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Spectrum: Advice from the President’s Desk

Advice from the ‘President’s’ Desk

When Dr. Claibourne Smith left Delaware State University’s board of trustees in the summer of 2008 to become interim president of the school, he knew he had a task ahead, having run complex, multimillion-dollar companies for his old employer, the E. I. DuPont de Nemours Company.

With a new president, Dr. Harry L. Williams, set to start work this month, Smith returns to his volunteer trustee post with a new appreciation for the challenges presidents and boards of trustees face.

“It is remarkable how much you learn and how much you thought you knew as a board member and didn’t,” says the 70-year-old retired vice president of technology at DuPont, reflecting on his tenure at the helm of the 3,600-student school run on an $80 million annual budget.

When he returns to the college’s 15-member board, Smith says, his fellow trustees will see “a different person. We’ve (the trustees) got to step it up,” he says. “There’s a shared role we’ve got to play that we haven’t played well in the past. If we’re going to do the job well, we have to change,” he says, adding he now knows “I didn’t ask several key questions I should have asked” in the past.

Smith says trustees need to have a “clear set of goals and objectives with appropriate measures” in order to “have confidence the organization is truly carrying out what you thought it was carrying out. The burden is really on the president of the university and chair of the board to clearly have that understanding.

That way you go to a board and they have the facts” needed to make decisions.

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