The Board Retreat Playbook: How SaaS CEOs Run an Offsite That Pays Off

Abstract deep-navy visualization of a board retreat: softly glowing orbs arranged in a ring above a luminous cool-blue table-shaped platform, linked by bright converging lines forming a single focused decision — a SaaS governance and strategy offsite

Most of what gets writ­ten about the board retreat was writ­ten for a non­prof­it exec­u­tive direc­tor try­ing to get a vol­un­teer board to bond over a flip chart. If you run a ven­ture-backed SaaS com­pa­ny at $5M to $15M in annu­al recur­ring rev­enue (ARR), that con­tent is worse than use­less — it tells you to sched­ule ice­break­ers and “dig into some­thing meaty” with­out a sin­gle num­ber, deci­sion, or dol­lar attached. This guide is the oppo­site. A board retreat, done right, is the one day a year where you get your sharpest out­side minds in a room with no oper­at­ing fire to fight, and you use them to change a deci­sion that moves your val­u­a­tion by sev­en fig­ures.

The bar is high because the cost is high. Pulling three to six busy, expen­sive peo­ple out of their lives for a full day — plus your own prep time, which is the real cost — has to clear a return thresh­old like any oth­er cap­i­tal allo­ca­tion. I sit on boards and advise CEOs who run these, and the dif­fer­ence between a retreat that pays for itself ten times over and one nobody remem­bers by the next quar­ter­ly meet­ing comes down to a hand­ful of deci­sions you make before any­one shows up. Let’s walk through them.

What Is a Board Retreat (and How Is It Different From a Board Meeting)?

A board retreat is a longer, off­site, agen­da-light ses­sion — usu­al­ly a half-day to a day and a half — where the board and CEO step out of quar­ter­ly oper­at­ing rhythm to work on the two or three ques­tions that actu­al­ly deter­mine where the com­pa­ny goes. The defin­ing rule, bor­rowed from the best prac­ti­tion­ers across every sec­tor: noth­ing on the retreat agen­da should look like a nor­mal board meet­ing. No approv­ing min­utes. No com­mit­tee reports. No “here’s the dash­board, any ques­tions?” show-and-tell.

The dis­tinc­tion mat­ters because the two for­mats do dif­fer­ent jobs. Your reg­u­lar board meet­ing is over­sight: is the com­pa­ny on plan, are we sol­vent, did we hit the num­bers, approve the option grants, adjourn. It’s back­ward- and present-look­ing, and it’s tight­ly sched­uled because every­one has a flight. A retreat is the for­ward-look­ing coun­ter­part — the place to argue about the things a 90-minute agen­da nev­er has room for.

DimensionRegular Board MeetingBoard Retreat
Primary jobOversight and approvalsStrategy and alignment
Time horizonLast quarter, next quarterNext 2–5 years, the exit
Length60–120 minutesHalf-day to 1.5 days
CadenceQuarterly (or every 6 weeks)Once a year
AgendaDense, procedural, time-boxed2–3 big questions, room to breathe
Success looks likeApprovals granted, no surprisesA decision changed, a plan aligned
Who drives itCEO reports; board reviewsCEO and board chair co-design
MaterialsBoard deck / packetPre-read plus live working sessions

If you take one idea from this arti­cle, take this one: a retreat is not a longer board meet­ing. It is a dif­fer­ent meet­ing. The sin­gle most com­mon way these fail is that the CEO builds a 40-slide oper­at­ing review, calls it a retreat, and burns a day of every­one’s good­will deliv­er­ing a sta­tus report they could have emailed.

Why Bother? The Real ROI of a Board Retreat

The read­er I write for is a tech­ni­cal founder run­ning the biggest com­pa­ny of his life, usu­al­ly in a sec­ondary city, often feel­ing strate­gi­cal­ly iso­lat­ed. You have loy­al peo­ple, a prod­uct that works, and a nag­ging sense that the com­pa­ny should be grow­ing faster than it is — and you can’t ful­ly see why. That last part is the point. The most expen­sive prob­lems in a scal­ing SaaS com­pa­ny are the ones the CEO can’t see from inside the machine. A board retreat is the high­est-lever­age mech­a­nism you have to import out­side pat­tern recog­ni­tion into your blind spots.

