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Carver Policy Governance – It’s Only As Good As…

John Bauer October 15, 2015 blog, News
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Interviews with nonprofit leaders, board chairs, and professional nonprofit association executives have reinforced my observation that board governance continues to be a problematic issue for many organizations. Numerous challenges have been cited: confusion about the role of directors, ineffective meetings, improper relationships with staff, conflicts between the board chair and the CEO, inability to recruit capable directors, lack of board evaluation, onerous committee structures, and infighting among factions. In spite of a plethora of resources available to organizations since Sarbanes-Oxley, many nonprofit boards continue to struggle.

Going back more than 25 years John and Miriam Carver addressed the challenges facing nonprofit boards, especially with respect to roles and responsibilities of the governing body in contradistinction to those of the executive management team. They called out the problems associated with older, traditional forms of governance that had contributed to the plagues of micro-management, confusion in roles and responsibilities, usurpation of authority in one domain or the other, and wasted time and energy in meetings. Through their program of Policy Governance®, boards and executives were trained in the development of policies that clearly articulated the limits of authority for both.

The contribution the Carvers have made to nonprofit governance cannot be underestimated. Numerous boards have used their model to greatly improve their performance and CEOs have had their leadership enhanced through clearly stated expectations and limits of authority. Boards have found greater relevance in their work and meetings are focused on the long range future of the organization instead of having to listen to mundane operational management reports.

Having experienced first-hand the effects of the Carver Policy Governance model in various nonprofit environments, I have come to my own conclusions about its application and have identified a number of factors that either support or hinder its effectiveness as a governance model. These contexts include private institutions of higher education, social service agencies, national professional associations, and denominational judicatories and foundations. The results have been mixed, to say the least.

When Carver Policy Governance Works

In those organizations where it works best, boards and executives exhibit a high level of understanding of the governance process. Generally, these boards are comprised of experienced, highly skilled professionals who are able to take the time needed to fully understand and utilize the rubrics associated with the model. There is also usually a very high level of trust between the board and the CEO and his/her staff. For example, when Merle Freitag was the CEO of the Lutheran Church Extension Fund of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod, the Carver model was an ideal framework for effective governance. Board members would tell me how much they loved participation on the board, and how committed they were to supporting the leadership team because of the shared trust and confidence each had for the other.

When It Doesn’t

On the other hand, I served as a peer evaluator in the accreditation renewal process for several small liberal arts colleges in which the board had been talked into adopting the Carver model. Boards had been poorly trained, were comprised of well-intentioned but skill-deficient directors, and did not understand the nuances of crafting policy statements according to the model. In just about every case, I found that ineffective presidents used the model to withhold important information about the performance of the organization. Because the boards thought the president was operating within the policies they had established, they did not question critical areas such as financial viability, hiring practices, quality measures, and other factors that affected institutional reputation. I have observed similar adverse effects in social service organizations and denominational judicatories as well.

To Carver or Not to Carver?

What are the take-ways from two and a half decades of experience with the Carver Model? It seems to me that like any model, its effectiveness is only as good as the knowledge and skill of the people who are using it. Generally, in mature organizations with skilled boards of directors working with trusted and competent CEOs, the model can be an effective tool for keeping the focus of the board on mission-critical, long range issues.

On the other hand, when Policy Governance is adopted by inexperienced and unqualified boards of directors who lack the training and skills to craft appropriate policies and work within them, organizations put themselves at significant risk of violating their fiduciary and ethical responsibilities. And when CEOs push for adopting Policy Governance as a way to gain more freedom from the board, to withhold negative information from the board, or to somehow detach accountability for effective operational management from board review, trust in both the board and the CEO is compromised.

Unfortunately, it has been my experience that the investment of time and money it takes to sufficiently train a board and the management team in the development, implementation and effective execution of Policy Governance is formidable. On-going consulting contracts to ensure proper continuation of the model seem to be imperative. Even among organizations which claim to highly prize the model for its effectiveness, most do not follow exactly the patterns established by the Carvers and claim to use some “hybrid” type of the model. I have even heard debates among CEOs as to who is more “pure Carver” than others. I have yet to encounter a “pure” example.

