IN THIS ISSUE
FRONT PAGE
FEATURE
The State of Association Governance
VIEWPOINT
The Addicted Association
ASSOCIATE ARTICLE
The Top Reasons to Use Policy Governance
GUEST ARTICLE
Tips to Improve Your Purchasing Performance
GUEST ARTICLE
The Three R's of Web-Based Accounting
TOOLS, TIPS AND RESOURCES
PAST ISSUES
|
ASSOCIATE
ARTICLE - Carol Humphries
The Top Ten Reasons to Use Policy
Governance
Being the best you
can be as an organization is the intention of every
volunteer Board of Directors and every Executive
Director. Getting to be the best is neither easy nor
natural for either the Board or the senior staff person.
Choosing to use policy governance is one way that an
organization can move towards its best. There are 10
good reasons to for an organization to use policy
governance.
-
It’s a
Framework for the normal.
There are many relationships with multiple levels,
and different roles and responsibilities of the
people in any organization. Finding a framework that
defines these normal relationships, roles and
responsibilities of the people is essential. Policy
governance provides such a framework within which
the people in an organization relate and actions of
these people happen in a normal or theoretical way.
-
It’s a
Framework for crisis.
Within a complex, that is any, organization the
normal will regularly move to the abnormal. This is
called ‘life’.
Organizations which do not have the crisis
mode defined will find that this critical state
simply takes over. When there becomes less normality
and more crisis – often called in the fire rather
than the preferable frying pan, the organization
descends into an unproductive state.
Policy Governance provides a framework within
which the people and actions in an organization
practically happen and relate – even in crisis.
-
The
expectations of the Executive Directors are clear.
The relationship of volunteers on the Board of
Directors to their senior staff is a critical one
for every organization. The volunteers must be able
to verbalize their clear, corporate expectations for
performance of the Executive Director. These
expectations include both the outcomes and the
process to the Executive Director.
Without these explicit expectations, the
Executive Director and the volunteers could function
at odds to each other - to the detriment of the
organization. Policy Governance allows the
volunteers to express their expectations of the
Executive Director.
-
The Executive
Director and the volunteers can do their work well.
When volunteers and professional Executive
Directors work together, the language they speak is
often different and not understood by each other.
This may be particularly true when a ‘generic’
Executive Director is hired who does not come from
the same culture as the volunteers. When two people
speak a different language, the opportunity for
misinterpretation is high. Policy Governance gives
the volunteers and senior staff a common language
with which to communicate well.
-
Everyone knows
the game. The
behaviour in an organization can be likened to that
of a game. In both an organization and a game, there
are specific relationships, purposes, penalties and
reasons behind the actions. When these are all
crystal clear the game plays well; when everyone
wants to be in goal and no one knows when anyone
scores the game is a mess. The analogy holds true
for organizations too. Policy governance defines the
rules and roles, the purposes and penalties for the
game of running an organization.
-
So you know
why the organization is doing what it does.
Most organizations write a mission statement
but they fail to base this on underlying values,
philosophy, beliefs etc. When these underlying
principles are missing, the mission is weak and the
work of the organization is weakened.
Policy Governance provides the way to relate
the core principles of an organization to what it is
actually doing.
-
So you know
how you’re doing.
One of the most difficult jobs in life is to
stop and evaluate how things went. Everyone likes to
dream up the plan and most even like putting the
plan in place. What most of us find difficult is
stopping to purposefully assess what we did.
Without this assessment, the project is not
complete. Policy
Governance requires the organization to include
evaluation as a part of completing the work.
-
So there is a
big picture. For most
people, counting paper clips is lots more fun and
satisfying that working on the larger and often more
difficult decisions. These larger decisions that
define the big picture are often left undefined
because they are perceived as being to time
consuming, difficult, boring, etc etc for Boards of
Directors to define.
When the big picture is ignored or left to
staff to define, and the volunteers deal with the
details, the vital whole picture is missing or out
of kilter. Policy Governance insists on having the
big picture defined so that the details can fit in
appropriately and consistently.
-
So the
organization learns.
To be a learning organization remains a worthy goal
for most organizations.
At whichever stage of development
organizations find themselves, the anticipating of
corporate actions and the learning from corporate
mistakes are the basis of a learning organization.
Finding and using a model for governance in
an organization is something that all organizations
much do.
Policy Governance, when chosen for the right
reasons and when it is well implemented, is the best
way for an organization to move to being a learning
organization.
-
So you know
when you’re done it.
Finding the milestones of success along the way in
an organization’s work is essential. When success
is marked everyone is encouraged, the path is
clearly marked, correction can be made to keep to
the course. When there are no clear delineations of
success, it is easy for an organization to veer from
its goals. Policy Governance gives a compass to
organizations, both the incentive and the way, to
keep on track.
Many organizations
would not disagree with the value of using Policy
Governance. Some organizations could even cite these Top
Ten Reasons as why they should use Policy Governance.
Unfortunately, many do not take the steps to make their
agreement into commitment and implement true Policy
Governance. The organizations which take the steps of
commitment to Policy Governance will tell you the story
of their success.
Carol
Humphries is currently the Executive Director with
the Reflexology Association of Canada and an associate
with AXI. Carol is a passionate advocate of Policy
Governance having used this model as a director and
staff person at many different levels and types of
organizations. As a consultant, Carol has helped
international, national, provincial and local
organizations to embrace
Policy Governance.
Not to be
reproduced in whole or in part without the written
permission of the author.
|
JANUARY
2003
OUR MISSION
To build better
associations and non-profits by
delivering unique
and unparalleled expertise, programs
and services
to their staff and
volunteers.
|