Most struggling nonprofit boards don’t fail because they don’t care.
They fail because they blur one line.
The line between governance and management.
Board members are not supposed to:
✗ Supervise staff
✗ Run day-to-day programs
✗ Make operational decisions
They are supposed to:
✓ Set direction
✓ Provide oversight
✓ Safeguard integrity
✓ Think long-term when everyone else must think short-term
This sounds simple.
It isn’t.
Well-meaning board members micromanage
when they should mentor.
They dive into the “how”
when their role is the “what” and “why.”
And the Executive Director — the person actually running the organization — loses the space they need to lead.
I’ve watched great nonprofits stumble…
…not from lack of resources,
but from boards that didn’t know where governance ends and management begins.
One question clarifies almost everything:
“Am I setting direction — or am I doing staff work?”
💬 What’s the hardest boundary you’ve seen a board struggle to maintain?
Governance vs. operations — or something else entirely?
