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How a Board Portal Can Help You Be More Efficient With Your Directors Time
By Dustin McKissen, April 20, 2017
The first board of directors I ever worked for faced—and
overcame—one of the biggest challenges I’ve seen any board deal with.
This particular board had oversight responsibility for a
trade association managed by a founder. The founder had run into some personal
challenges, and the board had to step in and run the association. They also had
to recruit a new chief operating officer (that’s where I come in) to manage the
organization’s day-to-day operations.
The founder had to step away from the organization, and the
period of time between his temporary departure and my joining the organization
was about four months. During the interim period, the board president managed
the association remotely, in an uncompensated role, while he also served as CEO
of his own business.
Needless to say, it was a difficult four months for that
board president.
That’s an extreme example of what a board member may be
asked to do during his or her tenure. But the reality is that the time
commitment required with service on a board of directors is hard to predict.
Occasionally the organization faces challenges that no one could have foreseen,
challenges that require a board member to give more time than anyone ever
expected.
No one ever tells you that when they recruit you for a
board, particularly for the board of a small organization where directors may
occasionally be asked to fulfill more operational roles, even on a temporary
basis.
Even if it may discourage some potential new directors from
serving on the board, doing your best to accurately represent the workload a
director has will ultimately result in fewer burned-out board members.
Underselling the responsibilities to potential directors
just to get board seats filled is one mistake organizations make with their
board’s time.
A second mistake many organizations make is not being more
efficient with their board’s time when it comes to the more routine aspects of
board service.
In other words, sometimes unexpected things happen, and your
board members may have to step in and serve in roles they didn’t expect, or
(more likely) spend more time than they anticipated guiding an organization
through a strategic challenge.
That’s okay. That’s what boards do.
But your organization can reduce the amount of time
directors spend shuffling through stacks of paper in preparation for a meeting,
or digging through old minutes trying to find out what the organization did a
year ago.
BoardPaq—the board portal of preference for over 1,000
community banks, credit unions, co-operatives, school districts, trade
associations, and nonprofits—is designed to do just that. Our paperless meeting
management platform makes the routine aspects of serving on a board of
directors easier, simpler, and more efficient.
Your directors may be asked to step in and do big,
unexpected things for your organization.
That might make their life a bit more difficult in the short
run, but stepping up is what being on a board is all about.
But before that happens, do what you can to make board
service a little easier, and sign up for a BoardPaq demo today.
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Dustin McKissen is the founder of McKissen + Company, an association management and marketing firm. He is a Certified Association Executive and has served as an executive or consultant to a wide variety trade associations, professional societies, and nonprofits.