Board Facilitation and Retreats

A board that understands the landscape it’s operating in makes better decisions. But between regular meetings, committee work, and the day-to-day demands of trusteeship, it’s rare for a board to carve out dedicated time to step back, think broadly, and engage with the institution’s direction in a meaningful way.

A well-designed retreat changes that. It creates the conditions for the kind of conversation that doesn’t happen in a standard meeting — and the kind of alignment that makes everything else run better.

How It Works

We design each retreat around your institution’s specific moment. Before we build an agenda, we talk with you and your Chair about where your board is, what’s on their minds, and what would be most valuable for them to wrestle with together. From there, we develop a program — typically a half-day or full day — that balances presentation, discussion, and reflection.

A retreat might include:

  • A presentation on the state of higher education and what national trends mean for your institution specifically
  • A facilitated conversation around a strategic question your board is ready to dig into
  • An analysis of a case study drawn from comparable institutions

Often, it’s a combination. We bring the content, the facilitation, and the structure — while you bring the people.

What You Receive

  • A fully designed retreat agenda built around your goals
  • Pre-retreat preparation materials and framing documents for participants
  • Expert facilitation from consultants with deep higher education experience
  • A summary of key themes and takeaways following the session
  • Whether in-person or remote, full design and delivery from start to finish

What Makes Our Retreats Different

Our consultants aren’t outside observers of higher education governance — they’re former presidents, CFOs, and board members themselves. They’ve sat in those chairs. They speak the language of a board not because they’ve studied it, but because they’ve lived it.

That changes the dynamic in a room. Trustees engage differently when they know the person facilitating has faced the same pressures, made the same kinds of decisions, and understands what it actually means to govern an institution.

Why It Matters

Boards that only ever react to what’s in front of them struggle to govern strategically. A retreat creates space for trustees to engage with the bigger picture, discuss the pressures reshaping higher education, and reflect on their own role in helping the institution navigate what’s ahead. Done well, a retreat energizes a board — building the shared understanding that makes governance more than a formality, and trusteeship more than a title.

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