ABA Banking Journal
No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
SUBSCRIBE
ABA Banking Journal
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Community Banking

Five tips to juice community bank board performance

Creating a board that is high-functioning and enhances the bank’s service to the community, its success and its profitability.

July 11, 2024
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Five tips to juice community bank board performance

Photo by Karen Martin

By Jamie Beaulieu

For community banks, having a highly functional and strategic board is more important than ever. From the “regulatory tsunami” to an environment rife with tech disruption, boards need to remain nimble to help their banks stay competitive and focus on the needs of clients and customers. How can bank management teams contribute to healthy board composition, high-functioning meetings and a focus on strategy over tactics?

The role of a bank director is to select the CEO, with a focus on succession planning; to monitor the bank’s operations and controls; to approve the bank’s strategy and risk appetite; and finally to engage with the community. To ensure the board members fulfill this role, Kafafian Group President Jeff Marsico emphasizes composition, governance, education and communication. Ultimately, he warns, if a board is overly tactical, it can lead them out of their oversight role and create unnecessary strife among the management team on staff.

1. Healthy composition. Common-sensically, Marsico noted in a session at the 2024 ABA Conference for Community Bankers, the board should be sufficiently diverse to be representative of the community around them. Additionally, consideration of industry and skill set is equally important. Beyond members who have experience working at banks, the board should include members of the legal and accounting professions. And tech talent in the boardroom has moved from nice-to-have to near-necessity, he notes — with the lightning speed evolution of technology, cybercrime, AI and other such disruptors to the industry, having this knowledge on the board will help the management team stay lock and step with bank priorities.

2. Focus on the right things. A high-functioning board requires the CEO and board chairperson to have consensus on the appropriate level of engagement for board members. “They should have their noses in, but their fingers out,” Marsico says. He goes on to describe four potential scenarios that should be avoided when it comes to the characteristics of board members:

  • The micromanager member, who says, “Management team? What’s that? I need to be involved in every decision.”
  • The negative impact member, who can panic in a crisis and has a history of making bad decisions.
  • The neutral/no impact member, who rubber stamps votes and doesn’t like to make waves.
  • And finally, the monitoring and checklist member, who basically understands their governance and fiduciary responsibilities but has a “just don’t get me in trouble” attitude.

If a board is overly tactical, it can lead them out of their oversight role and create unnecessary strife among the management team on staff.

The bar to strive for, Marsico says, is the Performance Enhancer. These board members understand their role and continually strive to educate themselves. They have a 360-degree view of internal and external factors that affect bank performance. They empower management to oversee the execution of strategy and day-to-day operations. It is this board that will be a strategic asset and help the bank to operate successfully and efficiently.

3. Keep the board educated. To achieve this performance, Marsico points to educational opportunities as well as good governance, management and communication. He urges the management team and the board to be involved with recommendations for board education. It should be intentional and focus on preparing board members to execute their responsibilities. Board committees also play a key role in performance. While some committees are in place to provide ongoing oversight in specific areas of the bank, others should be formed by board consensus to address more specific or ad hoc issues as they arise. Each committee should have a specific purpose and charter along with a protocol for reporting findings to the full board, he says. Committee composition highlights the need for specialized skills and knowledge within the board composition. Boards can recognize the need for these skills through strategic planning exercises and seek new members out for inclusion as applicable.

4. Manage the meetings. Intentional communication and strategic agenda planning for board meetings will also help maintain the right level of board engagement. CEOs can be intentional with how they manage the consent agenda—items that don’t require discussion—to free up time for macro issues. Marsico reminds CEOs not to neglect reports from senior management team members. These reports should be targeted at the strategic level, and they are an opportunity for the board to become more familiar with the management team and their areas of responsibility. CEOs should be mindful to limit meetings between meetings so as not to distract the management team from running the bank and executing the strategy determined by the board, he adds.

