The document provides an agenda and overview for a board skills training session led by Amanda Bennett. The day will focus on understanding the sporting context and landscape, exploring the board's structure and composition, and standards/controls. It will involve facilitation, scenario activities, and utilizing participant skills. Reasons for good governance in sport will be discussed. The voluntary code of good governance and its principles around vision/purpose, balanced boards, and standards will provide context. Risk management and the importance of delegation will also be covered.
3. Amanda Bennett
• International rugby player and
coach
• Chair, European Women and
Sport (2009-11)
• Executive Board Member, RFUW
• Head of Governance, UK Sport
• Author, Equality Standard for
Sport and Women and
Leadership Development
Programme
• Director, FairPlay Enterprises Ltd
• Governance Adviser to the SRA
• Equality Standard Adviser
• Head Coach, England U20
Women’s Rugby
• Member, RFU Game
Development Sub-Committee
4. Recap
• List three things you learned yesterday which
will help you in your role as a Director
5. Today
• List three things you want to find out about
during today’s sessions
6. Aims of the Day
• Understand the sporting context, its influence on your
organisation and the role of the Board
• Consider the purpose of the organisation
• Explore the Board’s structure and composition
• Understand what standards, systems and controls should be
in place
By:
• Facilitating discussion through scenario-based activity
• Utilising the skills in the room
7. Why Good Governance?
Think…
• News International phone hacking
• MPs’ expenses
• Nick Leeson, Barings Bank
• The Co-operative Bank
8. Why Good Governance in Sport?
Think…
• Taekwondo
• Snowsport GB
• Amateur Boxing Association of England
12. In a Sporting Context
• Vision – an aspirational view of ‘our’ world
– Health, participation, medals, inclusion
• Evidence – KPIs; milestones; R&D; audits; insight
– Individual performance
– Organisational progress (RAG)
• Pragmatism – practical problem solving, realism
– 2 coaches, 1 physio, P/T team manager
13. What’s it all for?
http://www.youtube.com
/watch?v=ntNVQpg3c08
14. Governance in the Sport Sector –
A Potted History
• 1999 management audits
• 2001 Modernisation Programme
• 2003 Investing in Change
• 2005-09 self-assurance and KGIs
• 2006 Additional £300m (UKS) – funding triggers
• 2011 Voluntary Code of Good Governance
• 2012 governance requirements and key criteria
for 2013-17
15. DCMS Objectives
• Maintaining and improving Britain's elite
sports performance
• Creating a lasting legacy from the 2012
Olympic and Paralympic Games
• Getting more people playing sport
Department
for Culture
Media &
Sport
16. Voluntary Code of Good Governance
• 7 Principles
• Voluntary – has provided basis
on which sports have met funding
requirements
• Sport-specific
• Flexible and adaptable
• Backed by Government and
National Sport Agencies
18. What’s Your Landscape
• On flipchart paper, draw the landscape within
which your organisation operates (5-10mins)
• Identify agencies of greatest influence /
importance to you
• Describe and explain this to a partner (5mins)
19.
20. Understanding and Engaging with the
Sporting Landscape
“The Board needs to be aware of the international and
domestic sporting worlds and position its organisation
appropriately”
Principle 7, Voluntary Code of Good Governance
24. Stakeholder Management
• What financial or strategic interest do they have in the
outcome of your work?
• Is it positive or negative?
• What motivates them most of all?
• What information do they want from you?
• What is their current opinion of your work? Is it based on good
information?
• Who influences their opinions generally, and who influences
their opinion of you?
26. The Role of the Board
• Understanding, defining and overseeing key relationships with
other bodies, e.g. investors, commercial partners etc.