Every first-time CEO has a ceil­ing set by pat­tern-recog­ni­tion expe­ri­ence they sim­ply haven’t lived yet. You raise that ceil­ing by bor­row­ing it — from advi­sors, board mem­bers, val­ue-added investors, and expe­ri­enced exec­u­tives. The retreat is where you con­vert your board seats from a gov­er­nance oblig­a­tion into that bor­rowed judg­ment, applied to your actu­al deci­sions. It’s the dif­fer­ence between hav­ing investors on your board and get­ting real strate­gic work out of them.

Here is the eco­nom­ic log­ic, made con­crete. Sup­pose your com­pa­ny is at $10M ARR grow­ing 30% a year, and the retreat pro­duces exact­ly one out­come: the board con­vinces you to kill a sec­ond prod­uct line you were about to staff and instead con­cen­trate that engi­neer­ing capac­i­ty on your core ide­al cus­tomer pro­file, where your LTV/CAC ratio is 5.0× instead of 1.5×. If that real­lo­ca­tion lifts your growth rate from 30% to 38% for two years, you don’t just add rev­enue — you re-rate the mul­ti­ple the whole com­pa­ny is val­ued at, because SaaS val­u­a­tion mul­ti­ples scale with growth. On a com­pa­ny that might sell for 6× ARR, a sin­gle day that changes that deci­sion is worth mil­lions. That is the return you are under­writ­ing when you plan the day.

Who Should Attend a Board Retreat?

Get­ting the room right is the first design deci­sion, and it’s most­ly about restraint. The con­sis­tent advice from peo­ple who run strat­e­gy off­sites for a liv­ing: cap the room at rough­ly ten to twelve peo­ple. Large enough for diverse per­spec­tive, small enough that every­one actu­al­ly speaks. For a Series A/B SaaS board, you’re rarely near that lim­it — the risk is usu­al­ly invit­ing too few of the right peo­ple, not too many.

Start with the peo­ple who have a fidu­cia­ry duty — a legal oblig­a­tion to act in the best inter­est of the com­pa­ny and its share­hold­ers — and build out from there:

  1. The full board of direc­tors. Founders on the board, the investor-appoint­ed direc­tors, and any inde­pen­dent direc­tors. In a ven­ture-backed com­pa­ny, your investor direc­tors nego­ti­at­ed their seats to influ­ence bud­get, major trans­ac­tions, fundrais­ing, strate­gic direc­tion, and exit — so a strat­e­gy retreat is exact­ly where they belong. (For how boards shift from founder-con­trolled to investor-influ­enced as you raise, Foley & Lard­ner’s overview of board dynam­ics in ven­ture-backed star­tups is a clear, lawyer-writ­ten primer.)
  2. Inde­pen­dent direc­tors and advi­sors. The out­side oper­a­tors who com­ple­ment your team — some­one who has scaled a SaaS com­pa­ny past the wall you’re about to hit. Their whole val­ue is per­spec­tive you don’t have.
  3. Select mem­bers of your exec­u­tive team — for the right ses­sions. Your head of sales, prod­uct, or finance should­n’t sit through the entire day, but you want them present for the ses­sions where they own the plan or the data. Noth­ing kills a strat­e­gy con­ver­sa­tion faster than a board debat­ing a go-to-mar­ket ques­tion with no one from go-to-mar­ket in the room.
  4. A facil­i­ta­tor, when the stakes or the ten­sion are high. Not a time­keep­er — a sub­stan­tive facil­i­ta­tor who can chal­lenge, probe, and push a hard con­ver­sa­tion to a real con­clu­sion. If your board has gen­uine dis­agree­ment to work through (a piv­ot, a fundraise-vs-prof­itabil­i­ty fork, a co-founder issue), a neu­tral facil­i­ta­tor earns their fee by keep­ing the CEO from hav­ing to both par­tic­i­pate and ref­er­ee.

The deci­sion rule for any bor­der­line invite: does this per­son have infor­ma­tion the deci­sion needs, or will they own exe­cut­ing the out­come? If nei­ther, they don’t need the whole day. Vis­i­bil­i­ty and devel­op­ment are real rea­sons to include a high-poten­tial exec­u­tive for a ses­sion — just be delib­er­ate about it rather than default­ing to “invite every­one.”

What Goes on the Agenda? A Sample SaaS Board Retreat Agenda

The design prin­ci­ple every seri­ous source agrees on: lim­it the retreat to two or three objec­tives, and send them to atten­dees at least a week ahead. The most com­mon fail­ure is over-ambi­tion — cram­ming ten top­ics into one day so none of them gets the depth that jus­ti­fied an off­site in the first place. Pick the two or three ques­tions that gen­uine­ly need your board­’s col­lec­tive brain, and pro­tect the time.

