Running a productive and energized board meeting takes time and effort. Harnessing the expertise of board members while meeting the needs of the company is a balance that must be continually recalibrated by the board and company leadership. In this session, we will cover the process to achieve effective board practices ranging from board meeting formulation and preparation, board meeting execution and facilitation, and post-board meeting follow-up. The social aspects of a board will also be discussed – how to create engagement, teamwork, and camaraderie among board members to maximize their contribution. With boards charged with a company’s most important strategic matters, no company can afford to waste valuable meeting time.
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/the-effective-board-2021/
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Practical and entertaining education for
attorneys, accountants, business owners and
executives, and investors.
3.
4. Disclaimer
The material in this webinar is for informational purposes only. It should not be considered
legal, financial or other professional advice. You should consult with an attorney or other
appropriate professional to determine what may be best for your individual needs. While
Financial Poise™ takes reasonable steps to ensure that information it publishes is accurate,
Financial Poise™ makes no guaranty in this regard.
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5. Meet the Faculty
MODERATOR:
Mark Trembacki – Busey Bank
PANELISTS:
Pankaj Amin - SC Ventures
Jeremy Waitzman, Sugar Felsenthal Grais & Helsinger LLP
David Spitulnik, Managing Partner, Spitulnik Advisors
Bruce Werner - Kona Advisors LLC
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6. About This Webinar -
The Effective Board
Running a productive and energized board meeting takes time and effort. Harnessing the expertise of
board members while meeting the needs of the company is a balance that must be continually
recalibrated by the board and company leadership. In this session, we will cover the process to achieve
effective board practices ranging from board meeting formulation and preparation, board meeting
execution and facilitation, and post-board meeting follow-up. The social aspects of a board will also be
discussed – how to create engagement, teamwork, and camaraderie among board members to maximize
their contribution. With boards charged with a company’s most important strategic matters, no company
can afford to waste valuable meeting time.
Each Financial Poise Webinar is delivered in Plain English, understandable to investors, business owners, and
executives without much background in these areas, yet is of primary value to attorneys, accountants, and other
seasoned professionals. Each episode brings you into engaging, sometimes humorous, conversations designed to
entertain as it teaches. Each episode in the series is designed to be viewed independently of the other episodes so that
participants will enhance their knowledge of this area whether they attend one, some, or all episodes.
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7. About This Series - Board of Directors Boot Camp
More and more privately-held companies are recognizing the benefits of effective corporate governance
and are working towards establishing more formalized and independent board processes. Multiple factors
influence this evolution at private companies and its continued acceleration: Managing increasing
complexity companies face in today’s operating environment and the associated requirement to have
additional and new expertise to help navigate; Shoring up risk management practices to manage an
expanded and ever-changing risk profile; Dealing with leadership transitions and succession planning
resulting from the demographic wave associated with leadership retirements and generational ownership
transfers; Responding to the ever-increasing pressure that companies face from foreign competitors
Managing growing stakeholder expectations – customers, employees, community - as well as
government regulation. The myriad of complex issues in running a business ranging from supply chain
management to digitization/technology to reputation management point to the need for enhanced
governance. Establishing, maintaining, and evolving a more structured and formalized approach to
governance can feel daunting. This webinar series discusses various aspects of good governance in
private companies including best practices and common pitfalls. Applicable to owners, executives,
directors and their respective trusted advisors, this webinar series brings a variety of experiences and
perspectives on the most common questions around private company governance.
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8. Episodes in this Series
#1: Roles & Responsibilities: a Primer
Premiere date: 3/25/21
#2: The Effective Director
Premiere date: 4/22/21
#3: The Effective Board
Premiere date: 5/20/21
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11. Why Have a Board?
• Another point of view
How to ensure that this group is not bound by insider and or family politics
• For Fiduciary, at a minimum
Selection of Senior Executives
Approve Shareholder distributions
Approve Long Range Plans
• Note that the level of authority of an Advisory Board may differ between a Fiduciary
and Advisory Board.
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12. Why Have a Board?
• The Board Will:
Deliver key ideas
Provide a level of accountability
Provide oversight
• Thereby Increasing:
Likelihood of growth
Stability
Achieving goals
• Note again that while the level of authority may differ between a Fiduciary and
Advisory Board, often the Company Leadership will depend on the Board for input
on these, whether or not the Board has the authority to make binding decisions.
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13. Why Have a Board?
