Board service at its best is about stewarding something larger than yourself. After 35 years across multiple boards—from educational institutions to healthcare organizations—I've learned that the skills that make board service meaningful are exactly the same skills that make executive leadership effective.
The first lesson is patience. Board members deal in quarters and years, not days and weeks. You learn to separate what feels urgent from what actually matters. The second lesson is listening. In a boardroom, you're often the least informed person about daily operations, but you might be the most experienced about long-term consequences.
The third lesson is about accountability without micromanagement. Good boards ask hard questions, demand clear answers, and then step back and let management execute. The skill of knowing when to engage and when to trust carries directly into how you lead teams, manage direct reports, and build organizational culture.