Is a nonprofit board fundraising committee really a useful entity?
The current best thinking about board committees is that effective committees get their marching orders from the board and report on their efforts to the board. Committees do not really have "authority" over staff or others. The best committees have very defined tasks that have beginnings and endings. And, most important, the best committees are not managing or staffing.
So, what then to do about a fundraising committee where most often the expectation is these folks are expected to go out and implement a fundraising plan. They are not expected to do governance type stuff (the point of a committee) like policy, planning and evaluation noting that this stuff doesn't raise money which is the perceived need.
So, does a nonprofit board really need a fundraising committee that is part of the board structure or does it more need a group of volunteers who are organized, managed by and report to staff to accomplish specific fundraising goals? I'm thinking no to option a and yes to option b.