Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
Engaged Boards
WILL Fundraise!
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
president,

asking matters
BrianSaber
presented by
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2021
agenda
what motivates board service
the evolution of boards
six ways to engage the board
takeaways and questions
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
questions?
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
asking styles
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
what motivates
board service
• attend 4 or more board meetings
(generally in the evening when
you might rather be relaxing).
The meetings may or may not be
interesting.
• work on a committee that may
also be meeting in the evening or
by conference call when you are
working.
• pay for the privilege.
• as a bonus…you get to fundraise.
the value proposition for board
service is counterintuitive
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
motivation
• deep personal concern for the
achievement of the mission; for
the change that the organization
can make in the world
• the experience of being part of
an effective and supportive
group
• the personal satisfaction of
having an impact on the
direction and viability of the
organization
the rewards that
motivate board service
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
motivation
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
motivation
create a
culture that
encourages
the full
engagement
of all board
members
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
the evolution
of boards
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
evolution
Hands-on Governing
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
evolution
Work
Wisdom
Wealth
Hands-on Governing
Work
Wisdom
Wealth
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
evolution
Hands-on Governing
Board Operations
• supports a founding
leader or group
• does everything
• committee of the whole
• more of the management role
shifts to ED/staff
• board relies on the ED for
financial management and
programmatic leadership
• division of labor into committees
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
evolution
Hands-on Governing
Board Composition
• friends & family
• “band of warriors”
• strong personal
commitment to the
founder
• broad range of professionals
with specific talents
• large donors
• strong personal commitment
to the mission
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
evolution
Hands-on Governing
Board Fundraising Role
• ask everyone you know
for help
• run numerous small
fundraising events
• may or may not give
personal gifts
• provide fundraising oversight
• make significant gifts
• cultivate and solicit major
donors
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
evolution
Hands-on Governing
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
what work that the board has been doing is no longer
needed?
what matters that the board has been discussing
should be left to staff?
what are the areas where more board attention is
needed?
what work has the board not been doing that is now
needed?
discussion on role:
evolution
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
1. design meaningful
board meetings
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
attention on strategy and oversight
ED’s report focuses on strategy, not operations
Routine reports are sent in advance
Every issue brought before the board should have
been previously addressed by committee
Program component in every meeting
meaningful
board meetings
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
meaningful
board meetings
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
2. bring board members
to the mission
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
establish an expectation that board members will visit
programs a certain number of times each year
require board members to report at a board meeting
what they learned on their visits
occasionally have staff or clients present anecdotes of
impact
the mission
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
the mission
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
3. agree on and
enforce expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
“I can’t do my job if I don’t know what it is and I
won’t do it if I’m not sure my teammates are
doing theirs as well.”
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
establishing agreed-to expectations for board
membership (“a job description”)
quantifiable and attitudinal
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
board meeting attendance
committee participation
committee or board leadership
personal contributions
fundraising involvement
measurable performance standards
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
respect for fellow board members and the work they do in
their committees
readiness to check one’s ego at the door - “it’s not about me”
willingness to listen to and consider perspectives different
from their own
respect for the dedication and work of the staff
provision of helpful refinements rather than revisiting the
entire question
agreed-to cultural/behavioral norms
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
expectations
raise important dollars
have board members feel like investors
set an example for other donors
institutions want to see 100% participation
goals of board giving
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
goals of board “getting”
raise important dollars
have board members feel like investors
set an example for other donors
institutions want to see 100% participation
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
goal: maximize both
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
give and get
to the best of your ability
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
everyone must
give
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
Everyone must give
a personally significant gift
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
everyone must
help cultivate relationships
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
everyone must
ask for something
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
some (hopefully most) must
ask for gifts
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
4
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
board prospectus, job
descriptions, and policies
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
board members can only do as much
fundraising as there is staff to support it
expectations
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
4. develop a
structure to manage
the work of the board
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
on a small board this could be the chair and one
other officer with the executive director
ideally, it would consist of the chair, the executive
director, and the committee chairs, some of whom
may also be officers (e.g. treasurer)
the committee would meet between board
meetings
establish a board management team
managing the work
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
plan for and manage board activity
oversee and coordinate the work of the
committees
develop the agenda for board meetings
including whether a matter is for board
decision or for information purposes only
support and evaluate the executive director
what it should do
managing the work
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
make decisions…except in
narrow circumstances
what an executive committee should NOT do
managing the work
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
5. develop a board resource
commitment process
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
annual individual meetings
board members = donors
the process
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
board members should solicit each other
builds responsibility
strengthens relationships
develops leaders
trains askers
the process
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
what else you can accomplish
evaluate prior year
reinforce board expectations
acknowledge board members’ overall contributions
in every way
identify all the ways board members can contribute
in the coming year
the process
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
6. provide training
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
most board members don’t know
how to fundraise
training
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
training
what training do they need
crafting their unique case for support
understanding the basics of the asking
process
opening the door
asking good questions
dealing with no’s and maybe’s
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
takeaways &
questions?
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
asking styles
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022
Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022

Engaged Boards WILL Fundraise!