Struc­ture the day around your nat­ur­al ener­gy curve: hard strate­gic think­ing in the morn­ing when every­one is fresh, lighter and more reflec­tive work after lunch. Here is a one-day agen­da I’d build for a $10M ARR com­pa­ny weigh­ing how to accel­er­ate toward an exit. Treat it as a tem­plate to adapt, not a script to fol­low.

TimeSessionPurposeWho Leads
8:30–9:00Arrival, coffee, informalLet people land; unstructured connection
9:00–9:30CEO framing: "Why we're here"State the 2–3 questions and what a win looks likeCEO
9:30–10:30State of the business, forward-looking20 min facts, 40 min discussion — not a status reportCEO + CFO
10:30–12:00Deep dive #1: The core strategic questionThe single biggest decision on the tableFacilitator
12:00–1:00Working lunchContinue the thread; smaller-group conversation
1:00–2:30Deep dive #2: Growth engine and unit economicsWhere does the next $10M of ARR come from, and at what CAC?CEO + Head of Sales
2:30–3:15The two-exit conversationWhat must be true in 24 months (yours) and 5 years (the buyer's)?Board
3:15–4:00Risk review: what could kill the planKey-person, concentration, execution riskBoard
4:00–4:45Decisions, owners, and datesConvert discussion into commitmentsCEO
4:45–5:00Close: each person's one takeawayLock in accountability and camaraderieAll

Notice what’s not on there: no min­utes, no option approvals, no com­mit­tee updates. Push all of that to a short for­mal board meet­ing bolt­ed onto the end or sched­uled sep­a­rate­ly. The retreat is for the ques­tions that don’t fit any­where else.

The “State of the Business” Session Is 20% Facts, 80% Discussion

The sin­gle hard­est dis­ci­pline for a first-time CEO is resist­ing the urge to spend the morn­ing prov­ing the com­pa­ny is doing well. Your board can read a dash­board. What they can’t do from a spread­sheet is help you inter­pret it. So the “state of the busi­ness” ses­sion should be rough­ly 20 min­utes of facts — the num­bers that frame the strate­gic ques­tions — and then 40 min­utes of the board react­ing to what those num­bers imply.

Send the full data pack­age as a pre-read. In the room, put up only the met­rics that dri­ve the day’s deci­sions: ARR and its growth rate, net rev­enue reten­tion (NRR), CAC pay­back peri­od, burn mul­ti­ple, and cash run­way. These are the same num­bers a sophis­ti­cat­ed investor pat­tern-match­es against, so sur­fac­ing them in the same lan­guage keeps the con­ver­sa­tion crisp. If you can lead with a sin­gle line — “we’re at Rule of 40” — do it; the Rule of 40 (growth rate plus prof­it mar­gin ≥ 40%) is the fastest way to tell a board how healthy the busi­ness is in one sen­tence.

The Growth-Engine Session: Bring the Unit Economics, Segmented

The most valu­able strat­e­gy ses­sion at a SaaS retreat is the one that answers “where does the next $10M of ARR come from, and what will it cost to acquire?” And the only hon­est way to have that con­ver­sa­tion is with unit eco­nom­ics bro­ken out by seg­ment — not a sin­gle blend­ed com­pa­ny-wide num­ber.

Here’s why that mat­ters, with num­bers. Say your blend­ed cus­tomer acqui­si­tion cost (CAC) looks fine, but you’ve nev­er split it by chan­nel. Break it apart and you might find this:

SegmentNew Customers/YrS&M CostCACAnnual Contract ValueGross MarginCAC Payback
Inbound / SMB200$1,200,000$6,000$12,00080%7.5 months
Outbound / Enterprise25$1,500,000$60,000$60,00080%15.0 months
Blended225$2,700,000$12,00080%

The blend­ed CAC of $12,000 hides every­thing that mat­ters. Inbound recov­ers its acqui­si­tion cost in 7.5 months; enter­prise takes twice as long at 15 months. Both can be good busi­ness­es — but they demand dif­fer­ent cap­i­tal, dif­fer­ent hir­ing, and dif­fer­ent board expec­ta­tions. A retreat is exact­ly the venue to decide, with your board, whether to pour the next dol­lar into the fast-pay­back engine or invest in the slow­er, larg­er-con­tract one. You can­not make that call off a blend­ed num­ber, and 100% of the time there are sig­nif­i­cant vari­ances hid­ing inside the blend. (For the full mechan­ics of these num­bers, see SaaS unit eco­nom­ics and the CAC pay­back peri­od guide.)

