The Nonprofit FAQ
How can staff use email for board and committee relations |
Ina Frank Here's another take re the Information & Communication uses: When interviewing for my present position, "my" prospective Department Chair (volunteer) announced that if I wanted the position, I'd jolly well better be online regularly cuz he absolutely refused to respond to any communication *except* what he got by e-mail. No phone; no mail; no faxes. Doesn't have time or patience, he said. May want stuff at dawn or midnight and resents the organization's killing off the entire Los Padres National Forest "every bloody time there's a meeting or report..." Other interviewers blanched. I all but kissed the guy! Age-related? Said person is [ahem...] early 70's I'd guess; retired Chief Scientist from a defense research facility whose name you'd know and he's bloody brilliant. And no, 'turns out he's not unique because of his former profession. Most folks online here are um... older or younger. It's the 40-somethings who are most of the intransigents. After a full year of verrrrry slow nurturing, we now have e-mail addresses for most of the Board and use to convey background info plus advance meeting notices and changes. Will wean from the paper stuff over the next year & they can print out only what they want. Plus: *All* of my committees' members appreciate it, and it's allowed us to get a new department off the ground in rocket time (hint.... hint) instead of waiting around for reply faxes or engaging in my pet peeve Voice Mail Tag. Specifics:
THE INA FRANK RATIONALE: (like, who cares... but here it is anyhow) I think it's presumptuous to expect volunteer leaders to be available to speak with me on *my* schedule when it is I who should be making it convenient for them. Hmmmph! Ina Frank Director - Leadership, Major Gifts, Planned Giving, Non-Cash Asset Donations & Whatever.. (downsizing does that to yer' business card...) United Way of Ventura County, California NOTE: Check carefully before using email or other Internet tools for official board business. State nonprofit laws about board meetings have very specific provisions for when and how business can be done. They may require written notices delivered by mail, face-to-face meetings for certain kinds of decisions, and set many other requirements that limit the ways electronic communications can be used. In 2003 and 2004, there were reports that several state legislators considered bills to change these requirements in ways that would make it easier to use the Internet for board business but there is no consistent pattern from state to state and local research is required (even more so if your board has members from or holds meetings in several states). (For a report I prepared on Washington state rules, see http://www.tess.org/ON/0312_ONLINE.html. And to see what the legislature passed, see http://www.tess.org/ON/0407_INDEX.html -- Ed.) Posted 4/98; revised 1/13/05 -- PB |