Startup Boards. Brad Feld

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of seven White males with prior board experience, similar to most companies throughout history. In contrast, the Bolster board has two White men, one Black man, and three women, one of whom is Asian-American, one of whom is Black, and one of whom is Latina. Four of them are first-time directors. Three of our investors, who are White men, chose to be board observers rather than take a board seat so we could fill board seats with diverse directors. It's early in Bolster's life, but I already feel that our board is more powerful and effective than the one we had at Return Path, especially at this stage. This approach is a new way to scale up a board: leveraging excellence through the observer roles while expanding the boardroom's diversity of experience and demographics.

      I've served on a dozen boards and chaired about half of them, including private companies, a public company, a non-profit board, university alumni boards, and a complex industry trade association board with over 40 members. I've spent a lot of time with venture capitalists and entrepreneurs understanding their views on boards. I've also observed my wife Mariquita's experience serving on and chairing several non-profit, civic, and community organization boards.

      After completing the second edition of Startup CEO: A Field Guide to Scaling Up Your Business and the first edition of Startup CXO: A Field Guide to Scaling Up Your Company's Critical Functions and Teams, I realized that I often wrote and blogged about boards publicly for Bolster and on my blog at startupceo.com. I approached Brad, whom I've worked with in different capacities for 20 years (including sitting on four other boards together), and Mahendra, whom I met when he and Brad wrote the first edition of Startup Boards: Getting the Most Out of Your Board of Directors, about collaborating on a second edition.

      Since the first edition was written in 2013, I thought an update could include more contemporary thinking about boards. For example, Delaware created Public Benefit Corporations (PBCs) in 2013, and the dialogue about stakeholder vs. shareholder capitalism has recently gained momentum.

      While the discussion around diversity in the boardroom was becoming more extensive, George Floyd's tragic murder in 2020 significantly changed the dialog and the urgency around boardroom diversity. Finally, the COVID-19 pandemic impacted all aspects of business, including the boardroom. After a brief discussion, Brad and Mahendra enthusiastically supported the idea. The second edition is the result of our collaboration.

      Matt Blumberg

      Bolster, founder/CEO

      February 2022

Section 1 Board Fundamentals

      The word boardroom conjures up images of important people puffing on cigars or sipping Scotch while sitting in leather chairs in wood-paneled rooms. They talk about complex things that determine the company's future. Formality and seriousness fill the air. Big decisions are being made.

      While first-time CEOs and founders often have an elevated view of the boardroom, great startup boards aren't fancy, complex, or pretentious. Instead, a startup board is usually a small group of people trying to help build your company.

      We've served on hundreds of boards. A few were great, many were good, and some were terrible. When things were going smoothly, the board was congratulatory and supportive. When there were challenges, some board members helped, others panicked, and a few vanished. The tempo and interactions of these boards varied dramatically. In some cases, reality dominated the discussion, while often, it was ignored or denied.

      After a particularly tedious board meeting, Brad realized that a startup board's default structure, composition, and approach were an artifact of the past, dating to how early venture-backed company boards operated over 40 years ago. Things had changed and evolved, but the dramatic shift in communication patterns and technology hadn't been incorporated into how most boards worked. As a result, Brad ran a two-year experiment where he tried different things—some successful, some not. As with every experiment, he did more of what worked, modified and killed what didn't, tried new things, and measured a lot of stuff.

      While the topic may feel dry, we've tried, as Brad and Jason Mendelson did in Venture Deals: Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist (2019), to take a serious topic and cover it rigorously in plain English with our brand of humor. Our aim is to demystify how a board of directors works, discuss best and worst practices, and provide a set of tools for creating and managing an awesome board.

      Unless you've been a startup executive who regularly attended board meetings and interacted with board members, you probably don't know what a startup board looks like, how it functions, or how it impacts a company. Even if you're a founder, you may never have served on a board of directors before, let alone built and managed one. Early in their careers, even venture capitalists often have little board experience.

      You may envision a board as a collection of faceless notables, convening meetings around a large conference room table with agendas packed with legalese about corporate governance. You might view the board as a boys' club full of older men either telling the CEO what to do or supporting whatever the CEO wants because they are in the CEO's pocket while enjoying expensive board dinners and periodic boondoggles to exotic locations.

      We wrote this book to dispel these myths, demystify the workings of a board, help you understand how to create and build your board while sharing our decades of experience about leveraging your board so it becomes a strategic asset for you and your company.

      Brad and Mahendra have collaborated with Matt Blumberg on this edition. You met Matt in the Preface, and we quoted him several times from his book Startup CEO (Blumberg, 2020) in the first edition of this book.

      After completing Startup CXO, Matt reached out to Brad and Mahendra with ideas on revising and updating Startup Boards. Matt's newest company, Bolster, took over the Startup Revolution series of books and startuprev.com. Brad and Matt have served together on four boards over the past 20 years, including Matt's company (Return Path), two boards where Brad was an investor and Matt was an independent director (FeedBurner and Moz), and one non-profit that Matt co-founded and where Brad served as an independent director (Path Forward). This shared experience made it easy to collaborate

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