• The Board is convened to offer independent insights on areas such as
Succession Planning
Long Range Plans
Company or Division
o M&A
o Divestiture
o JV
o New Market Entry
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16. Establish Clear Lines of Communication
• Consistent methods and clear lines of communication about Board meeting issues
and action items are critical to meeting planning and success.
• The Board Chair should be the focal point of communication about Board meeting
issues.
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17. Reports
• Written reports intended for presentation and discussion at Board meetings should
be circulated in advance to allow directors time to prepare.
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18. Resolutions
• If possible, resolutions should also be circulated prior to the meeting for review and
comment.
• Board Chair should generally be first to see it before circulation to other directors.
• A coherent and civil resolution review process may prevent a “war on the floor.”
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19. Reports and Discussions
• Administrative leaders and committee chairs should report as needed - up to the
organization whether that is at every meeting or only periodically
• Written reports are the rule (even if short)
• No magic to the form of reports
• Consider confidentiality issues - should the report be confidential and/or discussed
only in closed session?
• When possible (and when in doubt), preview the report with the Board Chair
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21. Meeting Objectives
• Formalize decisions
• Inform the Board - opportunity for Board to inquire and assess information beyond
the written reports
• Assign action items
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22. The Board Agenda
• Information Before the Meeting (hopefully 3-5 Days)
Performance information
Market issues including supply, competitors, channels, products, etc.
• At the Meeting
Minutes
Decisions required
Discussions at high level (Nose In, Fingers Out)
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23. The Board Agenda
• Fiduciary Vs. Advisory
Make sure you address what you are REQUIRED to as Fiduciary
• Establish a flow for the meetings as well as for the year
For the meeting, a standard set of ideas
For the year, if quarterly meetings, perhaps a topic deep dive
o Q4 Following year plan
o Q3 People and Compensation
o Q2 Market Dynamics
o Q1 Strategic Plan
All issues on the table, but focus for annual cycle
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24. Setting the Agenda - Sample
ABC Board of Directors Meeting
Wednesday, May 23, 2018, 10:00 am.
Agenda
• Call to Order
Attendance
Introduction of Guests
• Approval of Minutes from February 21, 2018 Board Meeting
• CEO’s Report
• CFO’s Report
• Committee Reports
• Other Business
• Adjournment
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25. Agenda Considerations
• Think about where you want to focus your precious time together as a board:
How much time on reviewing reports vs. discussing strategic matters?
How will we allocate our energy - what comes first, and what’s handled later in the
day?
How can we minimize distractions during the meeting? (i.e. scheduling a mid-
morning break for attending to calls/emails)
Set time limits for each agenda item and keep to them!
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26. Closed Sessions
• Discussion of certain topics should be limited to closed or executive sessions of the
Board, such as
Conflict of interest issues
Executive compensation and similar issues
Litigation
Other topics of a highly confidential or sensitive nature
• Board meeting are by default open meetings, particularly where the organization has
member constituents who may be entitled to attend Board meetings
• Closed sessions require a motion and vote to enter, and a motion and vote to exit
(which should be duly recorded)
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27. Closes (Executive) Sessions
• Minutes of closed sessions should be kept according to the same principles of
minutes generally - however, minutes of closed sessions will generally not be
available for review by non-board members.
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29. Board Engagement
• Stress in position description as well as in interviews expectations of participation
You are here because of both specific topical knowledge as well as your overall
business acumen
• Create a review process
• For the Board as a whole
Is the company getting from the Board what they were looking for?
• For individual Board members
• Encourage open and frank discussions
NO AD HOMINEM
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30. The Meeting Itself
• If you have planned well, the meeting should go (almost) according to plan.
• Board Chair is the ringmaster - responsible for timing and tone of the meeting.
• Following roll call, Chair should note whether a quorum is present in the event a vote
is required.
• Reserve questions and general discussion to specific times - typically at either at the
beginning or the end of the meeting.
• Two rules for the Chair:
Keep it civil (or bring it back from the brink when it is not).
STICK TO THE AGENDA!!!
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31. Robert’s Rules
• Robert’s Rules of Order are the paradigm but generally impractical and unnecessary
as a method for conducting a Board meeting.
• That said, if the Board Chair or another director is steeped in parliamentary rules,
apply them when and where necessary - for example, to break a logjam.
• Listening is the best rule (and skill) you can develop and demonstrate - from the
Chair to the newest member of the Board.
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32. Identifying Action Items
• Action items can be identified as the meeting goes along and/or identified in a wrap
at the end (just prior to adjournment)
• Board Chair should circulate an action item list, deadlines, and other key details after
the meeting, and them follow up before the next meeting
• Your takeaways and next actions can kick off the planning process for the next
meeting
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33. Minutes
• Formal minutes are a necessary part of Board governance. Minutes are considered
legal documents by courts, auditors and the IRS.
