Most new nonprofit board members think they signed up for a few meetings a year.
They’re wrong.
The moment you said yes, you became a legal steward of:
→ A mission that serves real people
→ Resources entrusted by donors
→ An organization’s long-term integrity
Here’s what surprised me after founding a nonprofit and serving on multiple boards:
Good intentions are not enough.
Silence at a board meeting is not neutral —
it can be a breach of duty.
And ‘I didn’t know’ is not a legal defense.
The most effective board members I’ve ever worked with don’t try to run the organization.
They govern it — with care, curiosity, and courage.
There’s a difference.
And when boards understand it, organizations become far stronger.
💬 Are you currently on a nonprofit board? What’s one thing you wish someone had told you on day one?
