Sunday 24 February 2013

Good Business People Don’t Always Make Good Board Members



I am the President of Ted Hull Consulting. I get to make all the decisions. Which clients will I serve? How much will I charge? And what brightness of photocopy paper will I buy when I stand in the aisle at Staples? I even get to decide how often and how well I clean the office. I am the President. I don’t have to collaborate and I don’t even know how to spell concensus. I am a business person.

So when I sit on a board it can create some special challenges for me. The board does not always benefit from my wisdom and years of experience. I cannot issue an edict and expect it to be carried out. So there is the temptation to wield whatever weight I can. “I’m not sure I want to put my money behind that” or “I would be reluctant to encourage people to support this initiative”.

A board needs to have a mix of gifts and perspectives. It should listen to the risk concerns provided by an insurance broker, look through the detailed eye of an accountant, use the wordsmithing capacities of a lawyer…and heed the entrepreneurial experience of a business person. But in the end, a board must be comprised of individuals who can collaborate and carefully consider the input of others. A board member must not sulk, pout or bully when his/her input is considered but not heeded.

If we all have the same view of an issue, all except one of us is unnecessary.

The command to “consider others” can be particularly challenging for those of us used to making all the decisions ourselves.

Friday 15 February 2013

Why Boards Shouldn’t Approve Budgets



Definition of Budget: An idea about how much money will be received and spent. The board’s approval of a budget is its agreement that the Leader has an idea. No budget in history has ever been met. Anticipated expenditures are higher in some areas and lower in others, but never being exactly what was projected.

What does the board value. Let me correct that: what should the board value? It should value the ultimate purpose of the agency.  The details of how that happens should be of far less concern than the overall purpose of the agency.

For example, a mission agency exists to see that churches are planted in Cambodia.  The board approves $7500 for travel expenses. We already know that travel will not cost $7500. It may cost $7838.54 or $6994.13, but never $7500.00. At the end of the year what will the board care about? Many boards will be mildly concerned with the amount over budget and more delighted that travel costs were under budget.

I have now identified the values of the board. Spend less than management’s original idea. Keep costs down. It rewards the Leader for inflating projected costs and spending less than projected. But were the objectives of the ministry compromised by the savings? Suppose the under budget travel expense included a trip to Chile; having nothing to do with the purpose of the agency? That question is seldom asked. The board is more concerned about meeting budget than the values which should undergird the budget.  

So what should a board be concerned about as it relates to the budget?

It may want to see a budget that projects breaking even; and that is arguably a good thing. But the more important question is whether the Ends of the agency were advanced by the travel. It should be equally concerned if the Ends of the agency were materially compromised by significantly reduced travel.

Be clear about the value of accomplishing the reasons for the agency’s existence: seeing that churches are planted in Cambodia and done so without incurring a deficient.

 And ignore the numbers.

Thursday 7 February 2013

When Charities are Run Like a Business - Part II



In my last blog, we were challenged to consider our resources as something to be carefully invested. To simply take care of what we are without investing it in a Kingdom initiative which reaps significant returns is unacceptable.

We referenced the two parables which Jesus told in Matthew 25 and Luke 19 in describing the importance of creating an effective return on our investments. While the two parables look similar. There are some distinct differences.


  •      Matthew 25 Jesus spoke to the disciples; Luke 19 He spoke to the multitude
  •      Matthew 25 A landowner is going on a journey; Luke 19 A nobleman is going to get a kingdom
  •      Matthew 25 The return of the landowner is imminent; Luke 19 The return of the nobleman is not immediate
  •      Matthew 25 There appear to be three servants; Luke 19 There are ten servants
However, specifically note the following differences:
  •  Matthew 25 Each servant receives a different amount; Luke 19 Each servant receives the same amount
  • Matthew 25 Each servant appears to be given based on capacity; Luke 19 Each servant is given equal amounts
  • Matthew 25 Inequality of capacity does not affect their reward
  • Luke 19 Inequality of responsibility does affect their reward.

 With all these differences, Jesus chose to underscore one common theme. The anger toward the servants, who did not blatantly sin, but did nothing; they did no squander, waste, steal or even spend the owner’s money. They just did nothing.

This should be a caution to individuals and organizations. We must be careful how we invest and we must not be guilty of the sin of just safely maintaining what we have.

With that in mind, let’s run our charities because of what they are: Kingdom businesses that are deserving of all the divine wisdom and energy we have been given.