Assuming a Professional Mantle: UK arts boards examined

Board Composition and SuccessionSuccession PlanningSocial ImpactBoard and CEO AdvisoryBoard EffectivenessBoard Director and Chair Search
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7月 31, 2017
9 min read
Board Composition and SuccessionSuccession PlanningSocial ImpactBoard and CEO AdvisoryBoard EffectivenessBoard Director and Chair Search
Executive Summary
​Amidst a broader governance debate spreading across sectors, UK cultural boards must contend with changing expectations.
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​Amidst a broader governance debate spreading across sectors, UK cultural boards must contend with changing expectations regarding their responsibilities. Non-executive directors ('NEDs') are being asked to fulfill an ever-more professional mandate to deal with challenging external and internal circumstances. Consequently, cultural boards often find themselves taking centre stage in the fulfilment of their organisations' missions, which increasingly requires providing governance oversight and strategic vision, in addition to support for financial and technical operations. Yet, while circumstances continue to redefine the art board's role in addressing unique industry challenges, relatively little information exists on the structures and processes it can harness to carry out its responsibilities. 

To better understand how cultural boards fulfil their role of safeguarding culture – and to complement increased scrutiny with actionable recommendations around best-in-class governance models – we looked at the boards of directors of 10 leading UK performing arts institutions and 10 leading UK museums.1 We also analysed a number of US organisations,2 where a similar debate currently rages, to provide context where additive. By highlighting UK cultural boards' strengths as well as opportunities for improvement, we hope to provide transparency, raise questions, and inform a discussion about the range of choices these nonprofit boards can make.

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Where can UK cultural boards be strengthened? 

Limited C-suite experience  

UK cultural boards could benefit from more members with senior leadership experience: most NEDs in the UK have no prior C-suite experience, and the majority of boards lack CFO experience amongst their members (Figure 1). While the legacy of including experts from the arts – who may have less senior management experience – in part explains these statistics, that answer nonetheless raises another question: how well equipped are boards to advise the executive team on issues they are tasked with resolving?

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An unmet digital need

Despite being cognisant of the need for technological expertise, most UK cultural boards are not digitally savvy. Only 4% of museum NEDs and 8% of performing arts institution NEDs have any prior digital experience, and those that do earn it predominantly by working in a digital organisation, not from a digital role (Figure 2). 

Consequently, even while cultural institutions struggle to stay in step with their evolving digital-age audiences and to invest strategically3 in new technologies, few board members possess the skills required to help them address these core challenges.

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Gaps in diversity  

Faced with increased public scrutiny and demands for accountability, organisations across all industries have recognised how important diversity and inclusion practices are to good governance. Cultural institutions in particular face increasing demands to reflect the diversity of the constituencies they serve, but data suggest there is room for improvement (Figure 3). Both museums and performing arts institutions orbit at or under 5% ethnically diverse board members, while performing arts institutions fare slightly better on gender diversity, with 34% female NEDs versus museums' 26%. Adopting a broader industry lens, diversity statistics are comparable between UK cultural institutions and FTSE 100 companies,4 though the former fare slightly better in terms of gender diversity and the latter in terms of racial diversity. These findings suggest that, while diversity and inclusion are top-of-mind concerns across industries and institutions, such awareness has yet to translate into meaningful changes at the board level.

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Too many boards, too little time 

Research confirms that a lack of active participation from board members and an apparent disconnect between the board and the executive team are key impediments to board effectiveness.5 One potential source of this disengagement involves the number of additional board seats members occupy. Most board members at UK museums and performing arts institutions (76% and 59%, respectively) sit on at least one other board, with an average of four additional board seats (Figure 4). However, more than a quarter sit on more than 10 additional boards (as compared to only 13% for US cultural board members). These significant additional time commitments pose a potential challenge to a board's effectiveness. With growing constraints on government subsidies, organisations are increasing fundraising efforts and looking to the board to take on a leadership role across a range of initiatives. However, the feasibility of delivering on these commitments, especially those of a financial nature, becomes questionable when members sit on multiple, potentially conflicting, boards.

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Where are UK cultural boards ahead of the curve?

A streamlined structure 

Board size – like several other aspects of board structure – encapsulates a trade-off: smaller boards may suffer from myopic vision, while larger ones could encounter efficiency concerns. The good news: neither of these challenges seem to apply to UK cultural boards, which average 14 members for both museums and performing arts institutions. Especially when compared to US cultural institutions, which average 33 board members for museums and 68 for performing arts institutions, UK cultural institutions emerge as benefiting from a streamlined board structure, which also features fewer committees and a higher representation of the organisation's CEOs. 

However, US boards are often larger in order to deal with the fundraising imperative they face – will the changing UK landscape, marked by decreased government subsidies for the arts, force its cultural institutions to follow the US lead?

A strong mix of experience 

Across assessments of US and UK NEDs, several internationally applicable best practices for a cultural board emerge: it should possess financial acumen; familiarity with academic, regulated, and highly matrixed environments; and subject matter expertise. 

The UK does well in this regard: despite low levels of C-suite and digital experience, UK cultural boards display a breadth and depth of expertise, with most of their board members having held professional roles across both the nonprofit and for-profit sectors and a share having had international experience (i.e., 12% of museum NEDs and 5% of performing arts NEDs).

Recommendations 

Given the array of challenges faced by cultural institutions, few 'silver bullets' exist regarding effective board composition. We have, however, set out the following recommendations to inform future decision-making. 

  1. Skills mix – UK cultural boards display a strong variety of backgrounds among their members. However, they lack certain strategically valuable skill sets, including digital expertise and C-suite experience. To align the experience profile of board members with the organisation’s strategic goals and ensure strong critical thinking at the board level, conduct regular audits of skills (including digital and C-suite), define specific candidate selection criteria, and recruit individuals from a range of industries and with a variety of experience.
  2. Diversity – UK cultural boards – like their FTSE 100 counterparts – feature a low share of female members and an even lower share of ethnically diverse members. To increase diversity meaningfully, ensure that board selection criteria and processes facilitate and encourage it, and develop a potential pipeline of diverse board members for the next five to 10 years. In that regard, consider younger candidate pools, who may have less board experience but more availability to participate. Moreover, to hold the organisation accountable and improve diversity efforts, consider making data on board composition public.
  3. Other governance commitments – UK cultural board members sit on numerous additional boards across the nonprofit and for-profit sectors. To guarantee their ability to govern effectively and support fundraising initiatives, be clear and candid about the time and resource commitments that membership requires. Rigorously select new board members and objectively survey their motivation, availability, and what level of priority a given board appointment would take on relative to other commitments. Finally, institute two-way accountability: regularly monitor member performance, but also structure meetings to focus on critical issues and enable board members to deliver on their responsibilities.

 

 

Footnotes: 

  1. Performing arts institutions included in this analysis had a median revenue of £32M and museums of £53M.
  2. In the Russell Reynolds paper, Who sits at the boardroom table? A look inside nonprofit boards (2017), 10 US museums with a median revenue of $207M and 10 US performing arts institutions with a median revenue of $102M were profiled.
  3. 3 For more on the topic of digital in cultural institutions, refer to The emergence of the chief digital officer in cultural institutions (Russell Reynolds,2016).
  4. For gender diversity: The Female FTSE Board Report 2016, Cranfield University, July 2016. For ethnic diversity: A Report into the Ethnic Diversity of UK Boards, Parker Review Committee, 2 November 2016.
  5. Survey on Board of Directors of Nonprofit Organisations, Stanford Business School, 2015.