A Better Way to Avoid Personality Problems on Your Board
Bernadette Mack
Writing, Communication & Marketing Professional ?? | Consultant ??| Nonprofit Executive
Adapted from the September 29, 2021 blog post on BernadetteMack.com
If you missed last week’s blog post about common personality types that get in the way of?nonprofit progress, you can?check it out here. In a slightly tongue-in-cheek way, I described eight seriously disruptive players...so that you?might pinpoint sources of friction within your board.
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Here’s the?good news:?many of you probably read the list, had a chuckle, recognized a person or two, and decided?those folks weren’t?so bad after all.
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Here’s the?not-so-good news:?a fair amount of you read descriptions that match?many of your?board members to a T?- and realized that you may have a serious problem on your hands.
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If you fall into the latter category, fear not. There are strategies that can help.
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If you find that?there are difficult personalities on your board, toxic types on your staff, or otherwise undesirable behaviors happening in your nonprofit, your expectation may be that?the perpetrators need to change?their behavior.?
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But here's a newsflash:?we?can’t change people.?They can only change themselves.?
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Try as we might, it is unreasonable to believe that?we can do anything to address the deep insecurities that cause?Bulldozers?to want to overpower the group or to quell the fears that cause?Micromanagers?to be "all up in your grill". These traits are years in the making and they are, frankly, not our business.
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That’s their own stuff. You are (probably) not a therapist.?
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Deep down, we all know this. But, also deep down, we all still want to try to change people.?We?coerce, incentivize, shame, or complain to others in order to get bad actors to stop being a nuisance.?We take it on as a challenge to find ways to effectively manage the “difficult people” or to win in a battle of wills.
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But?expecting that others will change is a trap. Focusing on changing the bad behavior or undesirable personality traits?makes the conflict personal?and causes?us to waste valuable time and energy that would be better spent on trying to accomplish the mission.
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In this way,?friction?develops between people instead of where it actually is: between the group and its ability to accomplish?the goals/mission.
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For instance, when the?Icon?seeks out the executive director or board president after a meeting and tries to exert her influence by giving opinions and suggestions after the fact, it undermines the board's processes for governance. Applying pressure behind the scenes allows this person with inherent power - from long-standing service or professional?esteem - to bypass scrutiny or examination by the group.?This devalues the input of the other board members and can cause, among other things, confusion and animosity when decisions are made that haven't been vetted or discussed.?
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Here are some?alternative ways to think about managing the disruptive personalities on your board:
Remember that the personality traits of your board members are not your responsibility and that?disruptive behavior is, usually, not personal. When you have a solid foundation of policies, allies, and influence, you'll be able to keep the tendencies of others from standing in the way of real progress and?safeguard your organization against dysfunction from the inside out.?
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