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Did your Board Choose the Wrong Executive?

Ruth McCambridge
March 31, 2008
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It is torturous to watch a good organization wither away or go awry because the wrong executive was hired. A faulty hire is, in my experience, a mistake not easily rectified . . . I’m sure you’ve seen such sad stumbles in your own community. What a terrible waste of time, resources, social capital, and opportunity.

The Nonprofit Quarterly understands, then, why the topic of leadership transition is of such interest to our readers. A leader’s departure is a pivotal moment in any organization’s life — that is why we have chosen leadership transition as the theme of our Spring edition.

Actually, I think we outdid ourselves this time with some truly noteworthy articles, including “Boards and Leadership Transition: The Wrong Hire can Derail a Healthy Organization,” about how boards err in choosing a new executive and what to do to get it right. Written by Deborah Linnell (who authored the seminal, “Founders and other Gods”) this piece is both excruciatingly resonant and refreshingly illuminating. It is a must read for every board member. Here is an excerpt that sets the stage:

Consider this example. For three years, the board of an organization that promotes volunteerism has struggled with a lack of faith in its executive director. The mild-mannered director lacks personal energy and functions as a coordinator rather than as a manager. His leadership style creates a loss in momentum, although the organization’s rates of volunteer participation are high. Made up of young professionals, the board has let its frustration build, prompting this executive to intuit that he has not met expectations and resign. The board decides it needs a real go-getter who will focus on fundraising, and it gets what it wants: a motivated, former junior staff consultant at a for-profit firm serving nonprofits who drives ahead without consulting others. In fact, she often appears annoyed when others voice their opinions. Staff begins to filter out.

Always involved in setting the organization’s agenda, the board soon realizes that it has made a mistake. The problem is, its members have spent valuable social capital in promoting the new director as organizational savior. The director leaves within the year and the organization — now significantly weakened and disheartened — is consolidated into another. How do such things happen?

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To read more of this article which is rich in practical advice (subscribers to the Nonprofit Quarterly can link to the whole article but we have given you non-subscribers only a taste to encourage you to take the plunge and subscribe today!)

Other important articles in this sure to be well-circulated issue include:

  • •  A Leader’s Guide to Executive Coaching
  • •  Guide to the First 100 Days of an Incoming Leader
  • •  Debunking the Generation Gap in our workplaces

Meanwhile, and apropos of the topic, I want to acknowledge the sad passing of a remarkable and resilient community leader.

Barbara Motley of Goodwill Homes in Memphis had just passed the leadership baton to a woman she had mentored for decades when she died in a tragic house fire. Her legacy is in the health and happiness of the children and elders who are and will be so well served by Goodwill Homes. Ms Motley epitomized this sector’s spirit and tenacity. She will be sorely missed.

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About the author
Ruth McCambridge

Ruth is Editor Emerita of the Nonprofit Quarterly. Her background includes forty-five years of experience in nonprofits, primarily in organizations that mix grassroots community work with policy change. Beginning in the mid-1980s, Ruth spent a decade at the Boston Foundation, developing and implementing capacity building programs and advocating for grantmaking attention to constituent involvement.

More about: Board GovernanceEditor's NotesLeadership Transition/Succession PlanningOpinion

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