29
Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Changing a Board of Trustees

From Futile

to Fertile

William G. McGinnis

Page 2: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Existing Governing Board Climate

0% 0% 0%0%0%

1. Dysfunctional 2. Varies between Functional

and Dysfunctional 3. Functional Most of the

Time 4. Varies between Functional

and High Performing 5. High Performing

Page 3: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Common Signs of Dysfunction

• Adverse Conflict / Divided Board

• Lack of Trust

• Lack of Respect

• Single Issue Focus

• Political Connections / Ambitions

• Micromanagement

• Disengagement

Page 4: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Does your Board have other issues that adversely impacts their performance?

50%50%

Yes No

1. Yes

2. No

Page 5: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Impacts of a Dysfunctional (Futile) Trustee Board

• Lack of vision for the college• Frequent turnover in CEO position• Accreditation problems• Audit / Financial problems• Criminal problems• Employee Activism / Labor Strife• Law suits• Poor student success

Page 6: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Steps for Improvement

• Restructure Governing Board Agenda • Cultivate a Board focus on Vision / Future• Build / establish trust• Communicate appropriately • Facilitate Board accountability • Expand Board’s role to leadership• Provide opportunities for thoughtful

reflection & discussion

Page 7: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Board Agenda Issues

• Agenda Format management

• Educate Board members on agenda format and issues

• Develop focused issued-centered agendas

• Connect issues to vision / mission / strategic plan goals

Page 8: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

What Percentage of your Board’s agendas for the past year have been allocated to discussing the vision and/or

strategic plan of your college?

0% 0% 0%0%0%

1. More than 80% 2. Between 60 to

80% 3. Between 40 to

60% 4. Between 20 to

40% 5. Less than 20%

Page 9: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

How much time is spent at each Board meeting on Report Items (when the Board receives written and verbal reports from others)?

0% 0% 0%0%0%

– Less than 30 minutes

– Between 30 minutes to 1 hour

– Between 1 hour and 2 hours

– Between 2 hours and 3 hours

– More than 3 hours

Page 10: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Traditional Agenda • Opening• Reports

– Faculty Senate– Classified Senate– Students– President– Public Comment– Trustee Reports

• Financial Agenda– Approval of Expenditures– Approval of Transfers– Approval of Contracts

• Personnel Agenda– Appointments– Dismissals– Retirements– Labor Relations– Benefits Report

• Action Agenda– Resolution authorizing signatures on accounts– Course Approval

• Executive Session on litigation• Adjournment

Page 11: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Leadership Agenda Format

• Opening• Consent Agenda

– Financial Items– Personnel Items– Resolution on signatures– Resolution on course approvals

• Public Comment• Action / Board Discussion Agenda

– Future Financial Goals– Proposed College/K-12 partnership for student success

• Executive Session on Litigation • Adjournment

Page 12: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Focus on Vision

• Build consensus

• Develop a common vision / mission

• Manage discussions to overall arching issues

• Focus on “what” not the “how”

• Tie agenda issues to vision / mission.

• Talk about the future

Page 13: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Has your Board participated in any trust building exercises since it was formed?

50%50%

Yes No

1. Yes

2. No

Page 14: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Build & Maintain Trust

• Create an environment in which trust can be developed and maintained

• Board Chair’s role in maintaining a respectful meeting to maintain levels of trust

• Build consensus rather than scoring wins

• Communicate openly and honestly

• Focus on the future

Page 15: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Has your administration identified the style or manner in which each Trustees prefers to communicate

50%50%

Yes No

1. Yes

2. No

Page 16: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Communication

• Open and timely information

• Lack of surprises

• Communicate in the form the listeners need

• Sufficient / not too much / not to little – information

• Benchmarks – leading and lagging

Page 17: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Which of the following is completed annually by your Board?

0% 0%0%0%

1. Board self-evaluation, establishment of Board Goals, and periodic discussions on the agenda throughout the year such goals

2. Board self-evaluation and establishment of Board Goals

3. Board self-evaluation

4. None of the above

Page 18: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Accountability Issue

• Focus Board attention on issues affecting Vision / Mission / Strategic Plan

• Measures that are tied to vision / mission / strategic plan goals

• Leading / lagging indicators• Scorecards / Dashboards• Establish Board Goals • Facilitate Board Self-Evaluation & Follow up

Page 19: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Has your Board identified any leading indicators that can be used to measure student success?

50%50%

Yes No

1. Yes

2. No

Page 20: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Sample Benchmarks

• Transfer Rate to Universities

• Placement in desired occupations

• Success of 1st yr students in English & Math

• Student Engagement survey

• Efficiency Rating of Student Enrollment

• Facility Condition Index

• Community Survey

Page 21: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Expand Board’s Role

• Fiduciary Role / Activities

• Strategic Role / Activities

• Leadership Role / Activities

• Percent of work in each area

• Restructure in the future

Page 22: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Time to Discuss / Lead

• Open certain meetings to discussion / leadership activities

• Create an environment conducive to discussions

• Manage conflict to remain constructive• Create visions of “what” not focus on

“how”

Page 23: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

What is the most important major issue facing your College today that requires the Board’s attention?

0% 0% 0%0%0%

1. Long term finances

2. Employee Turnover & Replacement

3. Improving Student Success

4. Improving student participation

5. Other

Page 24: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

How frequently has or will your Board discuss this major issue?

0% 0% 0%0%0%

1. Every Board Meeting

2. Once a Quarter

3. Twice a year in retreats

4. Once a year – maybe

5. Never

Page 25: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Benefits of a Fertile Board

• Attracts high performing administrators

• Creates an environment of trust conducive of change

• Creates an environment focused on the future supportive of innovation

• Creates a community climate of respect for the college

• Leads to student success

Page 26: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

How to Start

• Help the Board build trust – Among their members– Between the Board and the CEO

• Change the Agenda– Less Wasted time– Fewer Fiduciary matters– More time for Leadership

Page 27: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Maintain Performance

• Thru Board Retreats review Board Performance

• Hold Board training whenever a new member is seated

• Board Chair to hold members accountable

• Revisit Board commitment when necessary

Page 28: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

QUESTIONS

Page 29: Changing a Board of Trustees From Futile to Fertile William G. McGinnis

Conclusion

• From Futile to Fertile, as in Farming,

the role of the farmer whose success is directly affected by his knowledge of the impacts of his stewardship of the environment; the success of our colleges is directly connected to their Boards’ knowledge of the impacts of their stewardship of the institutions.