Advisory board members can answer your questions, analyze your business plan, recommend new markets and introduce you to useful people. Board members could be customers, industry leaders or other experts who come together to help guide a CEO through major decisions.
The best contacts and resources to help you get it done
Determine the purpose of your advisory board
Some advisory boards get deeply involved with daily decisions, while others meet a few times a year. And as your business grows, you might want to add or remove members of your advisory board.
I recommend: See six tips for selecting a board from
Entrepreneur.com.
Tap your connections for advisors
Your investors, if you have any, are obvious candidates to serve on your advisory board. They want you to succeed and they have expertise. Or ask people already serving on advisory boards of similar businesses. Ask for help from your local chamber of commerce.
I recommend: See
The US Chamber of Commerce for a directory of local chambers, listed by state.
Hire a recruiter
Headhunter firms can find you advisors beyond your personal network.
I recommend: Geehan Advisory Boards and
Partner Com specialize in recruiting advisory board members.
Show your appreciation to your advisory board
Announce the appointment of advisory board members on your Web site and in your promotional materials.
I recommend: Follow the steps to writing a press release for a newly-appointed board member at
eHow.com and send it to his or her local newspaper.
Make meetings purposeful
By definition, your advisory board members want to help. Reward their efforts by not wasting their time.
I recommend: Six timeless rules for holding effective meetings are eloquently presented at
GovLeaders.org.
Use online videoconferencing to cut your advisory board's time and travel costs
When you need advice from your board in a hurry, hold a video conference on the Web.
I recommend: As many as four participants can be on-screen simultaneously at
SightSpeed, an inexpensive but high-quality desktop online video conferencing service.
WiredRed and
WebEx also offer Web videoconferencing services.