5. Know when to rotate. Lastly, good management also includes protocols to end board service. While many banks use mandatory retirement ages, Marsico calls this a mistake. Even with mandatory retirement, lengthy board terms can result in groupthink and over-familiarity. Instead, he recommends banks use term limits to ensure boards balance the value of historical knowledge with fresh perspective to power the bank’s ability to remain both secure and competitive.

It’s imperative for CEOs to understand what causes their boards to sway toward tactical and attack those symptoms head-on, Marsico advises. Then, they can design board selection, education, agendas and governance to bridge the gap. This performance-enhancing board will be the strategic asset that the bank needs to be high-functioning and a strong contributor to the bank’s service to the community, its success and its profitability.

Jamie Beaulieu is SVP for CEO and executive education programs at ABA.

Did you know—Educate your board with ABA Banking Journal Directors Briefing, in print or digital, the perfect resource to round out a briefing book. Subscribe at aba.com/directorsbriefing.

Tags: Leadership
ShareTweetPin

Related Posts

Bank surveys find consumers increasingly turning to AI for financial advice

Bank surveys find consumers increasingly turning to AI for financial advice

Newsbytes
April 1, 2026

Separate surveys by Wells Fargo and TD Bank found that an increasing number of people are turning to AI for financial advice, although they still prefer humans to make the final call on financial decisions.

OCC sees need for regulatory reform in bank merger process

Edgar County Banc Shares to buy Preferred Bancorp in Illinois

Community Banking
March 31, 2026

Edgar County Banc Shares in Paris, Illinois, has agreed to buy Preferred Bancorp in Casey, Illinois.

Treasury Department seeks comment on AI use in financial services

ABA survey: Banks view doing nothing with AI as greatest risk

Community Banking
March 30, 2026

While many banks are cautious about adopting artificial intelligence, most view doing nothing as the greater risk, as they fear becoming more dependent on vendors and losing their competitive edge, according to a new ABA survey.

Finding Compliant Ways to Use Consumer Data to Better Serve Consumers

How are bank marketers using data?

Featured
March 30, 2026

Improving data capability offers marketers a meaningful opportunity to strengthen credibility and demonstrate value within their institutions.

Sen. Tillis proposes legislation to address debanking

Survey: More customers moving money to different bank

Newsbytes
March 27, 2026

While overall customer satisfaction with retail banks has remained steady, a growing number of customers are moving money away from their primary bank, according to a recent survey by J.D. Power.

How AI and personalized guidance can help build credit resilience

How AI and personalized guidance can help build credit resilience

Community Banking
March 26, 2026

Digital tools can help tailor financial guidance so confronting consumer debt does not have to feel intimidating.

NEWSBYTES

Report: More than 10,000 veterans have lost homes since VA changes

April 2, 2026

Mortgage rates rise

April 2, 2026

CFPB received 6.6M consumer complaints in 2025

April 2, 2026

SPONSORED CONTENT

Check Fraud Is Outpacing Legacy Controls. What Banks Should Evaluate Now.

Check Fraud Is Outpacing Legacy Controls. What Banks Should Evaluate Now.

April 1, 2026
How top agricultural lenders are approaching AI, automation and innovation in 2026

How top agricultural lenders are approaching AI, automation and innovation in 2026

March 2, 2026
Top 7 FP&A Trends in Banking for 2026

Top 7 FP&A Trends in Banking for 2026

March 1, 2026
How Instant Payments Can Accelerate B2B Payments Modernization

How Instant Payments Can Accelerate B2B Payments Modernization

February 3, 2026

PODCASTS

Podcast: Are credit union commercial loans risky business?

March 30, 2026

Podcast: Risk and strategy in sponsor banking

March 19, 2026

Podcast: From stablecoin to fraud, top takeaways from the 2026 ABA Summit

March 13, 2026

American Bankers Association
1333 New Hampshire Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
1-800-BANKERS (800-226-5377)
www.aba.com
About ABA
Privacy Policy
Contact ABA

ABA Banking Journal
About ABA Banking Journal
Media Kit
Advertising
Subscribe

© 2026 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive

© 2026 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.