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Best practices for Zoom board meetings at early-stage startups

There are only 4 things a board really needs to consider

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Video call from home during lockdown
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Issac Roth

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Issac Roth is a Managing Director at Shasta Ventures, and a seasoned entrepreneur who advises founders on open-source technology and keeping communities engaged. Over this career, he’s created and sold multiple enterprise software companies and stays active as an advisor and investor.

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The world has spent most of 2020 adapting to ever-changing guidelines and restrictions (with no end in sight, even as the vaccines start to roll out). Board meetings are quickly increasing in their significance to foster consistent and vital interactions as an organization. It’s essential for companies to capitalize on the essential time together during these uncertain times.

While we might look like the Brady Bunch while sharing a Zoom window, are you actually communicating more like the family from “Succession?”

Are your meetings organized? Do people talk over one another? Do you usually run over time? Are you giving people time to digest information?

As we move into 2021 and Q1 meetings are being put onto calendars, take some time to modernize how you conduct your board meetings.

Having served on public company boards, growth-stage businesses and Series A startups, an observation I have made in boards that are later stage are more about financial analysis and governance. Whereas earlier-stage board discussions hinge more on product strategy, key partnerships, sharing best practices to help develop founders as executives and important hiring decisions.

Since the nature of the discussions is more, let’s call it … creative in earlier-stage businesses, where the focus is on where they’ve been particularly impacted by reduced bandwidth for collaboration while meeting remotely.

As said best by Mike Maples and paraphrased by Jeff Bonforte — there are only four things a board really needs to consider:

  • Has the market changed since we last met? If so, did it affect us negatively or positively?
  • Has the team changed? For better or worse?
  • Has our position in the market changed?
  • Can we do what we said we would?

Collecting data around those points is the job. In the meeting, the team can add color.

Remember the board works for you, so be sure to put them to work. Sharing materials with participants about three days ahead of time tends to be the best. Any later and they may not get enough time to digest, send earlier and the information might be out of date by the time you meet. It’s most common to format as a deck, but lately I’m seeing more written format and even magazine-style.

The number one request I get from early-stage companies is “help find me more customers.”

Other common requests are “help me find or land this type of talent, help me with industry benchmarks for this type of business deal or compensation structure, connect me to people that have experience with X so I can learn ways we could structure our process.” It’s helpful to put these asks in the materials you send ahead because sometimes board members might not be able to react quickly and now “homework” comes up spontaneously in the discussions.

Another purpose of these meetings is to build working relationships so when strategic decisions need to be made, board members are used to working together. Sometimes it is a forum for executives to gain exposure to board members and for board members to have the opportunity to evaluate and provide input on executives. For that reason execs are often invited to participate in certain discussions.

Like the product person who presents a roadmap or a market analysis, the head of sales should give color on pipeline and competitive deals, the marketing person may lead a discussion on ABM or channel marketing tactics, the engineering lead might ask for feedback on their metrics versus other companies, etc. Generally, CEOs also bring forth an interesting topic to have a discussion, such as channel strategy, market mapping/sizing, hiring plan and related issues.

Logistics

As far as logistics, we reserve two hours in calendars but we try to hit 90 minutes. I suggest something like this for a 90-minute session:

  • 30 mins: Review/discussion of the “four questions” above, color from leadership.
  • 30 mins: Discussion of some topic.
  • 15 mins: Any administrative stuff — options or hiring approvals if these haven’t been done over email.
  • 15 mins: Time for company leadership to step out, let the others talk among themselves and then potentially be called back to receive any feedback.

Prepare an agenda that respects everyone’s time

Being thoughtful about the agenda ahead of time makes a big difference. The big theme is that it’s more difficult to adjust the agenda in real time. In a person-to-person meeting people can interrupt more easily and it’s easier to read the room — are we spending too much time on this, are people engaged and we should stay on this topic for longer, etc.

Because of this more effort needs to be spent up front understanding what everyone wants from the board meeting and crafting the agenda toward that. Solicit input on the agenda ahead of time.

Make introductions

Previously people would introduce themselves while milling around, make sure to introduce new faces (ask them to speak up so “speaker view” highlights them and people can see the face attached to the name, especially in larger groups).

Pause for questions

Pause after an agenda to ask for questions. It’s harder to speak up virtually. (Give a three-second count in your head).

Give attendees time to pre-read

Like Amazon, give people five minutes to do the pre-read (slides or narrative). If they’ve read ahead they can use this moment to fetch a drink or other things they want to do to establish their headspace.

Schedule back-to-back meetings

Set up multiple sessions for different groups in different Zoom URLs at different times. For example, for the executive session or closed session, create a separate link — that way it’s not awkward waiting for people to leave; the right folks can just switch to the other Zoom.

Build in breaks

Don’t ask people if they need a break: Build them into the meeting to give participants time to reset.

No more than nine attendees

The old adage is true, only three people can actually have a discussion; everyone else is just watching. The absolute maximum size for a productive discussion is nine.

Utilize and create the idea of a “second circle,” — have the folks with a board seat put their video on.

Limit the number of presenters

Only one or two execs should present per meeting, and limit time to 15-30 minutes. Board members and observers have to respect the agenda and not drag the meeting into “I want to have an update on X” — or we limit this to a very short session. Everybody tries to give you a formula for how to run your board meeting, but it largely depends on which of your board members can contribute at different stages and different moments.

After the call concludes

Since these meetings make for a good checkpoint of communication of where the company is at, when I was a CEO I would present the same deck (perhaps edited slightly) to the whole company a day or two after the meeting. I would explain what feedback the board had (good and bad, including comments about me so people could help me improve) and what the discussion points had been. If execs were presenting during that section it was a good chance for them to present in front of the company too.

I mean, I’d already done all the work to create the summary, why not use that to update everyone?

Customer advisory boards are a gold mine for startup brand champions

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