The Two-Exit Conversation

If you’re build­ing toward a sale, spend a ses­sion on some­thing most founders nev­er make explic­it to their board: you are plan­ning for two exits, not one. There’s your exit — the sale itself, maybe 24 months out. And there’s the buy­er’s exit — the next four to five years after they own you. You are not sell­ing a com­pa­ny worth $30M today; you are sell­ing a com­pa­ny cred­i­bly capa­ble of reach­ing, say, $72M, and the more believ­able that for­ward sto­ry is, the high­er the mul­ti­ple you com­mand.

That refram­ing changes what you ask your board to help with. Instead of “how do we max­i­mize rev­enue before we sell,” the ques­tion becomes “what must be true in 24 months so that a buy­er sees an obvi­ous path to more than dou­bling this?” That’s a board-lev­el strat­e­gy ques­tion, and it con­nects direct­ly to your exit strat­e­gy and to how SaaS rev­enue mul­ti­ples actu­al­ly get set. A board that has explic­it­ly walked the two-exit log­ic with you will make sharp­er deci­sions all year — because they’re opti­miz­ing for the mul­ti­ple, not just the top line.

The Risk Review: Find What Kills the Plan

End the strate­gic work with a delib­er­ate­ly uncom­fort­able ses­sion: what could make this whole plan fall apart? In val­u­a­tion terms, risk is the gap between your fore­cast and what actu­al­ly hap­pens — and every unit of unex­plained risk is a dis­count on your mul­ti­ple. Boards are unusu­al­ly good at spot­ting these because they’ve watched oth­er com­pa­nies die of them.

Walk the usu­al sus­pects out loud: key-per­son depen­den­cy (what breaks if you get hit by a bus?), cus­tomer con­cen­tra­tion (does one logo rep­re­sent more than 20% of ARR?), unpre­dictable sales exe­cu­tion, and undoc­u­ment­ed process­es that live only in peo­ple’s heads. The goal isn’t to scare your­self — it’s to con­vert vague anx­i­ety into a short list of de-risk­ing projects with own­ers. A com­pa­ny that sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly retires its top three risks over a year is mea­sur­ably more valu­able at sale, because a low­er-risk fore­cast earns a high­er mul­ti­ple.

How to Prepare for a Board Retreat

The retreat is won or lost in prep. The pat­tern I see in the ones that work: the CEO and the board chair co-design the agen­da togeth­er, weeks ahead, and the CEO asks every attendee the same short set of ques­tions before final­iz­ing any­thing. Bor­row­ing the best ver­sion of those ques­tions:

  1. This retreat will be a suc­cess for the com­pa­ny if ________.
  2. This retreat will be a suc­cess for me per­son­al­ly if ________.
  3. The two or three most impor­tant goals for this day should be ________.
  4. What’s the one top­ic you think we’re avoid­ing that we should­n’t?

Those answers do two things. They sur­face the real agen­da — often dif­fer­ent from the one you assumed — and they give every attendee a sense of own­er­ship before they walk in, which is what turns pas­sive observers into active con­trib­u­tors. A board mem­ber who helped shape the agen­da shows up invest­ed.

Then send a gen­uine pre-read at least a week out: the data pack­age, the two or three fram­ing ques­tions, and any deci­sions you’re hop­ing to reach. The pre-read is what buys you the “20% facts” morn­ing — if the board arrives already know­ing the num­bers, you skip the recital and go straight to the think­ing. The board nar­ra­tive you’d write for an invest­ment memo is a good back­bone for this: the same nine or so met­rics investors pat­tern-match against (ARR tra­jec­to­ry, NRR and GRR, LTV/CAC with inputs shown, CAC pay­back, Mag­ic Num­ber, gross mar­gin trend, burn mul­ti­ple) are exact­ly what your board needs to see to engage at alti­tude.

Prep TaskWhenWhy It Matters
CEO + board chair set the 2–3 objectives4–6 weeks outThe agenda is co-owned, not CEO-imposed
Send pre-questions to all attendees3–4 weeks outSurfaces the real agenda; builds ownership
Finalize agenda from the answers2–3 weeks outThe day reflects what the room actually needs
Distribute pre-read data package1 week outEnables the "20% facts, 80% discussion" morning
Confirm logistics and roles1 week outWho leads each session; no day-of scramble

How Long Should a Board Retreat Be, and How Often?

