Nonprofit Committees
Builder
Build charters for every standing committee your board needs — Executive, Finance, Audit, Governance, Programs, Fundraising, and more. Customizable to your organization's size, board structure, and oversight needs.
1. About This Tool
Committees are how boards actually do their work. A board of 12 people can't review the financials, evaluate the ED, oversee fundraising, govern policies, and audit operations in monthly two-hour meetings. Committees do that work in between — deep, focused, multi-meeting attention — and bring recommendations to the full board for ratification.
The problem most small nonprofits face: committees get formed without charters. A "Finance Committee" exists because it's expected to exist, but no one wrote down what it actually does, who serves on it, how often it meets, or what authority it has. Result: the committee drifts, member engagement is uneven, and the full board doesn't know whether the committee is doing its job.
The Committees Builder generates customized charters for each standing committee your board needs. Each charter is short (typically 1-2 pages) but complete — purpose, composition, authority, responsibilities, meeting cadence, reporting structure, and review schedule.
It's not legally required. But without one, the committee operates on undocumented norms that shift over time. With one, every new committee member knows what they're signing up for, and the full board can hold the committee accountable to a written standard.
2. Getting Started
Who this is for
- Board chairs formalizing committee structures that have grown organically
- Governance committee members reviewing and refreshing existing committee charters
- New committee chairs who want a clear starting point for what their committee does
- Executive directors who want clarity on which committees they should brief and how often
- Founders setting up board structure for the first time
What you'll need to begin
- Your bylaws (committee authority is usually grounded in bylaws — check for any committee-specific provisions)
- Your current board roster with officers
- List of existing committees (if any) and who chairs them
- Annual budget — helps calibrate the Finance Committee's scope
- Risk profile (vulnerable populations? significant donor data? meaningful insurance exposure?) — informs whether you need a Risk Committee
How long it takes
About 15-20 minutes per committee charter. Most boards adopt 3-6 standing committees, so plan for 60-120 minutes total. Charters can be built individually and adopted at consecutive board meetings.
A 5-person board doesn't need 6 committees. A 25-person board can easily support 6-8. Better to have 2 well-functioning committees than 6 paper committees that never meet.
3. Building Charters
For each committee, the Builder walks through the same customization flow.
Step 1 — Committee identification
Name, type (standing or ad-hoc), purpose statement, bylaws basis if any.
Step 2 — Composition
Number of members, required expertise (e.g., "Finance Committee includes at least one CPA"), chair selection method, term length, required roles (ED ex officio? Treasurer chairs Finance?).
Step 3 — Authority
What the committee can do on its own vs what requires full-board approval. Most committees have recommending authority but limited binding authority.
Step 4 — Responsibilities
Specific tasks the committee owns. The Builder provides starter lists per committee type that you can customize.
Step 5 — Meetings & reporting
Cadence, quorum, minutes, how the committee reports to the full board, and how often the charter itself is reviewed.
4. Using the Generators
The Builder includes generators for each standard committee type, plus a flexible "Custom Committee" option.
| Committee | Common to which orgs | Typical scope |
|---|---|---|
| Executive | Most boards of 10+ members | Acts between board meetings on routine matters; chairs strategic planning |
| Finance | Nearly all nonprofits with $100K+ budgets | Monthly financial oversight; budget recommendation; investment policy |
| Audit | Recommended at $500K+ revenue | Auditor selection and oversight; reviews audit results; independent of finance |
| Governance | Most boards as they mature | Board recruitment, orientation, evaluation, policy review |
| Programs | Service-delivery nonprofits | Program quality review, outcomes oversight, beneficiary advocacy |
| Fundraising | Nonprofits with active fundraising programs | Annual fundraising plan, major donor strategy, event oversight |
| Risk Management | $1M+ revenue OR vulnerable populations served | Insurance program, risk register, crisis preparedness, incident review |
5. Exporting Documents
Three export options per charter:
- Download as Word (.docx) — formatted with headings, signature lines for board adoption, BYC document style
- Download as HTML — for posting on a private board portal
- Copy to Clipboard — plain text for pasting into Google Docs or board portal editors
Each charter should be formally adopted by board resolution and recorded in minutes. Adopting a charter is what gives the committee its operating authority and accountability.
