Most boards say they need new members. Fewer boards can clearly articulate why.
That gap is where board recruitment often goes sideways. Seats get filled based on availability, familiarity, or urgency rather than governance needs. Over time, boards become well-intentioned but uneven. Strong in some areas. Thin in others. Over-reliant on a few people who quietly carry too much.
A board matrix exists to prevent that.
A proper board matrix is not a list of resumes. It is not a scorecard. It is not a ranking of who brings the most money or prestige. It is a governance tool designed to help boards see their collective capacity clearly and plan intentionally for the future.
When done well, a matrix shifts the conversation from personalities to structure.
Rather than asking who we know or who said yes, boards begin asking what this organization actually needs at this moment and whether the current board is equipped to govern it.
Guidance from BoardSource consistently emphasizes that strong boards are built, not inherited. A matrix is how that building happens with clarity rather than guesswork.
A functional matrix reflects the organization’s season. Growth requires different governance than stabilization. Transition requires different leadership than scale. A board matrix that does not account for the organizational stage is already outdated.
The most effective matrices focus on patterns, not individuals. They surface gaps without blame. They make it easier to recruit strategically and rotate leadership responsibly. They also protect boards from burnout by preventing over-concentration of responsibility.
Perhaps most importantly, a matrix creates shared language. It allows boards to talk honestly about what is missing without making it personal. That alone improves governance culture.
A board matrix is not about perfection. It is about alignment.
And boards that use one consistently tend to recruit better, govern more confidently, and stop being surprised by problems that were visible all along.
Board Matrix Template Ideas:
Designed for Governance Use
Create a template that is intentionally simple and personalized to your group. Use check marks or light indicators. Do not score people.
Step 1: Customize categories to your organization and current season.
Step 2: Complete as a group or through a governance committee. Review patterns, not individuals.
Board
Member
Governance
& Strategy
Financial Oversight
Mission
& Program Oversight
Fundraising
& Influence
Leadership
or Transition Experience
Community
or Lived Experience
Member 1
O
O
O
O
O
O
Member 2
O
O
O
O
O
O
Member 3
O
O
O
O
O
O
Member 4
O
O
O
O
O
O
Member 5
O
O
O
O
O
O
Category Definitions
Include this on a second page so expectations are clear.
- Governance and Strategy
Board leadership experience, policy level thinking, ability to govern rather than manage - Financial Oversight
Financial literacy, audit or compliance experience, risk awareness - Mission and Program Insight
Direct experience with the population served, sector knowledge, outcomes understanding - Fundraising and Influence
Philanthropy, donor engagement, advocacy, network access - Leadership or Transition Experience
CEO supervision, organizational change, growth or stabilization experience - Community or Lived Experience
Perspective that reflects the communities served or impacted by the mission
How to Use the Matrix Well
Use it annually, not only during recruitment
Use it to guide nominations and succession planning
Use it to protect against over-reliance on a few individuals
Use it as a conversation starter, not a verdict
What matters is not filling every box. What matters is knowing where you are thin and planning accordingly.
A Final Note for Boards
A board matrix is an act of honesty.
It forces boards to acknowledge that goodwill is not the same as governance capacity. It replaces assumptions with visibility. And it allows recruitment to become strategic rather than reactive.
Strong boards are not accidental.
They are designed.
