Building an Agenda – Back to Basics
Building an Agenda – Back to Basics
David Cantrick-Brooks | 27/03/2025

Agendas are a critical part of the decision-making process. One of the risks associated with building agendas is the unnecessary inclusion of items which do not actually require board attention and potentially consume time better spent on other things. Boards should review delegations of authority and charters to ensure that only items which actually require board attention are included. Boards should be focussed on the following core matters:

The front part of the agenda should include the following items:

  1. Welcome and any apologies
  2. Declarations of any changes to the register of material person interests (aka standing notice), plus any conflicts of interest that may pertain to the matters to be discussed
  3. Any late changes to the agenda (for example, as a consequence of a presenter being unavoidably delayed)

Agenda items are typically drawn from a wide range of sources, including the annual workplan, matters arising from previous minutes (aka actions register) and any specific requests received from directors and/or management.Reference to a previous agenda (at the same time of year) can be helpful, although not strictly necessary (if everything else is working as it should).

Themes in an annual board calendar could include:

* short-term and long-term

Note that the industry in which the company operates has a major bearing on agenda items – e.g. agendas for companies in the financial services industry tend to be very busy.

A board / committee meeting agenda is a roadmap for directors which outlines the items to be considered and in what order they will be discussed.It also includes the meeting's date, time, location (whether in-person, virtual or both), and the names and positions of those attending.

Committee agendas should reflect their individual charters, current workplans and prevailing issues / requests. Committees are established to assist the board by considering and making recommendations about particular matters and overseeing performance and compliance at a more granular level.All directors should not attend all committee meetings.

Allocate time for each agenda item (and stick to it!).The chair should ensure that the meeting runs smoothly and deals with all agenda items, encouraging contributions from every director (especially those who tend to be passive or reserved).

“Agenda creep”, where the agenda grows as new items are added but nothing comes off, is an issue for many boards.Boards should also be conscious of the amount of time spent looking back versus looking forward (strategy), with an emphasis on the latter.

Agendas are typically discussed and agreed between the secretary, relevant chair (board and committee), CEO and/or another responsible executive (in the case of committees).This can be a very time-consuming process and require many iterations, so start early!

The agenda-setting process can vary greatly depending on the organisation and the ways that things have been done in the past (for better or worse).Change can be difficult!

Papers should be clear and concise to ensure that the key issues are appropriately identified and addressed.More about this in a future blog.

Finally, it should be noted that agenda-building (and related) software is available to improve, streamline and automate manual processes.

NEED HELP?If you require assistance with creating an industry or sector-specific agenda for your organisation, or would like assistance to improve your current agenda(s), please contact us.We can also assist you in choosing and implementing an appropriate software solution – something appropriate for your organisation.

Additional Reading

https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/balancedscorecard.asp

General Disclaimer:

The information contained in this website is provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice on any matter.

No person(s) should act, or refrain from acting, solely on the basis of the material contained on this website. Your access of this website, and any use that you may make of the information on it, is not intended to create, and your use does not constitute, a contractual relationship of any kind.

All material published by Governance in Action Pty Ltd on its website remains its property, with copyright attached, and all rights are reserved.

PreviousNext

Related Articles

Local AI Models: A Governance Opportunity, Not a Governance Shortcut

Local AI models may allow organisations to use generative AI with sensitive information that would be unsuitable for consumer tools and difficult to approve for some cloud-based services. For boards, executives and company secretaries, that could be a significant opportunity. But local AI is not a governance shortcut. It still requires clear rules for data classification, privacy, records retention, legal holds, model provenance, cyber security, human verification and board reporting. The question is no longer simply whether an organisation should use AI. It is which AI should be used, for which data, and under which controls.

06/21/2026

The Digital Director: Boardroom Copilot, Not Licensed Driver

AI-enabled boardroom assistants are moving quickly from novelty to practical governance infrastructure. These tools can summarise board packs, search historic minutes and resolutions, draft questions, prepare minutes, track actions and surface emerging risks. Some vendors now use bold language such as "AI Board Member". Yet, under Australian corporate law, AI is not a director. It cannot vote, owe fiduciary duties or replace independent human judgement. This article considers whether boards are ready to use AI in the boardroom, where the legal and practical boundaries lie, and what guardrails directors, company secretaries and general counsel should apply. The conclusion is deliberately balanced: boards should not ignore the opportunity, but nor should they let AI drive. Controlled pilots, approved tools, source verification, human review, data-handling controls, cyber due diligence and clear board policies are essential.

06/20/2026