Steps 3 – 5 in Building
a ‘Resource Board’
Strategies and Tactics for Building a
‘Resource Board’
By Tom Colligan
Jeffrey Byrne & Associates, Inc.
Building your organization’s Board
of Directors into a “Resource Board”
is one of the primary responsibilities
of the “Chief Employed Officer,”
or CEO.
Recalling from previous articles in this
series (October
15, 2004), a resource board is one
that requires each person who serves on
the board to bring a minimum level of
financial resources either personally
or through their direct connections, and
often times both. Other qualities will
always be required but a candidate for
the board must first meet the ‘resource’
qualification to serve.
The next three steps in the process are
when the volunteer/staff partnership is
strengthened and blossoms. Much of this
work should be completed by the CEO and
reviewed and shaped by the very highest
level leadership in the community (which
you have already managed to recruit for
your board development committee.)
Volunteers who feel that their time is
used wisely and that they are associated
with the best run and most effective organization
in the community will become your organization’s
strongest supporters. Although presented
as Step 3, this planning is completed
prior to and is part of the first meeting.
Step 3: DEVELOP A
PLAN, INCLUDING ANNUAL GOALS AND SCHEDULE
FOR COMMITTEE ACTIVITIES
Full attendance should be the primary
objective of the committee’s first
meeting and a series of exhibits should
be mailed one week in advance, always
marked confidential.
The agenda and materials should cover
the following:
-
Committee “commission”
or charge’.
-
The section of the
by-laws that cover the nominating or
development committee, board size, composition,
terms, rotation, etc.
-
List of committee
members with addresses, phone numbers,
and e-mail addresses and a list of board
members with the same information.
-
An analysis of what
characteristics and skills are needed
on the board to meet the challenges
of the organization for the next 4 to
6 years.
-
A list of any existing
vacancies resulting from rotation off
due to term limits or resignation and
a list of board members by class (year
their term expires). This should also
note how many more years each sitting
board member is able to serve.
-
A blank evaluation
sheet to evaluate existing board members
whose terms are expiring but are eligible
for re-election.
-
A blank evaluation
sheet noting the recommended evaluation
characteristics to be considered for
new board members.
-
If a pool of names
for prospective board members exists,
this should also be included.
-
Finally and very
important is a schedule of meeting dates
and the tasks that should be accomplished
at the 1-hour committee meeting. Ask
each person to check their schedule
as the meetings may reach as much as
five months into the future. Also ask
each member to bring their calendar
so that conflicts can be resolved on
the spot, assuring 100% attendance and
participation. This will create a commitment
by members to attend every meeting.
If a conflict cannot be resolved offer
to conference in the individual, but
keep in mind that personal attendance
is the objective.
Step 4: CREATE A CUMULATIVE
LIST OF PROSPECTIVE MEMBERS
Maintaining an up-to-date list of individuals
you would like to serve on the board takes
discipline. This step is essential so
you can develop prospect research and
build an individualized recruitment strategy
for each prospect. And it is not as hard
as you think.
Begin with member, participant, major
donor lists, and those who have a reputation
for serving in significant capacities
in other organizations. Scout board members
from other successful organizations and
don’t forget lists from the country
clubs, major corporate boards, and foundation
board members. If you have recruited the
right kind of board development committee
names of peers will also surface.
Step 5: CULTIVATE
AND RECRUIT NEW BOARD MEMBERS
If you are recruiting the right caliber
of board member, you will be asking for
something much more valuable than their
money when you ask for their TIME. Appropriate
cultivation and the “recruitment
ask” should be as thoroughly planned
as any major gift ask.
Once you have a list of names, prepare
a data sheet on each prospect. Begin by
searching the Internet and spending time
in the archives of your community newspapers
to learn as much as possible about the
prospect.
Be sure to personally interview the individual
who suggested the name. The objective
is to identify all the possible community,
corporate, personal and organizational
interconnections that will provide insight
into your prospect’s interests and
motivations. Only then will you be able
to prepare a personal cultivation or “moves
management” program.
Now roll up your sleeves and start connecting
the dots. If the individual you want on
your board has run a telethon for a major
service organization and served on their
board, find out how your organization
might have connected with that organization
or its clients through related programming.
You’ll also want to know:
-
How many people have
received services from your organization
-
Who served with him/her
on the board
-
Who volunteers to
help with the telethon
-
Who is their largest
donor
-
Who do they vacation
with, recreate with, etc.
The more questions you ask the more likely
you will find the connections to those
who love and want to serve your organization.
The cultivation process is a fine art.
Begin by testing knowledge and inviting
the prospect to see how your organization
has impacted the community. Send a nice
thank you note and a reprint of a feature
article on your organization as a follow
up. Ask one of his/her closely connected
friends or associates acting as your advocate
to gently solicit the prospect’s
opinion on what he/she learned.
Arrange for the individual to attend
a special event and continue working the
process. This carefully planned process
can take months, and sometimes years.
Finally when the time comes to invite
him/her to the board, select the close
friend or associate who has been most
closely connected to the cultivation process.
Make the invitation and be clear about
expectations. This is not and should not
be an interview for the board. You should
already know if the prospect is appropriate
for board membership and that he/she will
accept.
A personal hand written note thanking
your new volunteer for their affirmative
answer should precede the notice to attend
the orientation meeting.
In the next issue of News You Can Use,
we will outline the final three steps
you can take in building your own Resource
Board. Strength of board leadership is
an important criteria in a development
audit and is essential to measuring internal
and external readiness for a capital or
major gift campaign through a Community
Readiness Assessment
SM.
To learn more about how to strengthen
your development efforts, or whether you
are ready for a campaign, contact Jeffrey
Byrne & Associates at 1-800-222-9233,
or visit us on the web at www.jeffreybyrneandassociates.com.