6. Why Standing Committees Matter
Standing committees do three things the full board cannot do well:
Deep, focused work
The full board has 90-120 minutes per meeting for everything — financial review, ED report, program updates, policy discussions, strategic decisions. There's no time for deep dives. Committees do the deep dive (review the full audit, evaluate three RFP responses, work through a strategic planning framework) and bring synthesis to the board for decision.
Continuity between meetings
If the board meets quarterly, three months pass between meetings. Many decisions can't wait. The Executive Committee (and sometimes Finance) can act on routine matters between meetings, with the full board ratifying at the next regular meeting.
Expertise concentration
Your board includes a CPA, a lawyer, a marketing professional, an HR director, others with specific expertise. Standing committees let each lend their expertise to the work it most fits. A Finance Committee with a CPA chair brings disciplined financial review the full board could never replicate.
The point of a Finance Committee is NOT that the full board still reviews all financials in detail AND a committee does too. The point is that the committee does the deep review, the full board accepts the committee's report, and the full board's time is freed for higher-order strategy discussion.
7. The Core Standing Committees
Executive Committee
Purpose: Acts on behalf of the board between meetings on routine and time-sensitive matters within bylaws-defined authority. Chairs strategic planning. Manages board officer succession.
Composition: Typically the four officers plus 1-2 at-large directors. ED often serves ex officio (non-voting).
Cadence: As-needed between regular board meetings.
Authority: Per bylaws — varies widely. Document limits clearly.
Finance Committee
Purpose: Provides oversight of financial reporting, budget, financial policies, and (in smaller orgs) investment policy.
Composition: 3-5 members including the Treasurer (typically chairs), at least one CPA or finance professional if possible. Should NOT include anyone with day-to-day financial duties.
Cadence: Monthly is standard; quarterly may work for very small orgs.
Authority: Recommending. Approves operating procedures; recommends budget, audit firm, investment policy to full board.
Audit Committee
Purpose: Independent oversight of the audit function. Selects and oversees the audit firm. Reviews audit findings without management present. Reviews internal controls.
Composition: 3-5 members, all independent (no staff, no conflicts). Best practice: at least one with audit/accounting expertise. ED does NOT serve.
Cadence: 2-4 times per year, including a closed session with the auditor.
Note: Often combined with Finance as "Audit & Finance" in smaller orgs.
Governance Committee
Purpose: Board recruitment, orientation, evaluation, succession, policy review.
Composition: 3-5 members, ideally including the Board Chair and Vice Chair (succession planning).
Cadence: Quarterly or as-needed. Heavier work cycle around annual board recruitment.
Programs Committee
Purpose: Quality oversight of program services. Reviews program outcomes, beneficiary satisfaction, capacity, and impact metrics.
Composition: 3-5 members ideally including someone with relevant program/sector expertise. ED and program director(s) attend.
Cadence: Quarterly review of program metrics; deeper dives 1-2 times per year.
Fundraising / Development Committee
Purpose: Strategy for annual fundraising plan; major donor cultivation; event oversight; grant funding strategy.
Composition: 4-7 members ideally including board members with development experience, donor relationships, or event-planning skills.
Caution: Don't conflate the committee with the development office. The committee provides strategic oversight; staff do execution.
Risk Management Committee
Purpose: Oversees risk identification, insurance program, crisis preparedness, incident response.
When to create: Generally appropriate for orgs with $1M+ revenue, those serving vulnerable populations, or those with significant insurance/regulatory exposure. The Build Your Club Risk Management & Insurance Audit app generates the full Risk Committee Charter.