• As a rule, the Board Secretary bears responsibility for ensuring that appropriate
minutes are prepared. However, minutes can be taken and drafted by any officer,
staff member or agent designated to the task.
• Review, comment, revision (if necessary) and approval of last meeting’s minutes
should be the first substantive item on the next meeting’s agenda.
• IF IT DOESN’T APPEAR IN THE MINUTES, IT DIDN’T HAPPEN.
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35. Minutes
• General Rule: Less detail rather than more
• Substantive categories to cover
Attendance - roll call of directors and guests
Decisions Reached (or not)
Action Items
Discussion Topics and Reports
Open Issues
• KEEP IT SIMPLE - okay to describe decisions made without reference to the votes
of specific directors or discussions held and reports given by identifying only the
participants and subject matter of the discussion of report.
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36. Board Meeting Follow-Up
• Make sure to document action plans including due dates
• Interim reporting to ensure all are up to speed
• Interim committee meetings
• Open communication
Within Board
With leadership, as appropriate
With Shareholders, as appropriate
But all Board members need to understand the limits as well as expectations of
reporting on conversations back to other Board members
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37. Planning for the Next Board Meeting
• Success or failure of a Board meeting depends on what happens in the
days/weeks/months since the last meeting.
• Communication and preparation are key
• Board Chair should drive the process
• Include Board members in the planning process
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39. Some General Key Rules
• Chair runs the meeting
• Close debate by consensus where possible
• Any voting process is acceptable so long as properly recorded
• Use votes on action items as leverage to assign responsibility
• Be civil
• Be clear
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40. A Key Rule
• KNOW YOUR BYLAWS (or at least the rules that govern quorums, voting, and other
procedural matters)
• You don’t want to conduct important business NOW and have a Board member or
other stakeholder point out LATER that you acted in violation of the Bylaws
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41. Three Wisdoms for Board Chairs
• Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good: Better to be 80% perfect and take action
than wait for everything to come together just right.
• It’s OK to experiment: The only way to get better is to try new things. Take a few risks,
and learn from them.
• Take advantage of tribal knowledge: For many situations the board faces, someone in
the organization has had experiences you can learn from. Ask others for perspectives
and history that can inform your path forward.
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43. Board Formation Foundation
• Make sure there is a Board Charter outlining:
Board responsibilities
Board member responsibilities
• Make sure there is an understanding of evaluation processes
For Outside Members and for Insiders
For the Board as a whole
o May be different for Fiduciary Vs. Advisory
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44. Resolutions and Voting
• Resolutions and votes are how the Board decides to act (or not)
• Directors make resolutions - not non-director regulars or guests
• A resolution should not be a surprise to the Board Chair
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45. Resolutions and Voting
• When Presenting a resolution
Preview the resolution
Give background and hold discussion
Close the discussion (the Board Chair) - if there is no consensus on closing debate,
consider whether to continue the motion to a future meeting
Call for a motion and a second
Vote
Chair notes for the record that it passed or not passed - result ( but not specific votes)
is noted in the minutes
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46. Adjournment
• This may seem obvious, but...
Board Chair should note on the record that there is no further business and move to
close the meeting
Don’t forget to second the motion, vote, and declare the meeting closed
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47. Committees
• Committees are formed to assist the Board in its business and deliberation
• Committees can be standing committees, ad-hoc committees and advisory
committees (not much difference between the latter)
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48. Why Form a Committee?
• To handle ongoing significant activities
• To handle a special project or address an issue that is too complex for the Board to
handle
• To investigate, analyze and advise the Board on significant matters
• To comply with applicable law or “best practices”
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50. About The Faculty
Mark Trembacki – marktrembacki@gmail.com
Mark Trembacki is Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer of Busey Bank where he leads
strategic planning and execution, acquisition integration and the overall evolution of this rapidly growing
financial services company. Prior to joining Busey, Mark founded Risk Management Levers, Inc., a consulting
firm focused on strategy, risk management, acquisition integration, and change management leveraging his
deep experience from leadership roles at BMO Financial Group, including U.S. subsidiary BMO Harris Bank.
Mark has an MBA in Finance from The University of Chicago Booth School of Business, a BS in Accounting
from The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and is a CPA. He is a qualified SEC Financial Expert, a
National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) Governance Fellow, and earned NACD’s CERT
Certificate in Cybersecurity Oversight from Carnegie Mellon University’s Software Engineering Institute. Mark
also completed a Cyber Security Management Graduate Certificate from the University of Virginia.
