Charisma – that indefinable something that draws people to
you, that influences them, that makes them want to be on your team. Passion and dedication are other qualities
that are often found in the charitable sector and individuals with just these
qualities founded many great charities. I would argue that many others have
fallen by the wayside because of poor governance and a lack of foresight (no
competent people around you to challenge and no succession planning).
This is simplistic but prompted by the collapse of “Kids
Company”. No one knows everything that
went wrong but I suspect that the charisma of the chief executive is central.
Much is being made of how she was trumpeted by celebrities and politicians –
everyone wanted to be on her team and perhaps the proper challenge was missing,
as was the scrutiny?
It seems extraordinary that a charity of nearly 20 years
standing was still leading a hand to mouth existence. Additionally, in a charity of that size
and complexity, if her presence was so critical after all this time that it
could not operate without her – that is a failure and she should take the
responsibility. I hope that supporters will divert their funds to the other
organisations that will be left to pick up the pieces.
Good governance is boring, it doesn’t grab the headlines and
it won’t raise money, cure diseases or help vulnerable children but it needs to
infuse everything that you do and it trumps charisma.
One anecdote from my own experience: some years ago, when I
was chief executive of Breast Cancer Campaign (recently merged into Breast Cancer Now) I was contacted by a very high profile individual who was
supporting the charity. They had been introduced to a very impressive (and
charismatic) clinician who had apparently cured a friend’s skin cancer with a
“revolutionary” new treatment. He was
sure that it would work for breast cancer.
Now the boring bit: we, like all respected medical research
charities, had a process called “peer review”.
This is where a research proposal is scrutinised by independent, highly
qualified individuals who then mark it according to various criteria. Those
marks and comments are collated and then debated by a scientific committee and
the application sinks or swims. Is it tedious
and laborious? does it rely on hours of unpaid work by scientist? - yes to all
of those – is it perfect? No – but it is
the best and fairest system.
Our supporter went back to the clinician who said that he
was far too busy treating patients to fill in lengthy application forms. Our
supporter contacted me again and insisted that this clinician was so talented
(and supported by several celebrities who would then apparently support us)
that these rules shouldn’t apply to him.
Of course we wanted to play on his team and be sprinkled with that
stardust and it was tempting to break the rules “just this once” but the
consequences could have damaged the charity’s reputation and drawn funding away
from worthwhile research.
Needless to say we never received an application, the
research didn’t receive funding and after the supporter accused me of
condemning women to die of breast cancer we lost his support too.
I was fortunate to have a board and staff who were never hesitant about challenging me. Occasionally it was unfair and unjustified and they were proved to be wrong and I was right – but hey – that’s life! It’s also good governance.
I was fortunate to have a board and staff who were never hesitant about challenging me. Occasionally it was unfair and unjustified and they were proved to be wrong and I was right – but hey – that’s life! It’s also good governance.
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