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Keep up to datewhich of these roles are important for board members? | |
Role | % consider important |
Ensuring the HA is financially viable | 98 |
Determining the strategic objectives | 96 |
Judging priorities for spending | 95 |
Ensuring the association is meeting housing need | 95 |
Holding management to account | 95 |
Monitoring performance against objectives | 95 |
Setting the standards of service | 94 |
Ensuring good staff morale is obtained | 86 |
Working with partners and other stakeholders | 77 |
Tenant board members are more likely than others to consider “ensuring good staff morale is obtained” and “working with partners and other stakeholders” to be important. Although these were the bottom two reasons overall, 92% of tenant board members said the former was important and 85% the latter. Tenants also had a stronger commitment to personal development and gave more importance to role concerned with the interface between the association and the outside world. |
What special skills/knowledge do you bring to the board? | |
Special skills or knowledge | % |
Local area | 44 |
Personnel/human resources | 38 |
Finance | 37 |
Community development | 32 |
Equal opportunities | 27 |
Housing management | 25 |
Building maintenance | 22 |
Experience of being a tenant | 21 |
Construction | 20 |
Legal | 16 |
Social services | 15 |
Computing and IT | 15 |
Surveying | 10 |
Architecture | 7 |
A majority (79%) think their board has a sufficient range of backgrounds, skills and experience. It was not clear, however, whether the skills gap perceived by the remainder was due to recruitment difficulties. The main skills they thought lacking were IT, legal skills, architecture, construction and social services. |
Which of these roles are important for individual board members? | ||
Individual role | Tenant members (%) | All (%) |
Ensuring ethical and legal conduct | 94 | 93 |
Selecting and assessing chief executive | 91 | 91 |
Reviewing and questioning managers’ decisions | 94 | 90 |
Providing expertise and advice to staff | 79 | 79 |
Monitoring performance in equal opportunities | 86 | 78 |
Representing the HA to the outside world | 89 | 76 |
Increasing own knowledge of relevant topics | 91 | 73 |
Acting as the voice of the community | 88 | 66 |
why did you join the board? | ||
Reason | Tenant members (%) | All (%) |
To contribute to society | 57 | 76 |
An opportunity to exercise skills and experience gained elsewhere | 45 | 69 |
To improve service for tenants | 93 | 56 |
Something would be good at and this would be satisfying | 42 | 51 |
To represent interests of local people | 70 | 37 |
Because I was asked | 23 | 32 |
The housing association has a good reputation | 30 | 27 |
To gain skills and experience in managing an organisation | 23 | 17 |
To make use of spare time | 16 | 13 |
Other | 7 | 6 |
Most board members join their boards because of a combination of altruism and a wish for personal fulfilment. Interestingly, nearly one-third said they joined “because I was asked”, indicating the value of directly approaching possible members. In fact, at least 40% of board members said they joined after getting a personal invitation from staff or other board members, even if this was not their primary reason for joining, showing that word of mouth is still a very important method of recruitment. Another 17% said they replied to an advertisement. | ||
Tenant board members showed markedly different priorities from others: more than nine out of 10 said they joined “to improve services to tenants”, seven out of 10 said they joined “to represent the interests of local people” while less than half saw their membership as an opportunity to use their skills – for other board members, this was the second most important reason for joining. |