  • 1.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 Engaged Boards WILL Fundraise! Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 president,
 asking matters BrianSaber presented by Brian Saber | © Copyright 2021 agenda what motivates board service the evolution of boards six ways to engage the board takeaways and questions
  • 2.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 questions? Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 asking styles Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 what motivates board service • attend 4 or more board meetings (generally in the evening when you might rather be relaxing). The meetings may or may not be interesting. • work on a committee that may also be meeting in the evening or by conference call when you are working. • pay for the privilege. • as a bonus…you get to fundraise. the value proposition for board service is counterintuitive Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 motivation
  • 3.
    • deep personalconcern for the achievement of the mission; for the change that the organization can make in the world • the experience of being part of an effective and supportive group • the personal satisfaction of having an impact on the direction and viability of the organization the rewards that motivate board service Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 motivation Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 motivation create a culture that encourages the full engagement of all board members Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 the evolution of boards
  • 4.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 evolution Hands-on Governing Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 evolution Work Wisdom Wealth Hands-on Governing Work Wisdom Wealth Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 evolution Hands-on Governing Board Operations • supports a founding leader or group • does everything • committee of the whole • more of the management role shifts to ED/staff • board relies on the ED for financial management and programmatic leadership • division of labor into committees
  • 5.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 evolution Hands-on Governing Board Composition • friends & family • “band of warriors” • strong personal commitment to the founder • broad range of professionals with specific talents • large donors • strong personal commitment to the mission Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 evolution Hands-on Governing Board Fundraising Role • ask everyone you know for help • run numerous small fundraising events • may or may not give personal gifts • provide fundraising oversight • make significant gifts • cultivate and solicit major donors Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 evolution Hands-on Governing
  • 6.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 what work that the board has been doing is no longer needed? what matters that the board has been discussing should be left to staff? what are the areas where more board attention is needed? what work has the board not been doing that is now needed? discussion on role: evolution Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 1. design meaningful board meetings Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 attention on strategy and oversight ED’s report focuses on strategy, not operations Routine reports are sent in advance Every issue brought before the board should have been previously addressed by committee Program component in every meeting meaningful board meetings
  • 7.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 meaningful board meetings Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 2. bring board members to the mission Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 establish an expectation that board members will visit programs a certain number of times each year require board members to report at a board meeting what they learned on their visits occasionally have staff or clients present anecdotes of impact the mission
  • 8.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 the mission Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 3. agree on and enforce expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 “I can’t do my job if I don’t know what it is and I won’t do it if I’m not sure my teammates are doing theirs as well.” expectations
  • 9.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 establishing agreed-to expectations for board membership (“a job description”) quantifiable and attitudinal expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 board meeting attendance committee participation committee or board leadership personal contributions fundraising involvement measurable performance standards expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 respect for fellow board members and the work they do in their committees readiness to check one’s ego at the door - “it’s not about me” willingness to listen to and consider perspectives different from their own respect for the dedication and work of the staff provision of helpful refinements rather than revisiting the entire question agreed-to cultural/behavioral norms expectations
  • 10.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 expectations raise important dollars have board members feel like investors set an example for other donors institutions want to see 100% participation goals of board giving Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 goals of board “getting” raise important dollars have board members feel like investors set an example for other donors institutions want to see 100% participation expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 goal: maximize both expectations
  • 11.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 give and get to the best of your ability expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 everyone must give expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 Everyone must give a personally significant gift expectations
  • 12.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 everyone must help cultivate relationships expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 everyone must ask for something expectations
  • 13.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 some (hopefully most) must ask for gifts expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 expectations
  • 14.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 4 expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 board prospectus, job descriptions, and policies expectations Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 board members can only do as much fundraising as there is staff to support it expectations
  • 15.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 4. develop a structure to manage the work of the board Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 on a small board this could be the chair and one other officer with the executive director ideally, it would consist of the chair, the executive director, and the committee chairs, some of whom may also be officers (e.g. treasurer) the committee would meet between board meetings establish a board management team managing the work Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 plan for and manage board activity oversee and coordinate the work of the committees develop the agenda for board meetings including whether a matter is for board decision or for information purposes only support and evaluate the executive director what it should do managing the work
  • 16.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 make decisions…except in narrow circumstances what an executive committee should NOT do managing the work Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 5. develop a board resource commitment process Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 annual individual meetings board members = donors the process
  • 17.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 board members should solicit each other builds responsibility strengthens relationships develops leaders trains askers the process Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 what else you can accomplish evaluate prior year reinforce board expectations acknowledge board members’ overall contributions in every way identify all the ways board members can contribute in the coming year the process Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 6. provide training
  • 18.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 most board members don’t know how to fundraise training Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 training what training do they need crafting their unique case for support understanding the basics of the asking process opening the door asking good questions dealing with no’s and maybe’s Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 takeaways & questions? Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 asking styles
  • 19.
    Brian Saber |© Copyright 2022 Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022 Brian Saber | © Copyright 2022