• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • DCMA
  • Terms
  • Sitemap
  • Submit
Sunday, May 11, 2025
Chicago Digital Post
  • News
    • Politics
    • Sports
  • Business
    • Marketing
    • Crypto
    • Real Estate
  • Education
  • Technology
  • Health
    • Fitness
    • Food
    • Travel
  • Lifestyle
    • Relationship
    • Movies
    • Music
  • Vehicles
No Result
View All Result
Chicago Digital Post
  • News
    • Politics
    • Sports
  • Business
    • Marketing
    • Crypto
    • Real Estate
  • Education
  • Technology
  • Health
    • Fitness
    • Food
    • Travel
  • Lifestyle
    • Relationship
    • Movies
    • Music
  • Vehicles
Chicago Digital Post
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

How to Recruit Board Members From Outside of Your Industry

by Staff Writer
October 24, 2022
in Business
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
How to Recruit Board Members From Outside of Your Industry
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Table of Contents

Toggle
    • You might also like
    • Why Should Companies Consider Call Center Support?
    • Business Cards – 12 Common Mistakes to Avoid
    • 5 Misconceptions to Throw Out of your Restaurant Growth Handbook
  • Outside experts bring more perspectives
  • Look for strategic, outside-the-box thinkers
  • When it’s worth the risk, despite no industry experience

You might also like

Why Should Companies Consider Call Center Support?

Business Cards – 12 Common Mistakes to Avoid

5 Misconceptions to Throw Out of your Restaurant Growth Handbook

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Few individuals are experts in everything. Even the cumulative expertise in most businesses could use input from more experts in diverse areas. This is why we have boards — a panel of experts in areas that fill in the gaps in our existing company knowledge base.

But even once we find the right group of experts from our industry to take a seat on our board, we would still stand to benefit from the wisdom of more diverse perspectives and experiences. Their range of successes and failures becomes additional resources to put together more tried and tested strategies in the face of new challenges.

Outside board members can bring a lot to a company, but to find the right ones for the job, we need to know what to look for:

Related: How Board Members Can Help You Through a Recession

Outside experts bring more perspectives

Most companies (and boards, for that matter) still lack insight from people outside their industry. In 2014, less than 5 percent of middle-market companies had an established board or advisory board, and most of those who did put family, friends and internal management into those roles. But the perfect marketing expert for a company could be someone from outside that company. Their experience could even be from outside of that company’s industry, but their new point of view might be exactly what the company needs to get its brand to the right audience. Their unbiased eyes can catch more company inefficiencies, see greater opportunities and ideate more innovative strategies.

This is also why diversity in race, gender, age and socioeconomic backgrounds drives innovation. Looking to outside board members to fill talent gaps opens up a larger pool for inclusivity. A 2020 Deloitte study found women held under 23 percent of board seats among Fortune 500 companies, and minority men, only 12 percent. But adding these points of view to a company’s leadership paints a complete picture of that company’s role in commerce and broader society. With this diversity of perspectives on our board, we position our company to be more innovative than most of our competition, still strategizing without them.

Related: 3 Ways to Find Your Perfect Board of Advisors

Look for strategic, outside-the-box thinkers

Besides looking outside your industry and broadening diversity, two main attributes indicate a high-quality outside board member: a strategic mind and outside-the-box thinking. Elon Musk is an excellent example of someone who demonstrates both qualities. His endeavors range from electric cars to solar energy to a space exploration company that competes with NASA — his outside-the-box mind saw the connections between these diverse fields, and his strategic mind allowed him to apply his successful experiences from one to another.

Of course, someone with both would be ideal, but someone with either quality will drive any company in the right direction. Strategic thinkers analyze several variables when creating plans for achieving goals and generating new ideas. They stay on top of new opportunities while considering vulnerabilities. To do this, they ask many questions, welcome feedback and self-reflect. They gather all the information before making decisions to make them decisively. With a strategic mind, even someone outside a company’s industry could still see how their skill set could be translated into a new field.

Most of us unknowingly follow some form of old ideas born out of antiquated lines of thinking, but outside-the-box thinkers easily step outside of those boundaries. They imagine radical new possibilities, question the status quo and stretch the boundaries of what’s achievable. Rather than fearing change, they embrace it as a new opportunity. An outside-the-box thinker will be able to see how their perspective and experience in other industries is advantageous to strategizing and innovating in a new one.

