I have worked with a variety of boards in my 25 year career. I have worked with good boards and not so good boards. I have seen them lose their way in a variety of circumstances including being burdened with an ineffective Chair, a disruptive board member, uncommitted board members, boards that get too involved in operations, and boards that simply perform a rubber stamp role for what senior leadership wants to get done. Ineffective governance can severely compromise and inhibit the ability of an organization to succeed and fulfill its mandate.

So what's the starting point for good governance? The first task is clearly understanding what the roles of the board are. First and foremost a board needs to focus on setting direction - making clear choices on an organization's vision, mission and strategic directions. Failure to fully engage in this first set of major responsibilities means that an organization can easily drift from its fundamental purposes. And as "environmental" circumstances change so too does the organization move from objective to objective, without any clear plan and with major implications for public confidence and deterioating staff morale. Moreover, if there is no consensus amongst the Board as to vision, mission and strategic directions how can senior operational leadership be effectively guided or held accountable for performance?
Second, a board is required to exercise oversight on organizational performance. It is important here to distinguish oversight for organizational performance from managing the organization. Neither the board as a whole nor individual board members (including the Chair) should get involved in managing their organization. The temptation to direct operations is intense, especially for those board members who lead and manage significant entities outside of the organization for which they are a board member. The board needs to remember that they have engaged operational leaders - the CEO in particular - to manage operational matters. Ostensibly, they have utilized a robust process for recruitment and selection, have followed up with appropriate performance reviews and feedback, and have trust in the CEO and other management personnel to achieve the Board-established strategic directions. If the Board lacks such confidence then it has erred in selection, has erred in communicating expectations, or perhaps has not been engaged in managing performance at all. Ultimately, if that confidence erodes the choice of the Board is to more clearly communicate its expectations or remove the CEO. The choices available to the Board does not include becoming more engaged in operational decision-making.
That being said, a Board MUST exercise appropriate oversight. It must be clear on its expectations and establish robust and objective mechanisms by which to evaluate CEO performance on achievement of the organization's vision and strategic directions. Moreover, a Board would do well to evaluate not only outcomes but also evaluate - at a high level - how those outcomes were achieved. The Board has a key role in ensuring that the values of the organization are fostered and upheld. Every effort should be made to ensure that objective, quantifiable reports on performance are made available to the Board on a regular basis. In this regard, the Board should avail itself of a variety of forms of feedback to evaluate performance and success in achieving objectives.

As can be imagined, it is easy for Boards to become involved in non-Board activities and tasks. Board members can easily neglect the very real work that is required to ensure proper Board functioning. If this high-level, strategic work is not done or is done poorly, there will be little or no foundation for success for the organization as a whole.
Boards have very real responsibilities. The tasks they are engaged in cannot be minimized or trivialized. We have seen too many organizational failures in recent years which can be traced back to governance failures. Complacency about board performance is not an option. However, effective governance does not mean becoming more engaged in operational leadership. Nor is it to establish ever more controls and bureaucracy. Boards need to do very real work in understanding their roles and responsibilities, establish proper structures to do their work, recruit and retain good members, and set the tone for the values and ethics that will guide the organization.
To achieve operational excellence there must be a foundation of governance excellence. Good leadership requires good governance.
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TEC Canada Chair/Executive Coach/Senior Consultant
hadubiak@wmc.ca
Helping leaders realize their strengths and enabling organizations to achieve their potential through the application of my leadership experience and coaching skills. I act as a point of leverage for my clients. I AM their Force Multiplier.
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