Meetings rarely fall apart because of “bad people.”
They fall apart because there’s no shared process for how a group talks, decides, and moves on.
That’s why Robert’s Rules of Order still matter, especially when meetings get messy. It’s a widely used system of parliamentary procedure designed to help groups make decisions fairly and efficiently. Not perfectly. Not painlessly. But predictably.
Henry Martyn Robert first published Robert’s Rules in 1876 after realizing that smart, well-meaning groups could still spiral into confusion without a common framework. The rules are built to protect order, fairness, majority rule, and minority rights. In other words, everyone gets heard, and the group can still decide.
If you work with a nonprofit board, you know the reality. You have volunteers, donors, staff, community partners, and board members who all care deeply and bring different perspectives. Without structure, conflict turns personal fast. With structure, you can untangle knots, keep trust intact, and make a difference.
This article is a concise Robert’s Rules cheat sheet you can actually use mid-meeting. Screenshot it. Print it. Keep it in your chair binder.
Why Robert’s Rules still matter (especially when meetings get messy)
Nonprofit work invites complexity. People are mission-driven, time-limited, and often emotionally invested. That’s a beautiful mix, and it can also be volatile.
Robert’s Rules gives you a shared language for moments like:
- “We keep debating but nothing is landing.”
- “Two people are dominating and others are checking out.”
- “We voted last month, but now we have new information.”
- “We’re drifting into side conversations and losing the agenda.”
Used well, parliamentary procedure is not about control. It’s about clarity. It helps you protect relationships while still getting to decisions.
And if you’re a chair or executive director trying to bring a fresh perspective into board culture, a simple cheat sheet like this can be the bridge between “we should run better meetings” and “we actually did.”
Before you use the cheat sheet: 5 meeting basics that make everything easier
1) Quorum
Quorum is the minimum number of members who must be present to legally conduct business (your bylaws should define it).
Why it matters: without quorum, you generally cannot take official votes or adopt motions. You can discuss, gather input, and do updates, but decisions may be invalid.
If you don’t have quorum, the chair should pivot to:
- information items
- committee updates
- planning discussion
- scheduling a follow-up meeting when quorum can be met
2) Agenda + minutes
A clear agenda reduces chaos and protects decisions. It sets expectations for what gets discussed and when.
Minutes are your paper trail. Good minutes record:
- the exact wording of motions
- who made and seconded (if your org records this)
- whether the motion passed or failed
- key follow-up actions
You don’t need transcript-style minutes. You need decision-style minutes.
3) Roles (and why the chair stays neutral)
- Chair/President: runs the meeting, recognizes speakers, states motions, manages the vote, announces results.
- Secretary: records minutes, tracks motions, helps ensure wording is captured accurately.
- Members: make motions, debate, amend, and vote.
The chair stays neutral most of the time because the chair’s job is to protect fairness. If the chair debates like a regular member, it can feel like the referee is also playing striker. If the chair wants to speak strongly on an issue, the clean move is to temporarily hand the chair role to someone else.
4) One thing at a time
Robert’s Rules is built on a simple principle: only one motion is “on the floor” at a time.
This prevents “side quests” that drain energy and create confusion. If someone raises a new topic, capture it in a parking lot or direct it to new business.
5) Voting basics (and what “majority” means)
Common vote methods:
- Voice vote: “All those in favor…” (fast, good for low-stakes)
- Show of hands/standing: clearer count
- Ballot: privacy for sensitive decisions
In Robert’s Rules, majority typically means more than half of those present and voting (not counting abstentions). That detail alone clears up a lot of nonprofit confusion.
The Robert’s Rules of Order cheat sheet (quick reference you can screenshot)
How to use this live: start with your goal.
- Want to decide something? Start with a main motion.
- Want to change the wording? Amend.
- Want to delay with a plan? Postpone to a Certain Time.
- Want to pause for urgency? Lay on the Table (rare, specific use).
