Nonprofit Leadership

Your Board Meeting Is Not a Committee Report

One of the most common problems I see in nonprofit board meetings is also one of the easiest to fix: Committee reports take over the meeting.

You know how this goes. Materials are sent out in advance. Committee reports are included. Everyone arrives at the board meeting. Then a committee chair proceeds to read the report out loud, word for word, to the full board.

I have watched this happen. On one board, the Finance Committee report had been sent out ahead of time. Then, in the board meeting, the Finance Committee Chair read the whole thing to everyone anyway.

Not summarized. Not framed around a decision. Not focused on the key questions.

Read. Out. Loud.

And you can feel the room change when that happens. People stop paying attention. They tune out. Phones come out. Eyes glaze over.

Even worse, over time, board members stop reading the materials in advance because they assume everything will be repeated in the meeting anyway. Then they also stop paying attention during the meeting because the meeting is mostly repetition.

So now the board is getting the worst of both worlds: they are not prepared before the meeting, and they are not meaningfully engaged during it. That is a problem. Because a board meeting should not be a live reading of reports people could have reviewed ahead of time.

Board meetings should focus on what the board needs to do

A good board meeting should be centered around a few clear questions:

  • What does the board need to decide?

  • Where does the board need to provide strategic insight?

  • What requires board oversight, direction, or action?

  • What conversation needs the full board in the room?

If something does not require a vote, discussion, strategic input, or action, it probably does not need much meeting time.

That does not mean the board should be uninformed. Quite the opposite. Board members need good information to make good decisions.

But being informed is not the same thing as governing.

The board should know that the gala date and location are set. That can go in a written report.

The board probably does not need to spend 15 minutes hearing a verbal update on the venue, menu, program flow, and who has RSVP’d so far.

But if the gala has a major budget gap? That may need board attention.

If sponsorships are lagging and board members need to help open doors? That belongs in the meeting.

If there is a bigger strategic question about whether the event is still worth the time, cost, and staff capacity it requires? Absolutely bring that to the board.

The difference is simple: do not just report activity. Bring the board something to do.

Not every update is board-worthy

A committee met. A program is moving forward. A contract was signed. An event date was confirmed. A staff member gave an update. A partner was contacted.

Those things may matter. They may even belong in the board packet. But they do not automatically belong on the board agenda.

The question is not, “Did something happen?”

The question is, “What do we need from the board?”

  • Do we need approval?

  • Do we need discussion?

  • Do we need strategic guidance?

  • Do we need help from board members?

  • Do we need the board to understand a major risk, opportunity, or shift?

If the answer is no, put it in writing and move on. That may sound harsh, but it is actually respectful. Respectful of the board’s time. Respectful of staff time. Respectful of the work that really does require attention.

Use three simple labels: information, discussion, decision

Before something goes on the agenda, the board chair and executive director should ask a basic question:

  • What is this item?

  • Is it for information?

  • Is it for discussion?

  • Is it for decision?

Those three categories can change the entire feel of a board meeting.

If it is for information, it should usually be in a written report, committee report, CEO report, dashboard, or consent agenda.

If it is for discussion, give the board enough context in advance to come prepared. What is the issue? What options are being considered? What are the pros and cons? What kind of input would be helpful?

If it is for decision, make the decision clear. What exactly is the board being asked to approve? What recommendation is coming forward? What background does the board need to act responsibly?

Too often, board agendas are just a list of topics. But a topic is not enough.

“Finance Committee Update” tells me almost nothing.

“Discussion: Options for Addressing a $25,000 Budget Gap” tells me what kind of conversation we are having.

“Decision: Approve Revised Event Budget” tells me what the board needs to do.

That clarity matters.

Give board members time to do their job

If you want better board engagement, send materials early enough for people to actually read them. This sounds obvious, but it is one of the most common mistakes I see. Organizations get into the habit of waiting until every single document is ready, then sending the board packet the night before the meeting.Then everyone is surprised when board members have not reviewed it.

Board members are volunteers. They have jobs, families, responsibilities, and full lives outside of your organization. If we want them to come prepared, we have to give them a realistic chance to prepare.

That means sending materials in advance, not at the last minute.

It also means not being afraid to share the real substance ahead of time. If there is a major decision coming, share the background. Share the options. Share the pros and cons. Give people time to think.

Some people process quickly in the room. Others want to review the details before they speak. I am one of those people. I do not love weighing in immediately on something if I do not yet understand the details.

Good preparation makes better conversation possible.

Better agendas create better meetings

The board chair and executive director play a critical role in shaping the agenda.

