It is surprising how few boards seem to fully understand and apply the influence, achieve the impact, and obtain the benefits, available to them through their policy making function. It’s almost as if this governance superpower is a secret weapon available and capable of being used by only a few. In this White Paper we will explain why boards should understand and make better use of their policy making potential.
The reasons are simple. It is a constitutional reality that the ‘buck’ for organisational performance and wellbeing stops with the board. To fulfil this crucial stewardship responsibility a board must be able to provide effective direction and control to its organisation.
An increasing number of boards are recognising that their job is to lead, not to wait passively and then respond to what their executives want them to do. Saying that is not intended to diminish the importance of an effective executive team. It is just to recognise that in most organisations any authority their chief executives have, is delegated to them by their boards. This can be done deliberately and transparently, or by abrogation. If the latter is the case, it is unlikely that the board is discharging its legal and moral responsibility to ‘direct and control’.
For a board to be an effective delegator it must first express its expectations as to how that authority will, and will not, be exercised. And that is a core task of the policy making function.
The importance of board policy making is underlined by the practical reality that that while boards have full time accountability they are typically only convened occasionally and for comparatively short periods. Most executives spend more time at work in a week than their board members spend together in a whole year.
Because, therefore, boards are time poor they need the equivalent of a remote control system. The board’s policy framework is the tool by which the board directs and controls the organisation when it is not in session. A comprehensive, integrated policy framework allows the board to be fully accountable for the organisation’s well-being and performance while, at the same time, letting its chief executive and staff ‘get on with the job’.
In its most succinct form, a policy can be described as ‘a decision made in advance’. A more extended description of the board’s policy framework might be something like this:
An explicit and formal (i.e., codified) expression of the values and perspectives on which the board directs, controls, and gives legitimacy to organisational action.
Such a definition points to the use of policy being a principled, systematic, and proactive way of the board directing and controlling its organisation. It is infinitely preferable to the sporadic, random, and mostly reactive interventions that constitute for policy-making in many organisations.
Governance policy does not only direct organisational activity towards consciously defined achievement but sets boundaries to contain undesirable activity. Ultimately, the board’s policy framework is a reference point against which every organisational action can be evaluated.
What has been stated above does not mean that boards have not attempted to direct and control their organisations in various policy-related ways although, perhaps, without realising it. However, much of what might be considered board policy has been documented in ways and in places that are jumbled, fragmented and unconnected. Some examples include:
As well as these more visible forms of board pronouncement, a considerable proportion of board policy decisions are deeply buried in the minutes of meetings past, often forgotten, frequently contradictory and inadvertently and, sometimes wilfully, misinterpreted, and misapplied.
Its policy making function gives the board leverage over organisational performance well beyond any specific situations it might be forced to decide on. This gives the board time and ‘bandwidth’ to attend thoroughly to the matters which properly justify its energy and attention and express its expectations of them in widely applicable policy terms.
Effective policy-making allows a board to influence everything that is IMPORTANT without feeling obliged or justified in making detailed decisions itself, particularly those that relate to routine or even out-of the-ordinary operational matters. A policy statement can be extremely powerful even at a relatively high level of abstraction.
In undertaking the necessary delegation of its authority, the board allocates decision-making rights - particularly between the board and management. In the process the board creates the foundation for a clearly defined accountability framework that ripples out through the whole organisation.
Policy making is implicitly also about setting decision making criteria and organisational performance expectations. Thereby, the board creates a framework for performance monitoring and ensures that all parts of the organisation are aligned in pursuit of a clearly defined vision of success.
For both board and management, the kind of discussion required in the development of policy is considerably more satisfying than much of traditional board meeting content.
Earlier we noted that a policy can be considered ‘a decision made in advance’. In contrast, boards have traditionally operated by approving proposals brought to them by staff. Among other things this means that the board is often – with some justification – seen as a bottleneck for decision-making.
Because the board’s criteria for approving such proposals are seldom explicit or visible in advance, much staff effort can be wasted in proposal rework and the additional delay involved. The need to fit proposals into the board meeting schedule also means that staffs’ ability to respond to rapidly changing circumstances is restricted. Further, having to seek board approval can easily have a dulling effect on staff creativity when the surest approach is put up conservative proposals that the board is likely to approve rather than novel and possibly far more effective initiatives.
Ends distinguish purpose from path, results from process, and where one is going from how one is going to get there.
A distinction between ends and means is important as we will see in a later webinar that will go more deeply into the policy making process. It is important to acknowledge this distinction in this context, however, because of the interaction and potential confusion between the two. It brings the constant risk of boards being drawn into detailed operational activity at considerable opportunity cost.
A board’s initial and arguably primary governance interest lies in the definition of ends - what is to be achieved through organisational endeavour (‘what’ must be achieved and ‘why’ - purpose, outcomes, results, impact).
However, as the old adage tells us, ‘the ends do not justify the means’. The board necessarily, therefore, has an interest in means, in ‘how’ the ends will be achieved. Not all conceivable staff means (actions/activities, etc.) are likely to be acceptable to the board. The board must also, therefore, state in policy terms what means (or resultant situations or circumstances), would be disagreeable or unacceptable.
While what is to be achieved (ends) is best specified in an affirmative, prescriptive format, means - having to be controlled - are best dealt with by way of limitation or proscription. It is a distinction that many board members struggle with but is central to board policy-making effectiveness as we shall see below.
Boards interested in using the inherent power of policy making will be likely to make significant changes in how they think about and spend their time on, for example, financial matters.
However, many boards exhibit a strong tendency to focus primarily on detailed budget content and approval and subsequent scrutiny of expenditure against budget. Although finance is just a resource, an enabler, in some organisations the budget is, in effect, the primary business plan.
Effective financial governance requires the board to get in front of budget preparation. It does this by creating a budget policy defining the criteria by which management’s budget (financial plan) would be acceptable. This shifts the board’s attention to whether or not a proposed budget demonstrates compliance with the board’s budget policy criteria without needing to approve the budget per se. Relevant questions when the board is considering management’s financial plan might include the following:
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