- Want to stop debate and vote? Previous Question.
- Want a smaller group to work it? Commit/Refer.
- Need to address the meeting itself? Recess/Adjourn.
- Need to fix process in real time? Point of Order/Inquiry/Privilege.
- Need a second chance later? Reconsider/Rescind/Take from the Table.
Quick table (common motions)
| Motion | What it does | When to use | Vote | Debate? | Amend? |
| Main Motion | Brings business before the group | To decide something new | Majority | Yes | Yes |
| Amend | Changes wording of a motion | To improve/clarify the current motion | Majority | Yes | Yes |
| Postpone to a Certain Time | Delays to a specific time | Need more info, input, or prep | Majority | Yes | Yes |
| Lay on the Table | Sets aside temporarily due to urgency | Only for immediate interruption | Majority | No | No |
| Take from the Table | Brings tabled item back | Urgent matter resolved | Majority | No | No |
| Previous Question | Ends debate and forces a vote | Debate is repeating, group is ready | Two-thirds (common) | No | No |
| Commit/Refer | Sends to committee | Complex work needs drafting/research | Majority | Yes | Yes |
| Recess | Short break | Cool down, quick huddle, regroup | Majority | No (typ.) | Yes (length) |
| Adjourn | Ends the meeting | Business is done or time is up | Majority | No | No |
| Point of Order | Flags a rules issue | Process is being violated | Chair rules | No | No |
| Point of Inquiry | Asks a factual question | Clarify facts before debate | No vote | No | No |
| Point of Personal Privilege | Addresses comfort/safety/logistics | Can’t hear, room issue, sensitive concern | Chair responds | No | No |
Note: your bylaws or special rules of order can modify details. When in doubt, follow your bylaws first.
Main motion (the one that starts most decisions)
A main motion is how you bring new business to the group for a decision. It’s in order when no other motion is currently being considered.
Plain-English nonprofit examples:
- “I move we approve the revised budget to add $8,000 for program supplies.”
- “I move we adopt the updated conflict of interest policy as presented.”
- “I move we authorize the executive director to sign the contract with Vendor X for up to $25,000.”
Baseline rules (typical):
- needs a second
- debatable
- amendable
- majority vote
Subsidiary motions (change or shape the main motion)
These are the tools you’ll use 90 percent of the time to speed up discussion without shutting people down.
Amend (change the wording)
Use amend when the group mostly agrees with the motion’s direction but wants to change the language.
How to amend:
- Add words
- Strike words
- Strike and insert (replace)
When to amend vs make a new motion:
- If you’re improving the current idea, amend.
- If you’re proposing a different idea, make a new main motion after the current one is resolved.
The “friendly amendment” myth: The chair can ask if the maker accepts a change, but under Robert’s Rules, the assembly decides. An amendment still belongs to the group.
Typical threshold:
- Majority
- Debatable
- Amendable
Postpone to a Certain Time (delay with a plan)
Use this when you need:
- more information
- a committee recommendation
- stakeholder input
- time for staff to price options or assess risk
Name the time. Don’t be vague. Good: “postpone to the March board meeting” or “postpone to after the finance report today.” Risky: “postpone indefinitely” (that’s a different motion in full Robert’s Rules and can be confusing).
Typical threshold:
- Majority
- Debatable
- Amendable
Lay on the Table (pause for urgency, don’t use it to kill debate)
This is one of the most misused motions in nonprofit meetings.
Lay on the Table is for a temporary interruption because something urgent comes up right now (a time-sensitive guest arrives, an emergency decision is needed, a required report must be handled immediately).
It is not meant to avoid a hard conversation.
If you want to stop working on it for now, you probably want:
- Postpone to a Certain Time, or
- Commit/Refer, or
- just finish debate and vote
Related motion:
- Take from the Table brings it back once the urgent interruption is handled.
