee the corporation • Duty of Loyalty: Board members must put the interests of the foundation above members or third parties • Duty of Obedience: Follow the by-laws and articles of incorporation
Ineffective Boards Ineffective: • Mild to moderate interest • Fund-phobia • Role confusion • Financial misfortune • Recruitment disorientation • Lack of strategic plan Stephen R. Block, Why NPO’s Fail, Jossey Bass
Leadership continued (build the team!) • Board Chair • Single most influential position on the board • Choose from those with prior NPO experience, or professional leadership experience. • Superintendent/Building Principal • Understands his/her role (Rand study) • Help identify and cultivate donors • Keep informed, meet with personally • Donates personally • Keeps the rest of the administrative team on board as well. • Helps to keep the BOE on board as well
Leadership continued (build the team!) • Board of Education • Willing to use leadership role in philanthropy • Understand the need to work and invest in this area • Help identify and cultivate donors. • Donates personally • Stays connected to the BOD via ex officio member's • Core Group of the Board • Recognize and nurture this group
Leadership continued (build the team!) • Board of Education • Willing to use leadership role in philanthropy • Understand the need to work and invest in this area • Help identify and cultivate donors. • Donates personally • Stay connected via ex officio member's • Advisory Board • Don’t let them slip away. • Consultants; major donor work, capital campaigns, planned giving, policies & procedures, strategic planning.
Improving Board Performance • Establish a board orientation time • Develop JD’s for all associated with the foundation • Develop a board handbook to keep track of all decisions, by-laws, articles etc. • Ask for annual evaluation of each member (self-evaluation…see attached) • Develop JD’s for committees • Annual evaluation of each committee
Benchmarks of Board Success • Effectively selecting and recruiting new members (a year round process) • New member orientation • Annual meeting (setting goals for the coming year) • Writing new policies and procedures • Developing a comprehensive annual report • Conducting an annual retreat: • Set budget • FR goals for the year • Review policies, procedures, by-laws, mission and vision • Review enterprise development components
Other reminders • D&O/E&O insurance in place. (statutory liability shield) • Incorporate term limits (3-1-3 or 3-3-1) • Add a conflict of interest policy • Schedule 8-10 meetings for the year • Encourage active committees reporting to the board. • Review the attached list of “What Boards Do”
Sample Job Description • Ideally, a job description is provided to the prospective volunteer before he/she is asked to make a commitment. • Name or title of the volunteer job/position. • Brief general description of the position, including: • Purpose and how it relates to the goals and objectives of the organization. • Primary responsibilities • Expected results • Qualifications required to perform the job well(Skills, knowledge, and/or experience; include physical requirements, if any)
Sample Job Description • Time required, including: • Number of hours per week/month • Length of commitment • Expected starting date • Name of person to whom responsible • Support system provided by the organization: • Budget • Meeting space or other space provided • Orientation/training required and by whom provided • (If applicable) staff person assigned to work with the volunteer or group http://www.arts.state.tx.us/toolkit/nonprofit/jobdescript.asp
Resources • Stephen Block, Why Nonprofits Fail, Jossey-Bass • Jim Collogan, School Foundation Textbook, NSFA • Fisher Howe, Welcome to the Board, Jossey-Bass • Sharon Oster, Strategic Management for Nonprofit Organizations, Oxford University Press • Smith, Bucklin & Associates, Inc., The Complete Guide to Nonprofit Management, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. NSFA Bookstore: www.schoolfoundations.org