The point of all this is that the form of governance can never become a substitute for the substance of governance. Boards need to be constantly vigilant in keeping clear the distinction between governance and management. But there are many different ways that objective can be achieved without having to adopt a sophisticated model that, in and of itself, can become the focus of board work as opposed to a means toward that end.

What are your thoughts?

 

Isolation and Ego – The Perils of Being a CEO

John Bauer July 4, 2015 blog, News
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The chairman of the board of directors came to the CEO after a meeting and asked, “Are you ok? You are looking really stressed out.” The CEO’s response was to dismiss it with assurances that he’d been working hard to get ready for the meetings, that he had been traveling a lot to various company locations, but that he was fine.

The truth was he wasn’t OK. Things in his personal life were a mess and they were beginning to take a toll.

Like many chief executives, he wasn’t willing to admit to himself, let alone to others, that he was struggling to keep his personal life from affecting his professional life. He figured that he was able to handle the stress on his own. After all, it was his self-reliance, character and abilities that had helped to get him the job in the first place, right? Inside, however, he knew that he couldn’t continue under these circumstances forever.

Does this sound familiar? This hypothetical CEO, like many chief executive officers I have known, rose to the top spot through hard work and many God-given gifts and abilities. These CEOs are likely to be visionary and compassionate leaders. They may have had great executive teams to work with. They are likely to be involved in local, regional and national boards of directors and may have received a lot of positive affirmation for their work. In short, good CEOs are respected and trusted as being effective leaders, good citizens, and people to be admired and looked up to. They are expected to model the values of the organization – not to be weak human beings.

It is an unfortunate fact, however, that many CEOs are also lonely – both by choice and by circumstance. I have written previously about the perils of how lonely at the top it can be for CEOs of large organizations. With an absence of peers inside the organization combined with fears about disclosing personal challenges to the board, CEOs who don’t have support systems outside the organization are at significant risk. And when issues in one’s personal life add another level of conflict and stress, well, the feelings of isolation become multiplied.

Why do such leaders seem to be averse to seeking help to deal with the personal challenges they face? From my experience, I have come to believe there are several forces that work against such CEOs.

Ego
The first of these is their own ego. Many CEOs are convinced that reliance on friends or others in a support network is indicative of weakness. They delude themselves into thinking that they don’t need such support, that they don’t need close personal relationships, and that “a rock feels no pain, and an island never cries.”  Therefore, to disclose personal challenges is to show weakness, and to admit to themselves or anyone else that they were in need of help is not an option. The difficult lesson that has to be learned is that there is a significant difference between weakness (actually, a type of arrogance) and vulnerability (which shows humanness).

Denial
A second factor is denial. To admit to anyone else that they are anything less than the perfect CEO they were expected to portray is considered dangerous to one’s reputation, or at least to the image they felt they had to maintain in the organization and the community. To themselves and to others, many CEOs deny their personal problems, or if they do acknowledge to themselves that their lives are a mess, that they can manage the challenge on their own.

Support
A third factor is not knowing where to turn for help. For many ego-driven leaders, circles of friends are relatively small and social, not personal.  Perceived as aloof and self-assured, these self-sufficient CEOs are actually isolated and having conversations only with themselves. They are in desperate need of having a confidential and non-judgmental person they can trust who can listen objectively and help sort through the challenges they are facing.

It is critically important that CEOs experiencing personal challenges find just that kind of person – someone who can confidentially help them navigate critical personal areas.  I would argue that most CEOs need to get over themselves and seek out that kind of help. Not only are such confidants a potential life saver, but there is the potential through counseling and support to improve leadership effectiveness, not to mention become better human beings.

I don’t want to see any competent executive leader go down the tubes because of issues in their personal life. Now, in my retirement, I am committed to providing a doorway through this consulting practice for CEOs to find the kind of confidential advice and support that can mitigate the possibility of personal and professional collapse. Anyone who has worked as a CEO knows the challenges. I have experienced them as well. Give me a call if you would like to have a confidential conversation about your particular circumstance. I’d love to offer an understanding ear.