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Nearly one in three nonprofit organizations in the United States is at risk of closure, with rural nonprofits facing even greater threats due to limited resources, staffing shortages, and governance challenges. This phenomenological study explored the attributes of nonprofit board members that contribute to successful strategic planning and governance in rural communities. Guided by stewardship theory, the research focused on rural nonprofit organizations in southeast New Mexico and included semi-structured interviews with eight board members who had at least one year of board service. Thematic analysis using the van Kaam method revealed five core attributes consistently demonstrated across participants: mission-driven and community-oriented commitment, strategic and financial stewardship, professional expertise and adaptive problem-solving, contextual awareness of rural challenges, and relational recruitment and board development. These attributes influenced how board members engaged in planning, responded to organizational constraints, and fulfilled fiduciary and leadership responsibilities. These findings offer rural-specific insights into successful strategic planning and governance of rural nonprofit organizations, including practical recommendations for board recruitment, onboarding, training, and long-term engagement. The study contributes to the nonprofit governance literature by illustrating how values-aligned, context-aware, and professionally skilled board members enhance organizational resilience and drive meaningful impact in underserved rural communities.