8. Anatomy of a Committee Charter
A well-built charter has eight standard elements.
1. Name and authority
Committee name. Standing or ad-hoc designation. Bylaws reference if any.
2. Purpose
One or two sentences. Specific enough to distinguish from other committees, brief enough to be memorable.
3. Composition
Size (min/max members), required expertise or roles, chair selection method, term length, ex officio members, whether non-board-members can serve.
4. Authority
What the committee can do independently vs what requires full-board approval. Spending limits, decision authority, contracting limits. Most committees have recommending authority only.
5. Responsibilities
Specific list of what the committee does. Detailed enough to evaluate performance against, broad enough to allow judgment. Typically 8-15 bullet points.
6. Meetings
Cadence, quorum, notice, minutes, executive session policy, virtual attendance rules.
7. Reporting
How the committee reports to the full board (written? oral? annual?). Who delivers. What's confidential vs broadly shared.
8. Charter review
How often the charter is reviewed (typically every 2-3 years). Amendment process.
9. Sizing & Staffing Committees
How many committees should a board have?
| Board size | Typical committee count | Common committees |
|---|---|---|
| 5-9 members | 1-3 | Finance (sometimes combined with Audit); occasionally Executive |
| 10-14 members | 3-5 | Executive, Finance, Audit, Governance, possibly Programs or Fundraising |
| 15-20 members | 4-6 | Add Programs or Fundraising; consider Risk Management |
| 20+ members | 5-8 | Full standing committee complement; possibly subcommittees |
How many members per committee?
Most committees work best at 3-5 voting members. Fewer than 3 lacks diversity of perspective; more than 5 makes scheduling difficult and individual accountability diffuses.
Non-board members on committees?
Yes, sometimes. Common cases: former board members with deep institutional knowledge; community experts (lawyer, accountant) lending specialized skill; major donors on the Fundraising Committee. Voting authority should remain with board members.
Staff role in committees
The ED typically serves ex officio (non-voting) on the Executive Committee and may attend most others. Finance staff attends Finance and Audit. Program staff attends Programs. Staff prepare materials, present updates, answer questions — they do not vote.
Committee chairs do most of the work. Without rotation, the same handful of board members carry the load while others coast. Rotate committee chair assignments every 2-3 years.
10. Committee Meeting Cadence
Different committees need different cadences. Don't impose a uniform rule.
| Committee | Typical cadence | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Executive | As-needed (often monthly during active periods) | Reacts to time-sensitive matters |
| Finance | Monthly | Reviews monthly financials; momentum matters |
| Audit | 2-4 times per year | Aligned to audit cycle |
| Governance | Quarterly + heavier cycle around recruitment | Steady review work, episodic intense work |
| Programs | Quarterly | Aligned to program reporting cycles |
| Fundraising | Monthly during campaigns; quarterly otherwise | Campaign tempo varies |
| Risk Management | Quarterly | Receives ongoing reports; deep reviews at renewal |
11. Reporting to the Full Board
The full board can't track every committee in detail. Reporting structure should ensure the board hears enough to provide oversight without drowning in committee detail.
Standard reporting menu
- Written report at every board meeting: 1-page summary of committee activity since last board meeting, key decisions made or recommended, any items requiring full-board action. Included in the board packet.
- Brief oral report: 5-10 minutes from the committee chair at the board meeting, highlighting the most important items.
- Annual report: Once a year, a longer summary of committee accomplishments, challenges, and recommendations.
- Material decisions only: For lower-activity committees, report only when there's a recommendation requiring full-board action.
What requires full-board action
The charter should specify. Typically includes: budget recommendations, audit acceptance, hiring/evaluation/compensation of ED, adoption or amendment of major policies, capital expenditures over a threshold, significant program changes, charter amendments. Anything the committee can decide on its own should not be brought to the full board for ratification.
