The difference between a leadership huddle and a board meeting is not the people in the room — it's the agenda. Here is the 90-minute structure that works at SME scale, with timings, ground rules, and what to leave out.
| Clock | Item | Why it's here |
|---|---|---|
| 0:00 | Actions from last meeting — by name (10 min) | Follow-through first; nothing changes behaviour faster |
| 0:10 | CEO summary (10 min) | The month in plain words — pre-read, so discussion not narration |
| 0:20 | Numbers: KPIs, P&L vs plan, cash (15 min) | Questions on the pre-read, not a presentation of it |
| 0:35 | Decision one (25 min) | The biggest call, while the room is freshest |
| 1:00 | Decision two (20 min) | One page, options, recommendation, ask |
| 1:20 | Risk & horizon (5 min) | What changed on the top five; what's coming |
| 1:25 | AOB + next meeting confirmed (5 min) | AOB is for small things — big ones get papers next time |
Operational detail (that's the management meeting — hold it separately, even with the same people, on a different day if you can); status theatre ("everything's on track" is one line, not twenty minutes); and surprises. A board that's ambushed makes worse decisions than a board that's briefed — bad news travels in the pack, not the room.
Monthly or six-weekly at SME scale; quarterly is too slow for a business where the numbers move weekly. Ninety minutes is the sweet spot — meetings that run to three hours are usually packs that arrived too late. Lock the year's dates now and treat them as immovable: cadence is the cheapest governance upgrade that exists, which is why it's the first thing the Board Maturity Score measures.
Five questions if you want structure. One email if you'd rather talk. Either way, a straight answer about what your board needs.