Walking through Jonker Street in Malacca, I noticed a confectionery shop with an unexpected name: Anywhere Door. It felt whimsical, almost childlike. A door that promises possibility, imagination, and freedom. And yet, it sparked a very grown-up reflection about the boardroom. Boardrooms are, by design, closed spaces.
They are meant to be. Behind those doors sit directors entrusted with stewardship, accountability and decisions that affect organisations, people, and communities. What happens inside is rarely visible to those outside and often misunderstood by those aspiring to enter.
The illusion of the door
From the outside, the boardroom door can represent:
- Achievement
- Influence
- Recognition
- A seat “at the table”
But once the door closes, the reality shifts.
Inside, the work is not performative. It is relational, ethical, and often uncomfortable. It requires
directors to hold tension, disagree respectfully, listen deeply, and act in the best interests of the
organisation even when that conflicts with personal views or external loyalties.
This is not an anywhere door.
Curiosity before commitment
Too often, people step into board roles without truly understanding:
- The behavioural expectations
- The emotional labour involved
- The weight of collective decision-making
- The accountability that lingers long after the meeting ends
Healthy curiosity before entering matters.
Ask:
- What conversations happen behind this door?
- How does this board handle dissent?
- What values are truly lived here?
- Who thrives in this room and who struggles to be heard?
Choosing your doors wisely
Not every boardroom door deserves to be opened by you. And you don’t need to walk through every door that opens. Intentional governance begins before appointment with reflection, discernment, and honesty about where you can genuinely add value and grow. An anywhere door suggests endless options. A boardroom door asks for commitment, courage, and care.
Director-Shift™ invitation:
The real work of governance doesn’t begin when the meeting starts.
It begins when you pause at the door and decide, consciously, whether this is a space you are ready to enter, serve, and shape.
Because once that door closes behind you, how you show up truly matters.
Written by: Joy-Marie Lawrence, your Coach in the Boardroom
A seasoned Board Director, Independent Non-Executive Board Director, and Boardroom Coach
The Founder of Boardvisory