12. Ad-Hoc & Task-Force Committees
Standing committees aren't the only kind. Time-bounded, purpose-specific committees solve different problems.
When ad-hoc beats standing
- Major strategic plan refresh (every 3-5 years)
- Capital campaign feasibility and execution
- ED search and transition
- Bylaws revision project
- Specific facility purchase or build-out decision
- Crisis response lasting weeks or months
- One-time program partnership evaluation
Ad-hoc charter is shorter
Usually 1 page. Includes:
- Specific purpose (single sentence)
- Sunset condition (when this committee disbands — specific date or completion criterion)
- Composition (often 3-5 members)
- Deliverable expected (recommendation, plan, decision, report)
- Cadence (usually meets more intensively than standing committees during its active period)
- Authority (almost always recommending only)
The hardest part is dissolving them. Without an explicit sunset, ad-hoc committees become zombie committees. Build the sunset into the charter at the start and honor it.
13. Common Committee Pitfalls
Forming committees without charters
Most committee dysfunction traces back to no charter. The Finance Committee chair operates by their own rules; the Programs Committee never quite gets going; the Executive Committee makes binding decisions it wasn't authorized to make. A 1-2 page charter prevents all three.
Too many committees, too little capacity
A 7-person board can't staff 6 committees meaningfully. Each member ends up on 3 committees and serves on none well. Match committee count to board capacity (rule of thumb: each board member on 1-2 committees).
Committee work duplicating board work
If the Finance Committee reviews monthly financials in detail and the full board does the same review at the next board meeting, you've doubled the work. The full board should accept the Finance Committee report unless there's a specific concern.
Skipping committee meetings because "nothing is urgent"
The point of standing committees is steady engagement, not just emergency response. Charter the meeting cadence and stick to it — meetings can be brief on slow months.
Chair carrying everything
If the committee chair does all the work and members show up to ratify, the committee isn't really functioning. Assign specific tasks to members. Build a co-chair pipeline. Rotate chair assignments every 2-3 years.
Audit Committee with management present in closed session
Audit Committee best practice: closed session with the auditor, no management present, at least annually. This protects the auditor's independence and creates space for honest discussion.
Boards with strong committees punch above their weight. Investing in committee charters and structure is one of the highest-leverage governance moves a board can make.
Administrator Access
The Committees Builder supports an Administrator role with elevated permissions for managing user accounts and application data.
First-Time Setup
From the sign-in screen, click Administrator Access in the side links. On first use, set an admin password. Stored as a hash in your browser's local storage.
Subsequent Sign-In
After setup, the Administrator Access link prompts for the password and grants administrative permissions.
Forgot the Admin Password?
The password is browser-local and cannot be recovered. Use Reset All Data on the Admin Settings page (clears all data including the admin password hash). Export work first.
The administrator role is browser-specific. Setup again on each new device.
Contact & Support
This Committees Builder is part of Build Your Club Academy — a growing library of self-service apps and learning content for small nonprofit organizations.
The Governance Suite
This app pairs with three others as part of the Governance Suite ($149 lifetime, all 4 apps):
- Board Handbook Builder — generates a customized handbook documenting board structure, fiduciary duties, meeting procedures
- Board Management — course covering board operations and member development
- Operations Audit — internal audit framework for governance, finance, HR, programs
Related Build Your Club tools
- Risk Management & Insurance Audit — includes a full Risk Committee Charter generator
- Document Retention & Security Policy Generator — produces governance policies committees reference
- Nonprofit Employment & HR Policy Generator — complements Audit Committee and Executive Committee work
- All Build Your Club apps — the full app library
Questions, suggestions, bug reports
Reach us through the contact form on buildyourclubacademy.org.
Important disclaimers
This tool generates charter drafts based on widely accepted nonprofit governance practice. It is not legal advice. State nonprofit law and accreditor requirements may impose additional or different obligations. Have generated charters reviewed by a qualified nonprofit attorney before board adoption.
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