Length depends on how much you’re try­ing to decide, but the prac­ti­cal range is a half-day to a day and a half. A focused sin­gle-day retreat — real start at 9:00, real fin­ish around 5:00 — is the sweet spot for most $5M–$15M ARR SaaS com­pa­nies. It’s enough to go deep on two or three ques­tions with­out the sched­ul­ing and trav­el bur­den of a mul­ti-day event, which for a busy board is a gen­uine con­sid­er­a­tion. If you’re wrestling with some­thing big — a strate­gic piv­ot, a fundraise deci­sion, board com­po­si­tion itself — a day and a half gives the extra evening for infor­mal con­ver­sa­tion that often does more than any sched­uled ses­sion.

On cadence: once a year is the right default. Some boards add a sec­ond, lighter touch­point — a “walk-around” day where direc­tors meet indi­vid­ual teams — but the strate­gic retreat itself is an annu­al event. More often than that and you’re pulling peo­ple out of their oper­at­ing lives too fre­quent­ly; less often and you drift, because a year is about how long a strate­gic plan stays fresh before the mar­ket moves under it. Anchor it to your plan­ning cycle: many com­pa­nies run the retreat in the quar­ter before they set the next year’s oper­at­ing plan and bud­get, so the board­’s strate­gic con­clu­sions actu­al­ly flow into the num­bers.

Company StageSuggested LengthCadencePrimary Focus
Seed / pre–$2M ARRHalf-dayAnnual (informal)Product-market fit, ICP, survival
$2M–$5M ARRFull dayAnnualRepeatable go-to-market, unit economics
$5M–$15M ARRFull day to 1.5 daysAnnualScaling the engine, building toward exit
$15M+ / pre-exit1.5 daysAnnual + pre-process sessionExit readiness, de-risking, buyer narrative

The Most Common Board Retreat Mistakes

Across the retreats I’ve watched suc­ceed and fail, the fail­ures clus­ter into a short, pre­dictable list. Avoid these five and you’re most of the way to a day that pays off.

  1. Turn­ing the retreat into a long board meet­ing. The car­di­nal sin. If your agen­da has approvals, com­mit­tee reports, or a 40-slide oper­at­ing review, you’ve built a board meet­ing and mis­la­beled it. Strip any­thing pro­ce­dur­al and push it to a sep­a­rate short ses­sion.
  2. No def­i­n­i­tion of suc­cess. If you can’t fin­ish the sen­tence “this retreat will have been worth it if ________” before you start, don’t hold it yet. A retreat with­out a tar­get is a very expen­sive way to have a nice lunch.
  3. Too many objec­tives. Ten top­ics in one day means none gets real depth. Pick two or three. Depth on the ques­tions that mat­ter beats shal­low cov­er­age of every­thing.
  4. No pre-read, so the morn­ing becomes a recital. With­out mate­ri­als in advance, you burn your fresh­est hours read­ing num­bers aloud that peo­ple could have absorbed on the plane. Send the data a week out and pro­tect the dis­cus­sion time.
  5. No fol­low-through. The most com­mon regret is the retreat where great con­ver­sa­tion pro­duced no last­ing change — the flip-chart-and-for­get fail­ure. Every deci­sion needs a named own­er and a date, and progress needs to appear on sub­se­quent board meet­ing agen­das. With­out that loop, the insight evap­o­rates by the next quar­ter.

The through-line: a board retreat is a cap­i­tal allo­ca­tion, and like any allo­ca­tion it needs a defined objec­tive going in and a tracked return com­ing out. Design it that way and it becomes the most valu­able day on your board­’s cal­en­dar. Treat it as an off­site with a nicer view and it becomes the day every­one polite­ly for­gets.

Turning the Retreat Into Results: The Follow-Through Loop

The work isn’t done when every­one goes home — that’s where most of the val­ue leaks out. Before you close the room, con­vert the day’s dis­cus­sion into a short list of deci­sions, each with a sin­gle account­able own­er and a due date. Not “the board thinks we should focus on enter­prise” but “Sarah will present a revised enter­prise hir­ing plan at the Q3 board meet­ing.”

