samsul ulum

The Forest Trust

wildlife&HCVF specialist

kaliwungu city, kendal, central java

www.tft-forests.org

--- On Wed, 10/28/09, arief perkasa <[email protected]> wrote:

From: arief perkasa <[email protected]>
Subject: [tft-indonesia] Motivating or Crushing Team Spirit: What We Can Learn 
from Nonprofit Boards
To: [email protected], "Dejan Lewis" <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, October 28, 2009, 7:24 PM






 




    
                  Dear all,

Please have a look at the below for our reference. Sorry for double posting

 

warm regards

- arief -

FC Expert Blog

Motivating or Crushing Team Spirit: What We Can Learn from Nonprofit Boards 
BYFC Expert Blogger Alice KorngoldThu Oct 22, 2009 at 5:34 PM 

This blog is written by a member of our expert blogging community and expresses 
that expert's views alone.



In training and placing business executives and professionals on nonprofit 
boards, I see which board environments motivate people to perform their best, 
and which environments crush the spirit right out of well-meaning, 
enthusiastic, and generous board members.

You see, nonprofit boards are revealing environments because people are there 
voluntarily. Board members don't have to be there nor do their best in order to 
earn a living. They are there primarily to serve their communities, to learn, 
for the psychic reward, and perhaps somewhat to build their professional 
networks.

The main point is that nonprofit board members are most likely to give 
generously of their time, expertise, and money, including opening doors to 
prospective donors, if the board environment is friendly, supportive, 
enthusiastic, and appreciative. That tone is set by the leadership-- the board 
chair and CEO of the organization, and has everything to do with how people 
treat each other on the board.

Think of the ways that people signal their support for each other and the 
organization, or, on the other hand, squash the spirit. Here are a few recent 
stories I've heard:

        * Same situation, but different reactions on two different boards: An 
email went out to the board announcing that an esteemed civic leader had just 
agreed to attend the annual fundraiser as one board member's guest. On one 
board, members emailed back to each other with enthusiastic notes. "Amazing!" 
"Great!" Then others chimed in by inviting people of interest and cheering each 
other on. On the second board, similar situation, but the response to the 
initial email was silence. Dead silence. Which board would you want to be on?

        * On one board, the chair opens every meeting with thank you's to board 
members who have contributed in the past quarter, showing appreciation and also 
signaling the variety of ways that one can be helpful in advancing the 
organization' s work. On a second board, the board chair rarely even makes it 
to board meetings, and no one at all acknowledges the few board members who use 
their business networks to raise money and other valuable services and 
assistance for the organization. On a third board, the board chair attends 
board meetings, but does his emails during board meetings from the head of the 
table. If you were on the second or third board in these examples, how 
motivated would you be to open up your most valuable contacts to invite them to 
do favors for the organization or to contribute generously?

        * On one board, the board chair made the lead financial contribution, 
both personally and from his company, and people from his company volunteer at 
the organization. On the second board, the board chair asked everyone on the 
board to contribute $3,000 to an event (some did and some didn't), and then, in 
the end, he himself contributed only $200, and nothing from his company, even 
though he is a successful businessman. On the second board, how much would you 
stretch your family budget to give to this organization or ask your boss to 
contribute from the company?

In order to give and raise money generously, boards need to have a clear 
understanding of the case for support, a good website to refer to (and perhaps 
printed materials), and staff support. But, even more importantly, board 
members need to feel that they are part of a team that is working together to 
advance the organization in serving the community. It should be fun. 
Exhilarating. 

There are many great causes, and many boards that will appreciate generous, 
enthusiastic members. Board members have choices, and can easily move on to 
other organizations where they can do good and feel good too.

Businesses that seek to retain the most talented employees can learn from these 
volunteer experiences how to build teams that are inspired and motivated to 
give their best and their most. High performers thrive in work environments 
where they engage with others to achieve the greater potential.




 

      

    
    
        
         
        
        








        


        
        


      

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