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How To Write A Resolution

Board resolutions are used to document important decisions made by a board of directors. Resolutions can be written to document decisions such as electing new board members, hiring employees, selling company shares, allocating nonprofit funds, and honoring individuals. Resolutions should be stored securely with other important documents and meeting minutes, as they are legally binding. When writing a resolution, the document should include the date, a title, formal language describing the purpose, and a concluding statement of the board's decision, followed by spaces for board member votes and signatures.

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Remil Castañeda
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views1 page

How To Write A Resolution

Board resolutions are used to document important decisions made by a board of directors. Resolutions can be written to document decisions such as electing new board members, hiring employees, selling company shares, allocating nonprofit funds, and honoring individuals. Resolutions should be stored securely with other important documents and meeting minutes, as they are legally binding. When writing a resolution, the document should include the date, a title, formal language describing the purpose, and a concluding statement of the board's decision, followed by spaces for board member votes and signatures.

Uploaded by

Remil Castañeda
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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What Kinds of Situations Call for a Board Resolution?

A board of directors can decide to write up a resolution for most any reason they choose. Think about it
in terms of any decision that a board resolves to do. Resolutions can be written for the following
reasons:

 To document that a new member of the board was voted in


 To record a decision made at a board meeting
 To document a decision made by the shareholders of a corporation
 When a company wants to hire new employees
 When a company wishes to sell shares in the corporation
 When a non-profit organization wants to delegate funds to a certain project
 When a government entity wants to honor someone

Where Should Boards Store Resolutions?

Keep resolutions with other books and important documents and have a backup copy in another
location. Resolutions can also be kept with the meeting minutes, because they are legally binding
documents.

How to Write a Resolution

1. Format the resolution by putting the date and resolution number at the top. If it’s the boards
first resolution, you can number it whatever you want. Consider using something like 0001 and
then giving all future resolutions a consecutive number.
2. Form a title of the resolution that speaks to the issue that you want to document. For example,
“Resolution to Designate Funds of the 2016 Gala Fundraiser to the Marketing Fund.”
3. Use formal language in the body of the resolution, beginning each new paragraph with the
word, whereas. The first sentence should reference the board’s responsibility. For example,
“Whereas it is the responsibility of the Board to designate funds for a specific purpose.”
4. Continue writing out each important statement of the resolution, beginning each paragraph
with whereas.
5. The last statement of the resolution should state the final resolution, which is the action that
the board took. For example, “Now, therefore be it resolved to designate the funds of the 2016
Gala Fundraiser to the Marketing Fund.”
6. The bottom of the resolution should list the names of the board members voting on the
resolution and spaces adjacent to their names where they can indicate a “yes” or “no” vote.
Obviously, the resolution is approved when the majority of the board members vote “yes.”
7. There should also be a place for the board president to sign and date the resolution.

Concluding Thoughts About Writing a Resolution

Understanding better how resolutions are written should take any intimidation out of the process. Once
you get started, you’ll find that it’s actually pretty easy and you’ll probably enjoy it. Remember to review
templates of resolutions that were written by other boards for similar purposes. Find a good template to
help you get started, but keep it flexible enough to serve the true purpose of the resolution. Most
importantly, make sure that the board members and the board president sign and date the resolution.
It’s a legal document just like the meeting minutes.

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