A strong agenda is not a list of everything that happened since the last meeting. It is a tool for focusing the board’s attention on what matters most.

Before adding an item, ask:

  • What do we need from the board on this?

  • Does this require full board discussion?

  • Is this tied to mission, strategy, finances, risk, or leadership?

  • Could this be handled in writing?

  • What would make this conversation useful?

If the agenda is mostly committee updates and staff reports, board members will tune out. Not because they do not care, but because the meeting has not been designed for their engagement.

People are more likely to participate when they understand why their perspective is needed.

Try this at your next board meeting

You do not have to overhaul everything at once. Start with a few practical changes.

First, use a consent agenda at the beginning of the meeting. Include committee reports, routine approvals, and informational updates there. Ask if anyone has questions or wants to pull an item for discussion. Otherwise, adopt the reports and move forward.

Second, send materials early. Not the night before. Give board members a realistic chance to read, reflect, and prepare.

Third, limit each meeting to one or two major decision points or strategic discussions. Give those items appropriate time. Send background in advance. Include the pros and cons. Be clear about what kind of input or action is needed.

Fourth, label agenda items as information, discussion, or decision. This small change helps everyone understand why the item is there and what role they are expected to play.

The goal is not a shorter meeting. It is a better one.

A better board meeting is not just about saving time. It is about using the board well.

It is about making sure board members are informed, prepared, and engaged in the right conversations. It is about creating space for the decisions and strategic questions that need the full board’s attention.

Committee work matters. Reports matter. Updates matter.

But the full board meeting should not be a replay of every committee meeting that already happened.

It should be where the board does the work only the board can do.

Because when board meetings are focused, strategic, and useful, board members are more likely to show up prepared, ask better questions, and help move the organization forward.

And that is the whole point.

Practical Nonprofit Leadership, Minus the Jargon

If you’ve spent any time in the nonprofit world, you’ve probably met at least one “expert.”

Sometimes it’s the consultant who shows up with a framework you’ve never heard of, tells you everything you’re doing wrong, and leaves behind a 42-page report no one will read.

Other times it’s the board member who joined two meetings ago, read one article on governance, and now has very strong opinions about how everything should work.

We’ve all been there.

So let me start here: I am an expert, but not that kind of expert.

My expertise comes from 20 years of actually doing this work: leading organizations, working with boards, serving on about a dozen boards myself, and facilitating more meetings, retreats, and planning sessions than I can count.

Through all of that, I’ve learned this: most nonprofits don’t need someone to make the work sound more complicated. They need someone who understands how the work actually happens.

The messy parts. The human parts. The “we have 12 priorities and no time” parts.

That’s why I’m starting these posts.

Some of the best sessions I’ve ever been part of haven’t been formal presentations. They’ve been simple “Ask Me Anything” conversations with boards and leadership teams. What are you seeing work at other organizations? How can we improve this? What are the best practices we should know? What would you do differently?

Those are my favorite conversations. No overproduced slides. No jargon. Just real questions, practical answers, and a chance to help people see what might be possible. That’s where things actually move forward.

This space is going to be an extension of that. I’ll share practical board governance guidance, strategic planning insights, membership and engagement strategies, lessons learned, and plenty of thoughts on what I’ve seen work, and what definitely did not.

Some posts will be tactical, like how to structure board meeting minutes. Others will be more direct, like why your strategic plan isn’t going anywhere. All of it will be grounded in real experience.

And this is not just for executive directors or nonprofit staff. It’s for board chairs, board leaders, and board members who want to do this work well. If you’ve ever sat in a meeting thinking, “There has to be a better way to do this,” you’re in the right place.

More than anything, I want this to be useful. So send me your questions. Seriously.

Ask me about board minutes, executive sessions, strategic planning, board recruitment, disengaged board members, messy agendas, unclear roles, or the difference between governance and getting the work done.

Wondering if your board meetings could be better? Trying to figure out how to recruit the right people? Not sure what best practice actually looks like in real life? Send it my way. If you’re asking the question, someone else probably is too.

Nonprofits do some of the most important work out there. When boards and leadership are aligned, clear, and functioning well, everything gets easier and more impactful.

That’s the work I care about. I genuinely love this work. Give me a room, a board or leadership team, a Diet Mountain Dew, and a set of real questions, and I’m in.

My hope is that this space gives you practical ideas, useful tools, and a little reassurance that you are not the only one trying to figure this out.

I’m glad you’re here. I hope you’ll read along, send questions, and take what’s useful back to your own organization.

And if at some point you want someone to sit in a room with your board and help work through it? That’s still my favorite thing to do.