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When board members don't show up at meetings and other dysfunctional behaviours - What can you do?

Paulette VinetteBy Paulette Vinette, CAE
June 16, 2008

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You agreed on the date of the board meeting at the last meeting and you sent an Outlook Meeting Invitation to ensure each board member had the next meeting date in his or her calendar. You sent out the board package a week before the meeting, a definite reminder of the meeting date. Still, some board members do not attend because of “conflicts”. What can you do?

Well first, let’s explore why this might be happening. After all, each of us is blessed with 24 hours each day - we have the choice to decide how to use them.

In addition to using our own experience, we did a literature review to seek solutions to dysfunctional board and committee behaviour and this article summarizes our findings.

Is your meeting agenda relevant to the participants?

The number one reason for volunteer apathy, in my view, is a perception of lack of relevancy. The meetings simply do not give the volunteers anything they can use. For some, the sense of purpose of the organization has to directly apply to them too. When this is the situation, and you want to keep that volunteer at the table, a remedial action would be to work with the volunteer to understand what it is she needs. This could be done by an individual interview or by a full board/committee survey. It is often preferable to use an independent third party to conduct such interviews, not only to ensure confidentially but also to eliminate any personality issues that might prevent honest feedback.

How to deal with volunteers who develop meeting conflicts

Another popular reason for volunteers missing meetings is time constraints or last minute conflicts (which can be professional or personal). You may want to make it more convenient to participate by allowing members to participate by teleconference and perhaps only for a portion of the meeting. We know that for many, participation by phone is not preferred, but isn’t it better than nothing?

When missing meetings becomes the norm

Some not-for-profit organizations include an attendance chart along with the board/committee meeting package. If members missing meetings becomes the norm, the chair needs to engage the group to deal with the problem they have created. Possible solutions include:

Other dysfunctional behaviours

The primary cause of dysfunction in boards

We firmly believe that having a strategic plan with clearly articulated priorities is a strong tool to use to refocus dysfunctional behaviours. Tying the behaviour to how it serves the plan allows the chair to seek group consensus to follow the roadmap that has been approved.

In another article on this site, Mel Gil wrote:

My research has lead me to conclude that the primary cause of dysfunction in boards (and the board/staff relationship) is a lack of clarity in roles, goals and expectations:

In summary, having a strategic plan to redirect misplaced energies and adopting meeting rules and procedures can go a long way to turning around dysfunctional boards/committees. Another tool that might prove useful is adopting a meeting covenant - for a sample click here.

Paulette in president of Solution Studio Inc., a consulting practice that serves the not-for-profit association community. Paulette co-authored two manuscripts on risk management & not-for-profit organizations and regularly conducts risk management, strategic planning and board development workshops. She can be reached at 1-877-787-7714 or Paulette@solutionstudioinc.com.

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