Call the Question / Previous Question (end debate and vote)
Use when:
- discussion is repeating
- no new points are emerging
- the group is ready to decide
Because it limits debate, it usually requires a higher threshold, commonly two-thirds.
Chair scripting tip: Before allowing this to steamroll the room, the chair can say:
- “I’m hearing we may be ready to vote. Is there any new information we still need before we decide?”
- “We’ve heard from several viewpoints. Let’s check if there are any final comments we haven’t heard yet.”
Used well, this protects time. Used poorly, it can silence minority voices and create backlash.
Commit/Refer to a Committee (send it to a smaller group)
Refer when:
- the work is complex
- drafting is needed
- research is required
- stakeholder involvement matters
- you need options, not opinions
Be specific so it doesn’t vanish into the committee black hole:
- committee name
- scope of work
- deadline
- what they should report back with (recommendation, options, cost estimates)
Example: “I move to refer this policy update to the governance committee to revise the draft and bring a final version to the April meeting.”
Typical threshold:
- Majority
- Debatable
- Amendable
Privileged motions (deal with the meeting itself)
Privileged motions outrank most others because they protect the meeting’s ability to function.
Recess (take a short break without ending the meeting)
Use a recess to cool down tension, let staff confirm facts, or allow the secretary and motion-maker to tighten wording.
Typical threshold:
- Majority
- typically not debatable
- amendable (length of recess)
Adjourn (end the meeting)
Adjourn when business is complete or time is up. If you need to set the next meeting time, that is usually handled as its own agenda item or by your standing schedule.
Typical threshold:
- Majority
- not debatable
- not amendable (in most cases)
Incidental motions (procedural interruptions that keep things fair)
These happen because of something else that’s going on, and they are some of the chair’s best tools for keeping order without escalating conflict.
Point of Order (someone thinks rules are being broken)
Use when:
- the discussion drifts off the motion
- someone speaks out of turn
- debate rules are violated
- the chair skips a required step
Chair response script:
- “Point of order noted. The member is correct, we need to return to the motion.” Or:
- “The chair rules the point not well taken because…”
Safeguard: A member can appeal the decision of the chair (your group votes on whether to uphold the chair’s ruling). You don’t need to memorize the full appeal process to respect that it exists.
Point of Information / Point of Inquiry (ask a factual question)
Use to clarify facts before debating:
- “What is the current budget line?”
- “What does the proposed motion actually authorize?”
- “What is the deadline in the grant agreement?”
Keep it tight. This is not a disguised speech.
Chair tip: If someone starts commenting, redirect gently:
- “Thank you. That sounds like debate. What’s your question?”
Point of Personal Privilege (comfort, safety, logistics)
Examples:
- “I can’t hear the speaker.”
- “Can we close the door?”
- “I need to raise a quick reputational concern about naming a donor publicly.”
Handle quickly and respectfully, then return to the motion.
Renewal motions (bring something back or undo something)
This is the “second chance” category.
Common use cases:
- new information appears
- circumstances change
- the board realizes last month’s decision created a problem
Examples to know:
- Reconsider: revisit a decision made earlier (often time-limited and requires someone on the prevailing side, depending on your rules).
- Rescind: cancel a prior action.
- Take from the Table: bring back something that was tabled due to urgency.
If your board is newer to procedure, it’s okay to handle these carefully with your bylaws and, if needed, a designated parliamentarian.
How to make a motion (step-by-step script you can follow)
This is the flow that keeps meetings clean:
Get recognized
“Madam Chair” or “Mr. Chair”
Make the motion
“I move that…”
Second
Another member: “Second.”
Chair states the motion
“It is moved and seconded that…”
Debate
Members discuss the motion, not each other.
Amendments (if needed)
Amendments are handled and voted on before returning to the main motion.
Vote
Chair takes the vote using the agreed method.
Chair announces the result
“The motion carries” or “The motion fails,” plus the effect.
Sample wording you can steal:
- Approve: “I move we approve the finance committee’s recommendation to…”
- Adopt: “I move we adopt the policy as presented.”
