Nonprofit board governance can be challenging, especially for multi-site organizations juggling priorities, training, and oversight. In this blog, we explore eight practical ways to improve governance - from onboarding to self-assessment - and explain how a unified platform like Claromentis helps nonprofits streamline communication, training, and compliance without adding more tools.
Your board — or trustees — are the guiding force behind your nonprofit. They set direction, steward resources, and protect the mission. Strong nonprofit board governance turns that intent into day-to-day reality: clear roles, transparent oversight, and informed decisions.
Despite this, 56% of nonprofits struggle with board governance. And many growing nonprofits face difficulties with board constraints.
This problem is not new. In 2015, a Stanford survey stated that:
“Over a quarter of nonprofit directors don’t have a deep understanding of their organization’s mission and strategy; nearly a third are dissatisfied with the board’s ability to evaluate performance; and a majority doubt their peers’ experience or engagement.”
In this blog, we’ll discuss why this is the case and what you can do to improve your nonprofit board governance.
There’s no one-size-fits-all reason, but most nonprofits face the same core challenges when it comes to governance. Here are the three most common:
When there’s no clear line between governance and day-to-day management, things can get messy.
Board members start dipping into operational decisions, leadership teams hesitate to act, and progress slows. Without clear expectations, even the most well-meaning people can step on each other’s toes.
The fix is relatively simple. You need to define what the board is (and isn’t) responsible for.
Set out clear roles, committee remits, and decision-making boundaries in one place. Use a governance calendar to stay on track, and revisit it regularly.
Board members want to do a good job. After all, they care about your mission too. But, a good attitude and a desire to help only goes so far if they don’t get the tools or training to do their job.
Without proper onboarding or ongoing development, people make mistakes, confidence dips and frustration rises. Making it harder to contribute meaningfully or hold others accountable.
Build a short, controlled onboarding journey that covers everything people need, from fiduciary duties to how your organization operates. Then, follow up with bite-sized training and refreshers throughout the year. Ensure that learning is a part of your culture, not a one-off event.
For example, you could use Claromentis’ LMS triggers as part of your onboarding journey. These open up functionality and access to different parts of your nonprofit management system based on whether or not a board member has completed their training.
Your board members are busy people. Between work, family, and community commitments, it’s not always easy to prepare for meetings or engage consistently, especially across multiple sites.
Respect their time and make it easy for them to find everything they need. Create a dedicated discussion room and centralized repository for all relevant instructions, pre-reads and other documentation.
This ensures that your board meetings are focused on making decisions, rather than catching up and debating priorities.
Now that we understand some of the common challenges that affect nonprofit boards, let's fix them.
Here are eight practical best practices that will help you bring clarity and measurable improvement to your nonprofit board governance.
Without clear onboarding, even the most experienced board members can feel unsure of their role. Especially in multi-site organizations where responsibilities and processes can vary.
Create a consistent journey that covers your mission, strategy, finances, bylaws, and committee structures. Be clear about expectations: governance vs management, time commitments, and confidentiality. Pair new members with a mentor, and connect them with key staff across your locations to build both context and rapport.
Once onboarding is complete, follow up after 60 - 90 days to gather feedback and improve the experience for future members.
Your handbook is the backbone of board operations. From bylaws and committee charters to meeting cadence and decision-making authority, every key document should live in a single, accessible space.
Avoid confusion over handbook versions and updates that come with email attachments or local folders.
Ensure that there is a single source of truth that everyone can refer to. One that has comprehensive version control with review dates and a way to ensure everyone understands what is expected of them. For larger organizations, a glossary of acronyms or key terms can also be helpful.
Claromentis makes this easy to manage. Built-in document management features — like check-in/out, permissions, and audit logs — keep your content secure and controlled.
Plus when something changes, you can mark it as a “mandatory read” for users and capture acknowledgments. Meaning that no board members will miss important updates.
When board members are clear on the mission, strategy, and impact metrics, decisions are faster, sharper, and better aligned.
But when that clarity is missing, boardroom time gets wasted on catching-up and second-guessing.
Create a dedicated space where your board can easily access your mission statement, strategic goals, key metrics, and up-to-date dashboards. For more complex initiatives or multi-site structures, short explainer videos can add valuable context. Refresh content quarterly, and highlight any changes before each meeting to keep everyone aligned.
With Claromentis, you can build a board-specific intranet page that brings everything together - KPIs, updates, and a rolling brief - with targeted news and announcements so your members always have the right context at the right time.