Mark serves as the Board Chair at the DuPage Children’s Museum and Treasurer of the Chicago Historical
Society (Chicago History Museum) and was part of CEO Search Committees at both organizations in 2019
and 2020. He has also been an adjunct professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign teaching
Enterprise Risk Management in the Masters of Finance program.
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51. About The Faculty
Pankaj Amin – pamin@scven.com
In his extensive work as a CEO, private equity advisor and corporate Board member, Pankaj
brings more than 25 years of leadership and operational experience in the healthcare,
telecommunications, financial services and business service sectors. Pankaj is a thoughtful,
insightful and intellectually curious advisor who has a solid grasp on process as much as
product. Pankaj currently serves as a board member of MUBIC, a makeup joint venture
launched by Intercos, a 6000-person global makeup manufacturer headquartered in Italy and
portfolio company of private equity firm L Catterton. Pankaj brings financial oversight, growth
strategy, and consumer products experience to the company’s board. Pankaj also currently
serves as a board member of Enzo Bevande, a beverage company that is bringing popular
European products to the mass market in the United States. Pankaj represents the interests
of two European investors.
To read more, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/webinar-faculty/pankaj-amin/
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52. About The Faculty
Jeremy Waitzman – jwaitzman@sfgh.com
Jeremy Waitzman advises his clients on significant transactions and operational issues in
their businesses. Described by clients as “an essential business advisor” and “a partner in the
success of my business,” Jeremy has substantial experience representing businesses of all
types and sizes from inception, guiding them through significant growth, and often through
ownership’s exit. His clients include privately-held middle market and emerging growth
companies, family offices/funds, investors, C-level executives, boards of directors, family-
owned businesses and entrepreneurs. Jeremy counsels clients in the areas of corporate law,
mergers & acquisitions, private placements, general contract law and often acts as outside
general counsel for his clients. Jeremy represents individuals, closely held businesses, start-
up companies and serves as outside counsel to several large corporations. His work with
companies often includes strategies for creation of enterprise value.
To read more, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/webinar-faculty/jeremy-waitzman/
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53. About The Faculty
David Spitulnik – dspitulnik@spitulnikadvisors.com
David Spitulnik is a successful executive with over 40 years of experience in both large technology companies and
in consulting to and leadership of mid-market, closely held and family owned businesses across a variety of
industries. In addition to serving as a member and former chair of the Private Directors Association’s Private and
Family Business Center Outreach Committee and a member of the PDA Chicago Programming Committee, David
frequently writes and speaks on a number of topics related to leading, building, maintaining and strengthening
businesses and their governance structures. Drawing from a broad range of experience in the United States and
internationally, David is called upon to coach and mentor business leaders, to work with companies to develop
and implement their long-range plans and to advise businesses on board creation, structure and effectiveness so
that the individual, the board and the company can maintain powerful forward momentum.
David also is active in the community, currently serving on the Executive Committee of the Board of the Youth Job
Center whose mission is “Success for Young People in Their Careers and in Life.”
David published a book on leadership, Becoming An Insightful Leader: Charting Your Course To Purposeful
Success. The book focuses on the journey from managing to leading to advising and reflects David’s belief in
communicating and questioning how individuals and teams will define and then accomplish their goals and
objectives.
David graduated from Haverford College with a B.A. in Economics and received his MBA
from the Kellogg School at Northwestern University.
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54. About The Faculty
Bruce Werner – bruce@konaadvisors.com
Bruce Werner is the Managing Director of Kona Advisors LLC, which provides governance
and owner advisory services to middle market businesses. His range of assignments has
included M&A, strategy, finance, workout, succession planning and all facets of family
business consulting. Mr. Werner is an experienced outside director, having served on
numerous boards during periods of growth, restructuring and crisis management. He has
helped several businesses achieve INC 500 status. He writes and speaks on governance and
family business issues.
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55. Questions or Comments?
If you have any questions about this webinar that you did not get to ask during the live
premiere, or if you are watching this webinar On Demand, please do not hesitate to email us
at info@financialpoise.com with any questions or comments you may have. Please include
the name of the webinar in your email and we will do our best to provide a timely response.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The material in this presentation is for general educational purposes
only. It has been prepared primarily for attorneys and accountants for use in the pursuit of
their continuing legal education and continuing professional education.
55
56. About Financial Poise
56
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