I'm at the Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership & The Nonprofit Quarterly Conference on Nonprofit Governance.
Some research on nonprofit board chairs was shared. Some research done by Yvonne Harrison at Seattle University, and also some research by William Brown at Texas A&M University.
One good learning: A nonprofit board chair's leadership competence is composed of two types of intellignece: emotional and spiritual.
Emotional intelligence has two characteristics: personal and social (organizational awareness and inspirational leadership). Spiritual intelligence also has two characteristics: a belief in something that grounds direction and a motivation or calling to bring others to service (referred to as altruism).
Preliminary research indicates that the high-impact nonprofit board chair gets high grades in both emotional and spitual intelligence.
The big challenge of course is in identifying and recruiting the individual that has these characteristics. Also, the individual will perform best when they have some history and experience as a chair/leader; they have been prepared to serve; and, they are evaluated.