Good governance doesn’t happen by accident — it’s something boards learn and build over time.
Without regular development, it’s easy for directors to veer into operational detail or feel unsure about their oversight role. What’s more, research from BoardSource shows that ongoing education and self-assessment make boards significantly more effective across core governance responsibilities.
To ensure your board is operating to their fullest potential, create an annual curriculum. This regular training can cover the essentials of board membership — their fiduciary duties, risk management, strategic thinking, financial oversight, and inclusive decision-making.
Use short modules, real-world scenarios, and quick quizzes to support learning ahead of key decisions like budget approvals or CEO evaluations. For new members, offer a fast-track training program that helps them get started quickly.
Claromentis makes this easy to deliver. Our intuitive LMS enables you to build structured board training paths with SCORM-compliant content, track completions, and issue certificates. You can also trigger “read & accept” flows for policy updates, and use our built-in AI assistant to help directors review key points and ask questions on demand.
Too often, board meetings get bogged down in updates, leaving little time for meaningful discussion. It’s hard to make progress and easy to lose momentum when everyone’s unprepared.
Establish simple, consistent norms to make collaboration more effective. Use agendas to group routine items into a single vote, so meeting time can focus on strategy and judgment calls.
Share pre-reads in advance and encourage directors to comment asynchronously, flagging any open questions ahead of time. If you operate across multiple sites, allow virtual attendance as well as in-person so that you make sure every voice is heard.
Claromentis helps nonprofit boards work more efficiently by consolidating everything they need into a single, comprehensive communications platform. Discussion rooms enable pre-meeting planning and engagement, announcements keep everyone aligned, and sensitive information remains secure due to granular permissioning.
All of which means your board can communicate, collaborate and make better informed strategic decisions without having to jump between tools.
Your board members aren’t just decision-makers — they’re ambassadors for your cause.
Giving them an active role in communications helps them stay connected to your programs and gives your messaging more reach and credibility.
Set some light editorial guardrails to guide tone and messaging, and give directors a space to contribute to your communications. These could be a short update from the Chair, a reflection from a committee lead, or commentary tied to strategy milestones.
Ensuring they have access to assets like one-pagers, slide decks, and FAQs also makes it easier for them to represent your organization in the community.
With Claromentis, board members can draft content in a secure, controlled environment. Brand assets, content approval workflows, and audience targeting are all built in, so your team can support board-led storytelling without creating more admin.
Good governance takes reflection. Regular self-assessments help your board spot blind spots —- from meeting effectiveness and role clarity, to strategy alignment and committee performance.
A short quarterly survey and a deeper annual review can reveal what’s working and where support is needed. Visual tools like the NCVO Governance Wheel make results easier to discuss and turn into action. Follow up with a simple 90-day improvement plan and revisit progress regularly.
Claromentis makes this process straightforward. Use built-in polls and surveys to run anonymous self-assessments, display results on your board page, and track change over time. Scores, trends, and action items all stay in one place, so your board can focus on making meaningful improvements.
Board transitions are inevitable, but they shouldn’t come as a surprise.
A clear succession plan reduces disruption, protects institutional memory, and opens the door to fresh perspectives and skills.
Start by mapping upcoming term expirations at least a year ahead. Identify any gaps in expertise or representation, and maintain a simple talent pipeline with notes on prospects, interview outcomes, and eligibility dates. For officer roles like Chair, Treasurer, or Secretary, create handover checklists and calendars to make transitions smoother.
Claromentis helps you stay organized behind the scenes. Keep a private board directory with renewal dates and skills tags, store handover materials in a shared handbook space, and assign workflow tasks for nominations, interviews, and approvals — complete with reminders and deadlines to keep everything on track.
As your nonprofit grows, board governance becomes more complex. More people. More policies. More locations and stakeholders to align. When clarity and compliance matter, disconnected tools and manual processes just don’t cut it.
That’s where Claromentis comes in.
Our digital workplace for nonprofit management brings everything your board needs into one secure platform that combines communications, training, surveys, policy management, and workflow automation.
Instead of jumping between tools, your board gets one place to stay informed, collaborate, and make better decisions — and your team gets a clearer, simpler way to keep everything on track.
If you'd like to see how Claromentis can help you streamline your operations from the board down, book a short discovery call now. We'd love to chat about your governance priorities and show you how our product can help you in practice.