
Is Your Nonprofit’s Next Board Chair Prepared for Success?
According to research on nonprofit board chairs, many incoming chairs assume their role with little or no preparation.
Welcome to Hardy Smith’s blog, where he shares experience and insight learned through decades in the corporate world and advocating on behalf of nonprofits and associations across America.
Hardy’s mission is to help maximize the performance of nonprofits and associations and their essential leadership teams.
If you’re seeking to triumph over communication challenges, bring meaningful and manageable solutions to, and realize measurable results of your organization, this blog will give you more than ideas — it will maximize your team’s performance like never before.

According to research on nonprofit board chairs, many incoming chairs assume their role with little or no preparation.

Nonprofits can be challenged by board engagement not meeting expectations. This post shares actions that will increase board engagement.

Often nonprofit boards fail to meet diversity and inclusion goals because of mistakes in their recruiting process.

Nonprofits share many problems. Issues such as donor retention, volunteer turnover, and board member engagement are just a few that plague nonprofits on an ongoing basis. And, not by coincidence, nonprofits also share frustration because common approaches fail to yield positive results. Why continue to invest limited time and resources doing what doesn’t work? Perhaps best practices that don’t produce positive outcomes really are stupid. Speaker colleague Stephen Shapiro has some insight on the matter and shares his solid advice.

Can an organization with such a casual approach — picking leaders without much forethought — really be serious about achieving its stated purpose? Shouldn’t leadership selection be intentional instead of accidental?

How does your organization communicate its opportunities for leadership nominations? The recruitment process must be intentional. Look to these examples for inspiration.

Nonprofits have long been challenged by unmet expectations in board member engagement and performance. Whatever the challenges, they can be effectively and proactively addressed by starting with an honest evaluation of your current board recruitment practices.

Nonprofit leaders recognize that new solutions are needed to address the nonprofit sector’s evolving challenges.

To say Simone Joyaux is passionate about fixing problems in nonprofit board governance is an understatement.

According to research on nonprofit board chairs, many incoming chairs assume their role with little or no preparation.

Nonprofits can be challenged by board engagement not meeting expectations. This post shares actions that will increase board engagement.

Often nonprofit boards fail to meet diversity and inclusion goals because of mistakes in their recruiting process.

Nonprofits share many problems. Issues such as donor retention, volunteer turnover, and board member engagement are just a few that plague nonprofits on an ongoing basis. And, not by coincidence, nonprofits also share frustration because common approaches fail to yield positive results. Why continue to invest limited time and resources doing what doesn’t work? Perhaps best practices that don’t produce positive outcomes really are stupid. Speaker colleague Stephen Shapiro has some insight on the matter and shares his solid advice.

Can an organization with such a casual approach — picking leaders without much forethought — really be serious about achieving its stated purpose? Shouldn’t leadership selection be intentional instead of accidental?

How does your organization communicate its opportunities for leadership nominations? The recruitment process must be intentional. Look to these examples for inspiration.

Nonprofits have long been challenged by unmet expectations in board member engagement and performance. Whatever the challenges, they can be effectively and proactively addressed by starting with an honest evaluation of your current board recruitment practices.

Nonprofit leaders recognize that new solutions are needed to address the nonprofit sector’s evolving challenges.

To say Simone Joyaux is passionate about fixing problems in nonprofit board governance is an understatement.