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Board Overboard: Laughs and Lessons for All but the Perfect Nonprofit

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O'Connell draws on forty years of camaraderie and affection to offer this hilarious spoof. Presented in the form of one organization's board meetings' minutes, Board Overboard is a witty sendup of a world that is too seldom treated with humor.

221 pages, Hardcover

First published December 1, 1995

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About the author

Brian O'Connell

92 books2 followers
Brian O’Connell is a former chairman of Shannon Heritage, the State company which operates a network of cultural tourism venues, such as Bunratty Castle, in Counties Limerick and Clare. In that role, and as a member of the Hunt Museums Trust, he had the opportunity to observe the economic and cultural legacy that John Hunt left to the region. He has spent years travelling world-wide researching the life of Hunt and his impact internationally on the art world.


He initiated the publication in 2004 of an oral archive on regional development pioneer, Brendan O’Regan. He is the co-author of ‘In Bello Fortis’, a biography of Tipperary man General Sir William Parker Carrol, published in Spanish by Fundacion Gustavo Bueno, Oviedo, May 2009.

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Profile Image for Judie.
810 reviews24 followers
March 27, 2014
If you have ever served as a member of a Board of Trustees, particularly of a nonprofit or independent sector organization, this book is definitely for you. Told in the form of what are called the minutes of the monthly meetings but, in actually is more of a condensed version of The Congressional Report or the Talmud, the secretary provides more detail than Robert’s Rules of Order ever required or expected. Most people will recognize the opening of one chapter: “Mr. Russell began the meeting at 8:13 P.M. (though he had tried to start it at 8:04 and again at 8:10).”
Originally released as OUR ORGANIZATION, BOARD OVERBOARD is guaranteed to both educate you, make you realize that it could be worse, and entertain. You may recognize some of the people, situations, and frustrations of a group of mainly well-meaning people trying to accomplish things way beyond their competence.
We never learn either the name or mission of the Organization but it can fit a diverse range. Many of the Board members are totally unprepared for their duties despite being presented with material and guidance to help them. At one point, when learning they are in danger of losing their 501(c)(3) status, one member naively asks, “What’s wrong with starting back at one again, or couldn’t we negotiate for a compromise and just go back to something in between, like 250(j)(11)?”
O’Connell’s sometimes subtle wit permeates the book. “Penelope held a tissue to her eyes to keep from weeping, and Jack Neal held a handkerchief to his mouth to keep from gagging.” “Being wound up but not winding down....” One resolution proposed the “National Board, now approximately 85 percent male, should be required to have closer to a fifty-fifty balance. It was defeated by approximately 85 percent of the votes.”
Needless to say, the Organization is in severe financial straights. While scrounging for help in adding equipment and getting some offers of ancient items, one soliciting Board member reported, “All the businessmen pointed out that nonprofits don’t need the latest stuff.”
A few comments are very timely: “Was it not better to leave it to the schools to teach fundamentals and the churches fundamentalism?” Published in 1995, BOARD OVERBOARD discusses changes in communication but didn’t predict the influence of the internet or social networking.
I first read OUR ORGANIZATION in 1990 when I was studying for a Master’s Degree in Management of Nonprofit Organizations. The program was in its infancy with fewer than five colleges offering the degree. The differences between nonprofits and for profits is huge and the growth of the programs have improved the leadership of the independent sector. Brian O’Connell, the founder of The Independent Sector, has written several books to help people and organizations fulfill their missions. BOARD OVERBOARD is a fantastic look at what happens to them when they follow Alice down the rabbit hole.
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