Organizing a board meeting: agenda, preparation and minutes

The agenda: preparation is everything

Prepare the agenda at least a week before the meeting and send it to all board members. A good agenda includes:

Indicate for each agenda item how much time you allocate for it. This helps the chair to ensure the meeting does not run over time.

The role of the chair

The chair leads the meeting, and that means actively steering, not just forwarding. Tasks of a good chair:

Read more about the distribution of duties in board roles and profiles.

Writing good minutes

Minutes are not a verbatim transcript. They record:

Send the minutes within a week after the meeting to all board members. This keeps the memory fresh and allows quick correction if something has been recorded incorrectly.

Maintaining an action list

An action list (who does what by when) is the most useful part of the minutes. Start each meeting with a brief review of the action list from the previous time. What is completed? What remains open? This creates accountability without blame.

Meeting frequency

Most small community centres and associations meet monthly or every six weeks. More frequent meetings are rarely needed; fewer can suffice if the organisation is stable. Urgent decisions can also be taken by e-mail if all board members agree; please note this in the minutes of the next meeting. Also consider the options for digital meetings.