Site icon David DeWolf

Give up the illusion of control – proactively build your board

One of the worst pieces of advice I received in the early days of Three Pillar was to refrain from building a board of directors. If you need the advice, I was told, build a board of advisors. Conventional wisdom said that I shouldn’t relinquish control. Luckily, I ignored conventional wisdom and did the opposite of what was recommended. I added my first outside director when I had less than $1M in annual revenue. For a bootstrapped company with no outside investment, this was highly unusual.

I credit much of Three Pillar’s success to that decision. It did three things that an advisory board could never have done:

At the end of the day, I am fortunate that the result is a high-performing board. Not a lot of CEOs have this luxury. Many are stuck with a board that falls into one of two extremes – overbearing and meddling, or uninvolved and a distraction. At the end of the day, the best board is one that challenges assumptions, asks tough questions, and offers perspective based upon a diverse set of backgrounds. High-performing boards work well as a team and don’t require “management” from the CEO. Yes, the board has a fiduciary responsibility and holds the CEO accountable, but even more importantly, they are a resource for the company and a key tool in the successful CEO’s tool belt.

My relationship with my board has changed as we have grown, taken on investment, and become more formal, but I am glad that I gave up the illusion of control early on.  It allowed me to build a high-performing board and taught me how to interact and use a board before I had to.

Have you been successful in building a board?  Have you had to rebuild a board?  What techniques have you used to not only build but get the most out of your board?

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