[Foundation-l] board candidacies
Ray Saintonge
saintonge at telus.net
Sat Aug 12 04:44:31 UTC 2006
George Herbert wrote:
>If it really were Bill Gates and he really did demand a board seat, there
>are certainly a lot of people who would worry about his motives: though they
>could be benign, it would certainly be controversial.
>
>What if it was (purely random example) Elon Musk, though, and he just said
>that he wanted to make sure that the organization was being run well after
>he donated that much money? What if it was Mitch Kapor, also saying that he
>just wanted to make sure it was spent well? Or Sergei or Larry from Google?
>
I don't think that this speculation about various individuals gets us
anywhere.
>Part of the reason for large donators to want involvement is to get
>assurance as to the continuing management of the organization. Which is
>legitimately a concern, not in particular to Wikimedia, but generally
>regarding nonprofits. Some donations are structured as a committment over
>time, with the ability to back out of future donations if the organization
>fails to continue to perform well.
>
That's fair enough, but it doesn't require a Board seat.
>With others, the donator just prefers to
>have a board seat level of involvement.
>
To glorify his ego?
>Is it in the best interests of the Wikimedia foundation and the various
>subprojects that the policy now be that the board has to stay completely
>independent?
>
>Some benefactors have helped the management and productivity of nonprofits
>significantly, when they engaged and spent a lot of time helping with
>management and planning and such. There is value beyond money (management
>skills, contacts and additional in-kind resource donations that they can
>generate, etc) in some of these people who might conceivably be interested.
>
There is some comfort to being in a position where we can say "no" to
these offers when they have strings attached.
>I think it's worth thinking about and talking about. It's hypothetical now,
>but if it stopped being hypothetical some day, making those decisions on the
>fly would probably be bad decisionmaking process.
>
Absolutely.
Ec
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