- Authorize: “I move we authorize the executive director to sign…”
- Postpone: “I move we postpone this item to the April meeting.”
What not to do:
- Don’t debate before the chair has stated the motion.
- Don’t make vague motions like “I move we do something about fundraising.” Name the action, the owner, and the scope.
Quick note on seconds: A second means, “This is worth discussing,” not “I fully agree.”
Voting and results: what the chair should say (to avoid confusion later)
For a voice vote, clear language prevents messy minutes and reopened arguments.
Chair script:
- “All those in favor of the motion, say ‘aye.’”
- “All those opposed, say ‘no.’”
- “The ayes have it, and the motion carries.” (or) “The noes have it, and the motion fails.”
When counting is needed: If the result is unclear, a member can request a clearer count (often called a division). Then you can move to a show of hands or standing vote.
What goes in minutes:
- exact motion wording
- whether it passed or failed
- any key instructions (deadline, committee assignment)
Abstentions: In most cases, abstentions are not counted in “present and voting.” But they can still matter politically, so the chair should keep the process neutral and simple.
Chair tips: run an effective meeting without sounding like a robot
Use Robert’s Rules as a tool, not a weapon.
Your job is to protect fairness and momentum at the same time. That’s a real balancing act, especially with volunteers.
A few moves that work in the real world:
- Summarize before you steer. “I’m hearing two priorities…” This lowers defensiveness.
- Use de-escalation motions with dignity. Recess, refer to committee, or postpone with a clear next step.
- Make space for hard conversations. Structure lets people disagree without damage.
- Set norms early. One speaker at a time. Stay on agenda. Respect the chair.
- Invite quieter voices. If the same two people are speaking, you can say, “Before we go back to folks who’ve spoken, I’d like to hear from anyone who hasn’t yet.”
This is how you untangle knots without shaming anyone.
Using Robert’s Rules in nonprofit boards (realistic, not textbook-perfect)
Nonprofit boards don’t need to perform parliamentary procedure like a debate team. You need a minimum viable ruleset that keeps you moving and protects trust.
If your board is new, start here:
- Main motion
- Amend
- Postpone to a Certain Time
- Commit/Refer
- Point of Order
- Adjourn
Align with your bylaws and committee structure. Robert’s Rules fills the gaps, it doesn’t replace your governing documents.
And yes, good process supports fundraising and sustainability indirectly. When meetings are clear, decisions stick. Follow-through improves. Donors and partners feel it. Trust builds. Your team can make a difference without burning out on internal chaos.
Printable/downloadable cheat sheet idea (and how to use it in the room)
If you want this to actually get used, make it one page.
Format suggestion:
- motions grouped by category
- each motion with vote threshold and whether debate/amend is allowed
- a tiny “What’s my goal?” decision tree at the top
Where to keep it:
- chair binder
- board packet
- shared drive or board management system
- a slide in your meeting deck
Usage tip that helps immediately: Appoint a “parliamentarian lite,” someone who quietly helps the chair with wording and motion options. They don’t need to be a Robert’s Rules expert. They just need to be calm, prepared, and willing to be the cheat sheet person.
A practical closing note (from the nonprofit trenches)
Nonprofits are messy because people care. That’s not a flaw. It’s the job.
But caring doesn’t replace structure. If you want your board and staff to tackle real issues, have hard conversations, and still leave the room with clarity, process creates the safety to do that.
This is the work I’ve seen again and again in nonprofits across Washington and Colorado and in boardrooms in seven states. When you bring a fresh perspective and a simple set of shared rules, you stop relitigating everything. You make decisions faster. You reduce derailments. You create accountability people can live with.
Pick three motions to practice at your next meeting. Just three:
- Main motion
- Amend
- Postpone to a Certain Time
Get reps. Keep it human. And use the rules to untangle knots so your organization can do what it exists to do: make a difference.
