About now, 12 days before Christmas, a few CEOs (and more likely, their executive assistants) are scrambling to find meaningful gifts for their board members.
Here’s a gift idea that will keep on giving and giving and giving. What if…your
CEO pledged to wear board member shoes all year?
I recently came across the following insightful metaphor from Bill Hoyt in his
book, Effectiveness by the Numbers: Counting What Counts in the Church:
“It is not
according to the taste of the angler,
but according
to the taste of the fish
that one baits
the hook.”
When your CEO and senior team members (and CFOs especially) step into the
virtual shoes of board members, I’m guessing several things will happen:
#1. BOARD
PREFERENCES. CEOs will support the board according to the board’s taste
(preferences, learning styles, meeting times, etc.) and not the CEO’s taste.
· Example: Your
CEO’s learning style might be listening,
but the learning style of her board members might be reading. (Click here to listen to The Flourishing Culture Podcast
on learning styles, and much more.)
#2. BOARD
REPORTS. Board reports will be delivered on time (or even early!) so board
members have adequate time to pray, discern, and reflect on board meeting
agendas, reports, and recommendations.
· Insight: “What
kind of CEO waits until the night before the board meeting to dump on the directors
a phone-book-size report…Surely not a CEO who trusts his or her board.” (Read
the HBR article, “What Makes Great Boards Great.”)
#3. BOARD
TIME. When CEOs wear board member shoes, there will be greater sensitivity to
the limited time board members actually have for board work.
· Idea. Urge
your CEO to serve on another nonprofit board—to experience the boardroom from
the other end of the table. It will be a wake-up call!
#4. BOARD
STRENGTHS. There’s a humorous story in Lesson 25 of Lessons From the Nonprofit Boardroom, “Align Board Member Strengths
With Committee Assignments.” The big idea: CEOs and board chairs must leverage
the “3 Powerful S’s” of every board member: Strengths, Spiritual Gifts, and
Social Styles. That would be a huge gift to every person.
· Example: When
you assign me to committees that don’t leverage my strengths, I’m likely to
skip the meeting. But when you invite me to serve in an area that aligns and
exercises my 3 Powerful S’s—whew!—that’s an instant holy calling!
If you still need
a gift—in addition to a Christmas card with the above pledge—then (you guessed
it) give every board member a copy of Lessons From the Nonprofit Boardroom.
Merry Christmas!
BOARDROOM ASSIGNMENT: Take five minutes at your next board meeting and ask
every board member to share how God has wired them: spiritual gifts, social
style (analytical, driving, amiable, or expressive), strengths, learning style,
etc.
MORE RESOURCES: Follow the “40 Blogs. 40 Wednesdays.” color commentaries
on Lessons From the Nonprofit Boardroom. Click here.
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