Board Communication Is a Skill, Not an Afterthought
Your board of directors has significant power over your company's direction. How you communicate with them shapes their confidence in your leadership, their engagement with your challenges, and their willingness to open their networks.
First-time CEOs and founders often treat board communication as an administrative chore — something to get through rather than something to get right. This is a mistake. Board members form opinions between meetings based largely on the emails you send.
These templates help you communicate with board-level professionalism, whether you're a first-time founder with investor board members or an experienced executive managing a diverse board.
The Pre-Meeting Board Update
Send 3-5 days before the board meeting:
Subject: Board meeting materials — [date]
'Dear Board Members, attached are the materials for our [date] board meeting. Agenda highlights: [3-4 key topics with brief context]. Key decisions needed: [items requiring board vote or formal input]. Pre-read materials: [list with brief description of each document]. Please review the financials (pages [X-Y]) and the strategic options memo (pages [X-Y]) before the meeting, as we'll dive directly into discussion. Time and location: [details]. If you have questions before the meeting or topics you'd like to add, please let me know by [date].'
Pre-reads respect board members' time and enable substantive discussion rather than presentation. The meeting shouldn't be the first time they see the numbers.
The Monthly Board Update (Between Meetings)
Subject: [Company] — [Month] board update
'Dear Board, here's the monthly update between our quarterly meetings. Dashboard: [key metrics table — revenue, burn, runway, headcount, key product metrics]. Highlights: [2-3 wins]. Concerns: [1-2 issues you're watching]. Decisions made since last board meeting: [significant decisions and rationale]. Upcoming: [what's on the horizon]. No action needed — this is for your awareness. If anything here raises questions, I welcome your input.'
Monthly updates between quarterly meetings keep your board informed without overwhelming them. The key phrase 'no action needed' sets expectations and prevents unnecessary back-and-forth.
Raising a Sensitive Issue
When you need to alert the board to a problem before the next meeting: 'Dear [Board Chair/Full Board], I need to bring an issue to your attention that can't wait until our next meeting. The situation: [factual description — be direct, don't bury the lead]. Impact: [current and potential consequences]. Actions taken: [what you've already done]. Recommended next steps: [your proposal]. Board input needed: [specific questions or decisions]. I'd like to schedule a brief call to discuss. [Proposed times].'
Never surprise your board in a meeting with bad news. Call the board chair first, then communicate to the full board. Board members who feel blindsided lose trust in management — and trust is hard to rebuild.
Responding to Board Feedback
After receiving feedback or direction from the board: 'Dear Board, thank you for the discussion at [meeting/call] regarding [topic]. To confirm my understanding of the board's direction: [specific actions or decisions made]. Timeline for implementation: [dates]. Metrics I'll report against: [how you'll measure progress]. I'll provide an update on progress at our next [meeting/monthly update].'
Closing the loop demonstrates accountability. It also creates a record of what the board actually directed, which protects you if memory differs later.
Board Communication Don'ts
Never email individual board members about company business without informing the full board (or at minimum the board chair). Side channels create information asymmetry and undermine board governance.
Never use board emails to lobby for a position before a vote. If you want to advocate for a decision, present the options with your recommendation at the meeting, not through pre-meeting politicking.
Never share confidential board discussions with your team without board approval. Board deliberations are privileged, and leaking them — even unintentionally — is a governance failure that can have legal consequences.
The golden rule: treat every board email as if it will be read by a regulator, a journalist, and your future self. Write with that level of care and you'll never regret what you sent.
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