Eight Myths About CEO Succession
Reality: Two of five don’t have a viable internal candidate to immediately fill the shoes of a CEO if he or she were to leave tomorrow.
Reality: While leaving the position open can bring on risk, the long-term goal here is about building shareholder value (i.e., “success planning” as opposed to risk avoidance).
Reality: Actually, board members place too much weigh on expenses and revenues, stock price and other fiscals, and too little on customer service, innovation, talent development, employee engagement and additional success drivers.
Reality: This is true but only if you pursue it the wrong way, such as thinking in terms of available people first instead of strategy. Determine the ultimate objectives, then find the best match.
Reality: Often, they don’t get enough exposure to internal candidates and express initial hesitation that they’re “untested,” regardless of whether they eventually promote these candidates.
Reality: They get weaker financial results, leave sooner and are more expensive to bring onboard.
Reality: One size doesn’t fit all, and business moves too swiftly for any one model to remain static. Boards must constantly re-assess what’s needed from tomorrow’s top leader.
Reality: The numbers don’t lie: Less than 5% of Fortune 500 companies have women CEOs. Just 14 (less than 3%) are African-American or Latino.