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We draw on our vast database of CEO assessments to create a specific success profile that fits your business strategy. We show you who in the talent pool—internal and external, both today and in the future—could match up to it. Assessments like our unique CEO and Senior Executive simulation put candidates in realistic situations with a top-level challenge. This not only helps your board decide who’s best able to step up, but candidates understand what it takes to succeed: a win-win at every level. Learn more about CEO Search and Succession.
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Succession planning is how an organization strategically develops a broad, deep talent pipeline. Many organizations think they engage in succession planning, but what they’re really doing is “replacement planning.” They’re identifying immediate successors to take over a specific position in the organization in the event of an emergency or unexpected retirement. Typically, these organizations focus on replacing indispensable roles in the C-suite: CEO, COO, CFO, and the like.
But succession planning is broader than looking for a replacement for a top position. Succession planning requires an organization to consider how it is developing talent at every level.
Succession planning also requires looking at more than one candidate who may a suitable replacement for a variety of positions. It considers multiple candidates for a role. (A rule of thumb is to consider three people for each role.)
Effective succession planning is data-driven. That means organizations use comprehensive assessments to identify their talent’s strengths and weaknesses. Organizations then compare their assessment results against the requirements and capabilities needed to fill a role as well as the organization’s requirements. If the assessment reveals any gaps, the organization creates a plan to close them through a structured development plan.
When organizations engage in effective succession planning, they meet several objectives:
To develop a succession plan, you must understand the talent you need as well as the talent you currently have.
You need to take a holistic view of your talent pipeline, from your C-level executives down deep into your organization’s talent pool. There, you’ll find incredibly valuable people that you can start investing in for future significant roles. Many of these people may be hidden in professional roles — those with specialized skills and expertise that are essential to the organization’s success but who may not be in a traditional leadership role.
To start developing this talent, take these steps.
Succession planning is critical to ensure an organization has the right people in the right roles at all times. When there’s a mismatch between talent and roles, it can damage performance and lead to business irrelevance, especially in today’s highly competitive, fast-paced market. Maintaining strong leadership is essential to executing strategy and navigating disruption and uncertainty, but it’s particularly challenging for organizations to get right.
When organizations don’t promote or hire the right candidates, it can be costly. Productivity might plummet because employees might become disengaged or suffer from low morale. Great internal candidates may be frustrated, feel alienated or leave the company altogether. In the long term, these problems add up and can cause the organization’s competitiveness to decline.
Most organizations aren’t satisfied with their succession planning outcomes. A succession planning consultant can step in with an objective perspective on what’s happening in the market rather than just in your organization and help you plan better for the future.
Succession planning consultants can help organizations draw up a succession management plan that accomplishes a number of goals:
Succession management addresses filling the entire leadership pipeline. It begins with the senior executive level and traces down into the organization and across various functions. Succession planning, on the other hand, takes into account the development of two or three generations of talent who are in line to fill a leadership role.
Sometimes succession planning takes the form of replacement planning, which is considering candidates who would take over a C-suite executive’s role if the incumbent were no longer capable of serving in their role. But true succession planning and succession management go deeper. They consider multiple candidates for each role in the organization.