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How To Prepare For A Board Meeting To Make Sure You Crush It

How To Prepare For A Board Meeting To Make Sure You Crush It

Most board meetings are administrative updates that accomplish very little other than inform board members about the performance of the company since the last board meeting.

That’s certainly one function of every board but if your board is your “brain trust” and the people you can most use as a sounding board to help you make the toughest decisions in your company and if its the one group truly privy to your most confidential information and your hardest choices then it’s a shame if you don’t get more value.

It’s also true that there will be tough moments in your company’s journey where you will want to be able to carry people behind the tough decisions you want. When people are problem-solving WITH you they are more bought in because they’re part of the solution. If they only ever received updates then don’t expect them to be bought into tough decisions when you inevitably have the board meeting where the news isn’t positive.

If you buy into the argument that a strong board can actually help you then this post will lay out how to help you have more productive meetings by preparing properly in advance.

How Most Board Meeting Prep Works

I’ve been sitting on tech boards for two decades so I have some experience with what goes wrong. The following is a narrative but if you have a lot of board experience I’m guessing this will sound all too familiar.

This isn’t a narrative of every board or every board meeting but it isn’t far off from many boards and board meetings. It should be your guide for what to avoid. This is what I might call the “inertia board meeting” because if you don’t put time & effort into how to get the most value out of your board meetings before hand — you are unlikely to get value on the day.

How to Make Your Board Meeting Really Effective

Create a Set of KPIs for How You Manage the Business

You should start with a strong set of key performance indicators (KPIs) for how you run your business that your executive team uses irrespective of board communications. I know that’s obvious but I find that many management teams aren’t disciplined about how they measure success (other than standard financial reporting — and even that can be “seat of the pants” sometimes).

Once you have KPIs for how you manage you should run them by board members to find out if they think you’re missing anything. Make them do some work to agree what success would look like. Often board members themselves don’t do the work to say “what metrics would we like to see.” Sometimes they don’t even know.

Any great board member should tell you, “please don’t create any performance metrics or materials that analyze the business that you’re not already creating for your own management’s use.”

No great board wants you distracted with doing a whole bunch of financial analysis that is strictly for board purposes. If you develop a strong set of KPIs for how you manage your business and then develop a regular pack that the board is used to seeing it shouldn’t require extra work to prep the quarterly board metrics pack.

Decide What Your Most Strategic Issues Are

About 6 weeks before your board meeting you should meet with the executive team who attends or prepares for board meetings and agree what the most significant issues the company is working on. This can include: Fund raising, product development choices, sales, marketing effectiveness, competition, business development, M&A … whatever.

But what are the KEY ISSUES management is grappling with. You can write this as a narrative in 3–5 key bullet points. When you have these identified you can agree which items you think are relevant to the board. There are three tests whether this is relevant for your next board meeting

Create a Short Strategy / Discussion Deck

Create a 5–10 page presentation in your favorite presentation software on any key issues you are grappling with. It’s sort of a “primer” for the board or as some CEOs call it a “pre read.” This is a way to frame the issue you’re wanting to talk about. If you have some key metrics or financial figures that go with the pre-read even better.

Example: We’re thinking about launching a new line of business

This is all made up but an example of what a single 5–7 page discussion deck might look like and what topic it might cover. Is this extra work vs. just turning up at a board meeting and presenting financials? Sure. But it’s a great discipline even internally for solving your most important decisions.

Create a Board Agenda

I would create a board agenda in advance with particular focus on topics and time allocations. Be very specific and purposeful about how much time you plan to spend in each area. It surprises me how poorly most boards are about time management and how much time boards allocate to less important topics and get stuck rushing more important topics.

The agenda should be purposeful. Think to yourself about the goals of the day, what is important to you and how much time you want to allocate towards it. If you start with admin (409a valuations, small stock option allocations, board minutes) and you then chew up 20 minutes with this — it’s your own fault.

I hate starting with unimportant stuff. We travel by airplane to sit around considering 0.02% stock grants? In my mind the least important stuff should be at the end of the meeting. That way if you’re squeezed for time you either rush the admin (if it’s truly just admin) at the end OR you can approve it via a UWC (unanimous written consent) after the board meeting or schedule a 15-minute admin call in between board sessions to approve this.

Save your agenda for the things that matter most to you.

Get Your Financial Deck Out 72 Hours in Advance

90+% of financial packs come out 1–2 days before the board meeting and I think 65% come 1 day before. There is limited way for board members to read them, digest them, compare them to the last board meeting, write up questions.

It’s no wonder your board meeting becomes a financial update meeting. You can’t expect your board members to get a deck at noon the day before a board meeting but then not have 3 other meetings the day before so at best they’re likely reading them in the evening. If you establish a pattern of 3 days in advance (72 hours) nobody has an excuse for not reading them and you have strong grounds for not doing a deep dive on them during the board meeting.

Send Your Agenda to Each Board Member Individually / Set Up Calls in Advance

Send the agenda in advance and ask for “pre calls” to see whether they’d like to add items to the board agenda or whether they think these topics are the right ones. If you have the time to get your strategy deck done early it’s also worth sending.

I think the best run boards the CEO has 30–45 minute calls with each non-exec board member before the actual board meeting to walk through the financials 1–1 and walk through the strategy information and the agenda.

I think this is critical for a few reasons:

Is this “overhead?” Yeah, probably. But it’s part of managing a board, which is part of running a company effectively. If you manage the pre-game, you have a better game. If you drain financial issues before the board meeting you can spend more time on critical discussion and less time on information dissemination.

Final Thoughts

I’m sure not every board member agrees with my assessment of how to prepare for great board meetings. Some members probably hate pre-calls, which they see as overhead. Some members probably want most of the board meeting to be a review of financial information.

I personally don’t think they’re right but it doesn’t matter what I think. What matters is that you figure out how to best work with YOUR board. Decades of experience has taught me that early pre-planning makes for much more effective boar meetings. But even more important than that is having a board that agrees.

Disclaimer: I’ve been on dozens of boards over the years. I am not talking about any individual company. I promise. If this sounds like your company and that I’m talking about you — it’s only because this is how > 50% of boards are run. 🙂

[This post by Mark Suster appeared first on bothsidesofthetable and has been reproduced with permission.]

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