• Upholding required standards set by other sporting bodies
domestically or internationally
• Defining the relationship between the NGB and clubs,
members and participants
• Advocacy, lobbying, promotion
27. International Federations
• Historical background
– one or more bodies
– e.g. Boxing, Golf, Taekwondo
• Responsible for the governance and development
of the sport
• Rules of the sport
• Events
• Olympic and Paralympic status
28. Delivering the Vision, Mission and Purpose
“The Board should set the high level strategy and vision
of the organisation and ensure that it is followed without
becoming involved in the operational delivery”
Principle 3, Voluntary Code of Good Governance
29. Vision
Your vision statement is your inspiration, the framework
for all your strategic planning. You are articulating your
dreams and hopes for your sport. It reminds you of what
you are trying to build.
30. Mission
A mission statement is a brief description of an
organisation's fundamental purpose. It answers the
question, "Why do we exist?“. The mission statement
articulates your organisation's purpose both for those
inside the organisation and for the members,
stakeholders and the public.
32. Examples
Our aim at Havant Rugby
Club is to create an
environment where
rugby can be played and
enjoyed by all ages from
6 to sixty regardless of
gender or ability.
Bowls England will
deliver an exceptional
sport and community
experience that is
appealing, entertaining
and accessible to all
To organise the world‘s
information and make
it universally accessible
and useful
Google
35. Balanced, Inclusive and Skilled Board
“The Board should be made up of individuals with the
right balance of skills and experience to meet the needs of
the organisation. Included in this is a need for
independent expertise and for representation of the
diversity of the sport and the communities it serves.”
Principle 4, Voluntary Code of Good Governance
38. Discussion
Competent high calibre individuals offering a mix
of skills, experience and backgrounds
Why is it important for sport?
What steps did your organisation take?
What challenges did you face?
39. Cross-Sectoral Good Practice
• Board members are chosen on the basis of their competence,
ability, qualities, leadership, integrity and experience
• Having at least 2 (ideally one third) independent Directors – no
one group can dominate decision making
• Setting terms of office for Board members to ensure the Board
is refreshed regularly
• Ensuring the voice of the participant is heard or represented
• Board composition adequately reflects society and is mindful of
diversity
44. The 12 Step Plan
Agree Board composition
Communicate with
stakeholders
Check Articles
Conduct skills audit
Communicate with
stakeholders
Agree recruitment process
(including Directors stepping down)
Secure stakeholder
agreement, e.g. AGM
Put in place recruitment
plan and resources
Open recruitment
Comprehensive
induction
Board evaluation
Communicate with
stakeholders
48. What Process?
• Open recruitment – advert, panel, interview
framework
• Election – voted by designated group, e.g. Members
• Appointment – can follow open recruitment or
election
• Secondment
• Co-opting *
• Shadowing*
*enables succession planning
49. Standards, Systems and Controls
“The Board needs to be conscious of the standards it
should operate to, and its role in exercising appropriate
and effective control over the organisation”
Principle 5, Voluntary Code of Good Governance
50. Risk is -
the uncertainty surrounding events and
their outcomes that may have a significant
effect, either enhancing or inhibiting:
• operational performance
• achievement of aims and objectives
• meeting expectations of stakeholders
51. Risk Management is -
the discipline of:
• Identifying and assessing all the risks you are
exposed to
• Setting risk appetite for those risks aligned to
strategic objectives
• Deploying the resources needed to control and
monitor the risks; and
• Reporting and re-assessing those risks in a
documented and evidenced framework
55. The ‘Art’ of Delegation
“Ensuring authority is delegated appropriately and that
checks and balances are in place to manage inappropriate
use of decision making responsibilities”
57. The ‘Art’ of Delegation
• Nurture the line management relationship
• Ensure clarity of outcomes, outputs and KPIs
• Set individual objectives
• Create responsibility
• Clarify accountability
• Agree limits of authority*
• Stay in touch
• Challenge progress – ask ‘good questions’
• Monitor and measure performance
• Reward success and be honest about failure
*responsibility without authority creates discontent
58. Thank You and Well Done!
Amanda Bennett
FairPlay Enterprises Ltd
Mob: 07507 355241
Email: Amanda.m.bennett10@gmail.com