Related: Thinking of Joining a Board? Here Are 3 Things You Must Consider First

When it’s worth the risk, despite no industry experience

If you find a strategic or outside-the-box thinker, the next step is determining if they are suitable for your board, especially when they have no experience in your industry. If your company plans to do mergers and acquisitions, bring a person outside your industry with expertise in mergers and acquisitions. If you want to take your company public, find an outside expert in going public. If you can find someone who has already done what your company needs to do in several industries, this is an excellent indicator of their flexibility to step in and excel in yours.

Then, try to draw out those valuable skills that translate across all industries: strategy and innovative thinking. Get to know their strategic mind. Ask about their area of expertise and if they have a strategic plan for growth and improvement. Reveal outside-the-box thinkers by getting them to elaborate on how their skill sets apply to your industry. When you find the right people with the skill sets your company needs and the ability to pull ideas from different industries, this outside board member can be a key player in driving your company’s success.

Source by www.entrepreneur.com

Share30Tweet19

Recommended For You

Why Should Companies Consider Call Center Support
Business

Why Should Companies Consider Call Center Support?

Call centers are there to support your back office and such areas where you may not have the expertise to excel. Sometimes, the lack of skills or lags...

by S. Publisher
December 6, 2022
Business Cards – 12 Common Mistakes to Avoid
Business

Business Cards – 12 Common Mistakes to Avoid

Your business card is your calling card. It should be a tool that will get people to remember you and contact you for business. But if your business...

by Staff Writer
November 17, 2022
Restaurant business
Business

5 Misconceptions to Throw Out of your Restaurant Growth Handbook

If you want your restaurant to use its restaurant growth handbook, there are certain things you need to do. But many things could be improved about what will...

by Staff Writer
November 17, 2022
How to find a business partner graphic
Business

Find a Business Partner Who’ll Help (Not Hurt) Your Business

Starting, operating, and scaling a business can be challenging, especially if you’re doing it all on your own. A partner can help share responsibilities, provide invaluable insights, and...

by Staff Writer
November 16, 2022
Person holding pen and looking at financial projections on paper
Business

5 Tips for Creating a Better Nonprofit Annual Report

5 Tips for Creating a Better Nonprofit Annual Report - crowdspring Blog Your nonprofit’s annual report gives supporters an inside look at the state of your organization. It’s...

by Staff Writer
November 16, 2022
OnBoard's Road to 1,000 Reviews
Business

OnBoard’s Road to 1,000 Reviews

When Dylan Caraker, a customer marketing manager at OnBoard, was tasked with generating 1,000 reviews, he knew it would be an uphill battle.  Kicking off in March 2019...

by Staff Writer
November 16, 2022

Related News

female shopper holding multiple bags

Cross-Selling and Upselling: The Ultimate Guide (2022)

November 4, 2022
Private wireless is the key to K-20 digital transformation

Discovery Education and Social Impact Partners Present Engaging Resources Supporting STEM Day Observances

November 5, 2022
Kazakhstan to Integrate its CBDC on BNB Chain, CZ Confirms

Kazakhstan to Integrate its CBDC on BNB Chain, CZ Confirms

October 28, 2022

Browse by Category

  • Articles
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Education
  • Fitness
  • Food
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Real Estate
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Vehicles
Chicago Digital Post

Chicago Digital Post! is a Digital web magazine covering topics related to tech and the latest news about Chicago, Illinois, sports, movies, pop culture, fashion, beauty, fitness, and politics at your fingertips. Read More...

CATEGORIES

  • Articles
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Education
  • Fitness
  • Food
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Real Estate
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Vehicles

Submit A News | Write For Us

Feel free to contact us for submission queries. via contact form or email us at: [email protected]

© 2021 chicagodigitalpost.com

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • DCMA
  • Terms
  • Sitemap
  • Submit
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Politics
    • Sports
  • Business
    • Marketing
    • Crypto
    • Real Estate
  • Education
  • Technology
  • Health
    • Fitness
    • Food
    • Travel
  • Lifestyle
    • Relationship
    • Movies
    • Music
  • Vehicles