Then build the loop: task a small group — usu­al­ly one direc­tor and one exec­u­tive — with dri­ving the fol­low-up, and put a stand­ing “retreat com­mit­ments” line on your next two or three quar­ter­ly board agen­das. Real updates, with evi­dence of move­ment, not “still work­ing on it.” This is the mech­a­nism that sep­a­rates a retreat that changed the com­pa­ny from one that mere­ly felt good. The strate­gic con­clu­sions you reached only mat­ter if they show up in your growth strat­e­gy, your oper­at­ing bud­get, and ulti­mate­ly your num­bers.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a board retreat and a board meeting?

A board meet­ing is a reg­u­lar, typ­i­cal­ly quar­ter­ly ses­sion focused on over­sight and approvals — review­ing per­for­mance, approv­ing grants and bud­gets, and han­dling for­mal gov­er­nance. A board retreat is an annu­al, longer, off­site ses­sion focused on strat­e­gy and align­ment: the two or three big ques­tions about the com­pa­ny’s direc­tion and exit that a nor­mal meet­ing agen­da has no room for. The rule of thumb is that noth­ing on a retreat agen­da should resem­ble a nor­mal board meet­ing.

How long should a startup board retreat be?

For most ven­ture-backed SaaS com­pa­nies at $5M–$15M ARR, a focused sin­gle day (rough­ly 9:00 to 5:00) is the sweet spot. If you’re tack­ling some­thing espe­cial­ly weighty — a piv­ot, a fundraise deci­sion, or board com­po­si­tion — extend to a day and a half so the extra evening allows for infor­mal con­ver­sa­tion. Half-day retreats work for very ear­ly-stage com­pa­nies with a nar­row­er set of ques­tions.

Who should attend a board retreat?

The full board of direc­tors (founder-direc­tors, investor-appoint­ed direc­tors, and inde­pen­dent direc­tors), plus advi­sors and select mem­bers of the exec­u­tive team for the ses­sions they own or have data on. Cap the room at about ten to twelve peo­ple so every­one can actu­al­ly con­tribute. Add a sub­stan­tive facil­i­ta­tor when the board has real dis­agree­ment to work through, so the CEO does­n’t have to both par­tic­i­pate and ref­er­ee.

How often should a board retreat be held?

Once a year is the stan­dard cadence for the strate­gic retreat. Anchor it to your annu­al plan­ning cycle — ide­al­ly the quar­ter before you set the next year’s bud­get — so the board­’s strate­gic con­clu­sions flow direct­ly into the oper­at­ing plan. Some boards add a lighter sec­ond touch­point where direc­tors meet indi­vid­ual teams, but the deep strat­e­gy retreat itself is an annu­al event.

What should be on a board retreat agenda?

Two or three strate­gic ques­tions, sent to atten­dees at least a week ahead, struc­tured around a nat­ur­al ener­gy curve: hard strate­gic think­ing in the morn­ing, lighter reflec­tive work after lunch. For a scal­ing SaaS com­pa­ny that usu­al­ly means a for­ward-look­ing state-of-the-busi­ness dis­cus­sion, a deep dive on the growth engine and unit eco­nom­ics by seg­ment, an explic­it “two-exit” con­ver­sa­tion about build­ing toward a sale, and a risk review. Delib­er­ate­ly exclude approvals, com­mit­tee reports, and sta­tus updates — those belong in a sep­a­rate short board meet­ing.

How do you measure whether a board retreat was successful?

Suc­cess is a deci­sion changed or a plan aligned — some­thing con­crete that came out of the day and would not have hap­pened oth­er­wise. Define it before you start by com­plet­ing the sen­tence “this retreat will have been worth it if ________,” then track it after: every deci­sion gets a named own­er and a date, and progress appears on the next two or three quar­ter­ly board agen­das. If noth­ing changed and noth­ing got tracked, the retreat failed regard­less of how good the con­ver­sa­tion felt.

Should we hire a facilitator for our board retreat?

Hire one when the stakes or the ten­sion are high — a piv­ot, a prof­itabil­i­ty-ver­sus-growth fork, a co-founder or board con­flict. A sub­stan­tive facil­i­ta­tor (not a time­keep­er) can chal­lenge and probe to push a hard con­ver­sa­tion to a real con­clu­sion, and frees the CEO from hav­ing to both lead the dis­cus­sion and stay neu­tral. For a rou­tine annu­al strat­e­gy retreat with an aligned board, a well-pre­pared CEO and board chair can usu­al­ly run it them­selves.

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Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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