SEMESTER: Spring 2019
COURSE NUMBER: EWMBA292B.11
This course is dual-listed with FTMBA
COURSE TITLE: Nonprofit Boards and
Governance
UNITS OF CREDIT: 1
INSTRUCTOR: Paul Jansen
E-MAIL ADDRESS: paul55jansen@gmail.com
MEETING DAY(S)/TIME: 2/10 & 3/3, 9am to
5 pm
Please
note the unusual format of this course, which meets all day on two
Sundays. You must attend both sessions in their entirety in order to
earn a passing grade.
PREREQUISITE(S): None
CLASS FORMAT: Lecture, discussion, case studies, panel
discussions with experienced directors and CEOs from local nonprofits
REQUIRED READINGS: Primarily published
articles, BoardSource governance materials and The
Dynamic Nonprofit Board: Lessons from High Performing Nonprofits
BASIS FOR FINAL GRADE: 40% participation, 60% for 2
case write ups
CAREER
FIELD:
This course is for business
oriented students who anticipate they might serve on a nonprofit board(s) over
the course of their career or for students interested in managerial roles at
nonprofit organizations who will need to interact with the nonprofit’s board of
directors regularly.
ABSTRACT OF COURSE'S CONTENT AND OBJECTIVES: This
one-unit course provides students with a working knowledge of the role played
by boards of directors in the nonprofit sector and prepares them to be active
and informed members of nonprofit board. My mindset is that of exposing
you to all the things I wish that I had known before I started my own nonprofit
board career. Specifically, the course will explore the following aspects
of boards:
·
Why boards exist, their legal and fiduciary responsibilities, and
the differences between for-profit and nonprofit boards, including
Sarbanes-Oxley Act requirements
·
The responsibilities of nonprofit boards, with a special focus on
practical issues that are likely to emerge as boards seek to fulfill their
responsibilities?
·
The enablers of strong board performance and how good boards deal
with the many practical challenges and tradeoffs in executing these best
practices?
·
How boards interact with chief executives, staff and community?
·
Board assessment tools and other resources board members can draw
on to improve governance?
·
How should you think about joining a nonprofit board and becoming
an effective director?
Students will have the opportunity to meet members of the Bay Area
nonprofit sector, including current board members, chief executives, and fund
raisers to discuss their roles and learn firsthand the challenges facing these
different leaders in an increasingly competitive nonprofit marketplace.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: Paul Jansen is an adjunct
professor at Haas. Paul spent 25 years as a consultant at McKinsey
& Company before retiring in 2009. In 2001, he co-founded the Firm’s
Nonprofit Practice, which later evolved into the Social Sector
Practice. At various times, he has held roles as leader of the
global nonprofit practice, knowledge leader and director of the global
philanthropy practice. In these roles, his client work focused on
strategy, organization development, and operations issues, where he gained
particular experience in global health, higher education, nonprofit governance
and public-private partnerships.
Paul has authored a number of articles including “For Nonprofits,
Time is Money” which stimulated sector-wide discussion on the strategic benefit
of increasing endowment payout rates. With former Senator Bill
Bradley wrote an article for the Harvard Business Review, entitled “The
Non-Profit Sector’s $100 Billion Opportunity”, which again challenged
sector beliefs about the potential for improved performance. Paul
has also co-authored a report entitled “The Dynamic Board: Lessons from
High-Performing Nonprofits”, which examines board governance issues unique to
the nonprofit community. Paul co-authored a report released in 2009
on philanthropic prizes “And the Winner is…Capturing the Promise of
Philanthropic Prizes”
Paul
received a chemical engineering degree from the University of California at
Berkeley and earned his MBA at the Harvard Business School. His
governance experience includes serving as chair of the Board of CARE USA, which
is committed to reducing poverty worldwide and as a director of the SCE Fund, a
philanthropic foundation, Care International Supervisory Board, and Care
Enterprises, a for profit social impact investor. He also serves on
advisory boards for Inside Track, an organization that seeks to improve college
retention, Imagine H20, which seeks to impact water issues, Strive for College,
which strives to increase college attendance by high risk students. Paul
also spent 15 years serving on the board of the San Francisco Zoological
Society, including 4 years as chairman on the board. Paul recently joined
the board of directors of Zymergen, a pre-IPO
molecular engineering products and services company.