The last blog of the last day of last year referenced Max De Pree’s quick-reading book and we asked you, “What Will You Measure in 2017?”
So this year, we’re encouraging you to keep that question in mind as you
inspire your colleagues on the board to reflect on their sacred calling. David McKenna writes that board members must see themselves as “stewards of a sacred trust.”
Stewards are lifelong learners, so before your board members groan or whine
about one more book to read, insert this at the top of your board agenda:
“An intelligent person is always eager to take in more truth;
fools feed on fast-food fads and fancies.”
Proverbs 15:14 MSG
fools feed on fast-food fads and fancies.”
Proverbs 15:14 MSG
SUGGESTION: Order one
copy of this 91-page gem (not a fad, it was published in 2001) for every board member and senior team member—and,
together, we’ll dig deep into Max De Pree’s Called to Serve: Creating and Nurturing the Effective Volunteer Board.
In each blog, we’ll highlight a big idea from the book—and suggest how you
might leverage that wisdom with your board. For example, as we approach Super
Bowl Sunday:
Commenting on board committees, De Pree notes the story of the English
visitor who watched his first American football game and observed, “The game
combines the two worst elements of American culture—violence and committee
meetings.”
EXERCISE: Using a scale of 1 (Not at All
Effective) to 5 (Extremely Effective), invite every board member to evaluate
every committee.
Called to Serve is short, says
De Pree, because “We believe good people need reminders and an occasional
nudge, not a sermon.” So instead of a 300-page snoozer, De Pree crafts a
coaching conversation (a series of letters) with a young leader and his first
CEO/board relationship. It’s easy reading and the short epistles are
extraordinary.
Great boards, says the former chairman and CEO of Herman Miller (he was
also board chair of and honored by Fuller Seminary), should have at least four characteristics:
--Lively
--Effective
--Fun to serve on
--Demanding in the best sense of the word
·
EXERCISE: Using a scale of 1 (Definitely
No) to 5 (Definitely Yes), ask board members to indicate if these four
characteristics are representative of your board’s culture.
EXTRA CREDIT: If you gave a
“5” rating for one or more characteristic, share one—and why.
In the next blog, we’ll begin thinking about Max De Pree’s “Top-10”
answers to “What would a really good board look like.” It’s not this, he writes:
“I once sat in on a board meeting as a visitor. Before the meeting was to
begin, I asked the man next to me if I could have a look at his agenda. He
said, ‘Oh, we don’t have a real agenda. What you see is simply an exercise in
random trivia.’ Well, that’s exactly what we don’t need.”
To order from Amazon, click on the title for: Called to Serve: Creating and Nurturing the Effective Volunteer Board,
by Max De Pree, (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company).
No comments:
Post a Comment