How to Become Board-Ready: A Strategic Guide for Executives Seeking Board Positions

Introduction

“If you are not at the table, you are likely on the menu.”

Boardrooms are where power is structured, risk is governed, and strategic direction is set. Those not present in these rooms are still affected by their decisions but without influence over outcomes.

For experienced professionals aspiring to board roles, the question is not whether boards matter but whether you are intentionally being shaped for the responsibility they confer.

In this article culled from an executive session with Ascent Club members, Mrs. Ronke Sokefun shares practical insights on governance maturity and what it truly takes to transition from senior executive leadership into credible boardroom influence.

Ronke Sokefun, F.CIoD, FCIS is a seasoned legal and governance professional with over 30 years’ experience across private practice, corporate leadership, and public service. She previously held key roles at Ighodalo & Associates, Aluko & Oyebode, where she became a partner, and served two terms as Ogun State Commissioner. A former Chairman of the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation and current Independent Non-Executive Director at Oando Plc, where she chairs the Governance & Nominations Committee, Mrs. Sokefun has built a career at the intersection of strategy, regulation, and institutional stewardship. A Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Directors and the Institute of Chartered Secretaries and Administrators, she mentors emerging leaders and remains actively engaged in governance reform and social impact through the M.R.S. Foundation.

What Does Board-Readiness Really Mean?

Board readiness is not a reward for longevity, seniority, or technical excellence within one organisation. Rather, it is earned through deliberate evolution from operator to steward. From specialist to systems thinker.

It requires a mindset shift: from doing the work to directing it.

At board level, value is no longer defined by execution but by judgment. You are appointed to test assumptions, interrogate risk, and safeguard long-term viability.

Boards require enterprise thinking. Finance, regulation, ESG, operations, stakeholder trust, and resilience converge in that room. Directors who drift into day-to-day management weaken governance because oversight requires distance and structured engagement, not operational control.

The board defines direction while management executes it. The distinction is non-negotiable.

Board-readiness comprises acceptance of and preparation for that.

Becoming Board-Ready: The 7-Point Framework

1. Shift from Operator to Custodian

The most credible board members understand where to draw the line between governance and management—and respect that line.

The first transition is mental.

Board service requires a shift from execution to direction. You are there to test assumptions, assess risk, protect the vision, and ensure the enterprise can survive storms.

To do that, you must understand governance structures, financial exposure, regulatory dynamics, and sustainability as strategy, not messaging. The question is no longer, “How do we fix this problem?” It becomes, “Is the system sound?”

This demands systems thinking.

2. Visibility is Strategic, Not Vanity

Brilliance hidden inside an organization is rarely discovered by nomination committees.

One of the most persistent barriers to board access is invisibility. And that’s why one of the core missions of Ascent Club is to help mid-senior level executives position strategically for board roles, among others.

Many high-performing professionals remain unknown outside their immediate organisations. They become indispensable internally while remaining invisible externally.

Boards appoint from reputation. Most board appointments are not made through open applications. They emerge through referral networks, professional visibility, and trusted circles.

Your name literally enters rooms before you do.

Visibility here does not mean self-promotion without substance. Think of it as reputational infrastructure. It means documented contribution to professional bodies, thought leadership, committee service, mentoring.

If your professional presence is not legible beyond your organisation, board opportunities will not find you.

3. Competence Must Translate to Boardroom Language

Boards do not reward narrow brilliance, they reward integrated thinking.

Technical excellence alone does not qualify anyone for the boardroom. What qualifies you is the ability to translate your expertise into enterprise impact.

Directors must understand financial statements, risk exposure, capital allocation, regulatory frameworks, and sustainability reporting. These are baseline competencies.

Modern boards are increasingly evaluated on long-term value creation, ESG performance, and governance maturity. Leaders who cannot engage meaningfully with these dimensions risk irrelevance at board level.

The boardroom is a multidisciplinary environment. Specialists must learn to speak systemically.

4. Networks Are Strategic Assets, Not Social Activity

Two separate conversations. Two independent references. A name mentioned twice.

Board appointments are relationship-driven. They emerge from trust built over time, professional credibility reinforced through contribution, and consistent presence in the right rooms.

