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Missional clarity: The why behind the seat

by reporter
July 11, 2025
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By Hilda Basson Namundjebo

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I recently spoke at a women’s training event on Intersectionality in the boardroom. A subset of my talk dealt with missional clarity which addresses the individual’s sense of purpose, their set of intrinsic motivations and their why.

The power of a boardroom lies not only in its policies, but in the quality of its people. How often have we as a nation, staggered from one underperforming state owned enterprise to the next, with high browed individuals occupying these powerful seats? Sadly, the accolades held collectively by the board would span over decades, but somehow these very qualifications do not enable the organisation to transition from mediocrity to an institution which serves it mandate and does so excellently.

Namibians deserve the best – from all its leaders whether in government, civil society or the private sector. Therefore, those of us who congregate around these tables of power must hold more than titles because in part, they hold the future. And if that future is to be shaped with wisdom, intelligence and strategic insight, it must begin with one thing: missional clarity.

Missional clarity is knowing why your institution exists—and knowing why you, specifically, are a part of the story. It’s the intentional alignment between the organisation’s purpose and your own motivation to serve. And this is where our clarity will model leadership behaviour which is exemplary and which will have a tangible impact on the constituency’s lived experience. In the absence thereof, board leadership becomes a hollow performance of governance. One where we comply merely, as a means to manage risk.

Power and Responsibility: A Delicate Balance

Leadership is a delicate balance between power and responsibility. Plato said it best: “The measure of a man is what he does with power.” But how does power show up in leadership?

For board members, power is rarely loud. It’s found in influence, in shaping decisions, in directing culture. It is accessed in who we choose to include, who we choose to withheld when we gate keep opportunity, and exercised when we take bold stances on behalf of those we serve.

So a question, or two :

  • What do I influence, shape, or direct in my role?
  • How do I use my authority to protect the integrity of the institution?

Because power, held without clarity, is simply control. Power, held with clarity, is purpose in motion.

The Wisdom of Perspective

In marketing, we always challenge brands to reflect and to seek perspective from a variety of angles. In West Africa, our brothers and sisters offer this insight: “The best way to see a masque dance is not to stand in one place—but to move around and watch it from all the various possible angles.” Leadership requires that same movement—not only in observation, but in reflection.

Missional clarity asks board members to look at the institution from different vantage points: through the eyes of staff, stakeholders, students, patients, communities. To see the whole dance—not just the angle from the seat you hold or the supposed expertise you bring to the room.

So a few questions to begin our joint reflection:

  • What tools do I have available to become more self-aware?
  • What motivates me intrinsically—not what flatters my ego, but what feeds my convictions?
  • Which people or experiences have had the greatest impact on my leadership lens?

These answers begin to form your leadership compass. They tell you where you are, and more importantly, why you’ve chosen this path.

What’s the Why Behind Your Seat?

Board membership is often perceived as an accomplishment. But it is, first and foremost, a responsibility.

So ask yourself: What is your specific why on this particular board?

Are you here to champion justice? To steward resources wisely? To be a voice for those whose voices aren’t often heard?

Too many leaders hog the seat without knowing their purpose in it. But missional clarity refuses that level of comfort. It pushes us to lead with intentionality—not inertia.

It demands:

  • Am I a trustee of the future, or a steward of tradition?
  • Is my decision-making missional, lasting in impact—or just managerial?
  • Am I contributing to legacy—or building my CV?

Legacy Is Not Later

We think of legacy as the residue of our life. But legacy is not something we leave. It’s something we live—no, it’s something we create every day, in every meeting, with every vote, and every time we don’t speak up.

When a board moves from positional leadership to purpose driven leadership, everything changes. Strategy gains depth. Culture becomes intentional. Stakeholders feel seen, not simply managed.

Legacy becomes not a plaque on the wall, but a principle in the room.

A Final Challenge

If you’re still reading this and remain unsure of your “why,” start there. Not with what the institution asks of you, but with what you choose to give.

Your missional clarity is not a static statement. It’s a living practice. One rooted in reflection, sharpened by self-awareness, and matured through service.

So I leave you with this invitation:

Step into your leadership with renewed purpose. Don’t just occupy a seat. Occupy a mission. And lead in a way that generations can thank you – not just observe.

Because institutions don’t thrive on ambition. They thrive on clarity. And boards don’t transform by position. They transform by purpose.

– “A leader’s position and actions must flow out of his purpose, not the other way around. Munroe ”

*Hilda is a business leader, public speaker and a seasoned broadcast journalist. Founder of the national brand and organisation Team Namibia, Hilda believes her purpose is to impact the world with kindness, one engagement at a time.

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