Strategic networking is intentional. It involves attending relevant forums, volunteering on governance committees, engaging in professional bodies, and building peer relationships laterally, not only upwards.

Networks are sustained by value exchange, not proximity. Effective network builders contribute insight, offer support, share knowledge, and remain present without agenda. Influence compounds exponentially when relationships are genuine.

5. Integrity and Emotional Intelligence Are the Real Currency

Technical expertise gets you considered. Judgment sustains you.

As leadership advances, the work becomes less technical and more interpretive. Can you handle pressure without panic? Disagree without being disagreeable? Deliver difficult feedback without eroding trust?

Boardrooms test character. Directors assess one another. Underperformance is noted. Silence is not neutrality. Persistent quietness in the boardroom is rarely read as wisdom and often read as lack of preparation.

Emotional intelligence becomes critical when difficult decisions arise. Layoffs. Restructurings. Reputational risks. Regulatory crises. The board sees the numbers. It must also understand the human impact.

Integrity compounds slowly and erodes quickly. In governance circles, reputation travels faster than résumés.

6. Readiness Is a Deliberate Posture, Not a Phase

Luck, in governance, is preparation meeting opportunity.

The most common point of failure in board readiness is reactive preparation. Waiting until opportunity arrives before learning the company, the sector, or the regulatory environment signals unseriousness.

Board meetings are examinations. Arriving without preparation is visible immediately. Directors who have not read the papers are exposed through silence or superficial commentary.

Readiness for board roles is anticipatory. Directors must understand and remain current on the macro environment, governance trends, ESG frameworks, economic signs and policy shifts. Each has implications for enterprise strategy.

7. Document Your Value Before It Is Requested

Board portfolios should be living documents.

Too many professionals begin compiling evidence only when an opportunity emerges.

Your board portfolio should be evergreen. Major projects led. Governance reforms implemented. White papers authored. Committees chaired. Measurable impact achieved.

When opportunity knocks, composure should replace scrambling.

Confronting Imposter Syndrome

Few directors feel fully ready in their first serious boardroom.

Imposter syndrome in the boardroom often shows up as hesitation. Many accomplished professionals feel it, especially in their early meetings. Being surrounded by strong résumés and forceful voices can trigger comparison. Doubt is common. It is not disqualification.

Preparation, however, is the stabilizer. It compensates for doubt. Directors who read thoroughly, understand the numbers, and grasp the strategic context begin to replace doubt with clarity.

Confidence does not arrive before contribution but rather grows because of it. Each informed question strengthens your footing.

Silence, however, can be misread. Women in particular are sometimes socialized to equate composure with silence. In governance settings, prolonged quietness often signals lack of preparation, not humility. Contribution does not require dominance, but it does require presence.

The discipline is to engage thoughtfully, even before you feel perfectly ready.

Summary Notes…

  • The move from executive leadership to non-executive governance is more of a professional reinvention than a promotion. A great part of the work is on mindset.
  • Executives succeed through proximity to operations. Non-executive directors succeed through strategic distance.
  • The temptation to overreach—to manage instead of oversee—is one of the most common governance failures among newly appointed board members. One you must seek to avoid.
  • Strategic visibility, boardroom competence, intentional networking, integrity and preemptive preparation are the core areas of boardroom-readiness.
  • Strong boards are built by directors who understand process, respect channels, and engage through structured oversight mechanisms.
  • The ability to relinquish control while retaining accountability is a mark of boardroom maturity.
  • Preparation compensates for doubt in board-readiness.

Conclusion

Boardroom access is not a function of seniority. It is the outcome of sustained strategic positioning.

Those who reach the boardroom intentionally evolve their mindset, build reputational capital grounded in contribution, and prepare long before opportunity appears.

If the invitation arrives tomorrow, readiness should not begin then. It should already be evident.

The Boardroom Insider is powered by Ascent Club, the premier visibility platform for African and diaspora women who are board- and speaker-ready. Through curated storytelling, media amplification and strategic positioning, we elevate the expertise of our members so they are not only seen but sought after for the world’s most influential tables.

Are you a senior female leader ready to amplify your thought leadership, secure speaking engagements or position yourself for board opportunities? Ascent Club is your launchpad to global influence.

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