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The Right Way to Step Down as CEO

2025/7/2
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Kurt Nickish
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Navio Kwok
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Rebecca Slan-Jerusalem
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Rebecca Slan-Jerusalem: 过去的研究主要关注CEO继任流程,但忽略了即将离任的CEO的经验如何影响组织。我认为,即将离任的CEO对组织战略、管理和文化有重要影响,他们的过渡经验至关重要。我们应该更多地关注即将离任的CEO的经验,以及如何更好地管理他们的过渡期,以确保组织的平稳过渡和持续发展。我发现CEO的业绩表现与他们是否主动离职没有直接关系,CEO主动离职通常是出于退休的考虑。 Navio Kwok: CEO继任对董事会和高层团队非常重要,但通常不紧急,因此容易被推迟。董事会通常专注于日常事务,而将CEO继任等重要但不紧急的事情推迟,导致未能及时考虑继任问题。我认为,董事会应该把时间花在寻找CEO的继任者上,而不是试图说服不情愿的CEO继续留任。董事会应该更早地了解CEO离职的原因,例如年龄和任期等,并与CEO进行定期对话。我建议,CEO应该与董事会进行长期的持续对话,及早识别和培养关键继任者。

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Just promoted? Wharton Executive Education's People Management for Emerging Leaders gives you tools to manage teams, projects, and performance. Live online, six weeks. Learn more at whartonemergingleaders.com. Welcome to HBR on Leadership, case studies and conversations with the world's top business and management experts, hand-selected to help you unlock the best in those around you.

When a CEO steps down, it can trigger a chaotic domino effect. The board is often caught off guard and has to jumpstart the search for a successor. And in the process, they sometimes exclude the departing CEO from the search or transition, leading to a loss of institutional knowledge and broken trust. But it doesn't have to be this way. Leadership advisors Rebecca Slan-Jerusalem and Navio Kwok say the relationship between a board and chief executive can make or break the changing of the guard,

They spoke to host Kurt Nickish on HBR IdeaCast in 2024 about best practices for CEO transitions. Rebecca and Navio, welcome. Thank you. We're thrilled to be here. Thank you. Thanks for having us. Obviously, the CEO transition is super important to a company. Is that important? Something that means that people really give it a lot of attention and do it right? Or that there's so much pressure to do it right that people kind of fumble it as they try to manage it well?

Well, I would say there's tons of work out there looking at the succession process, what parts of the succession process are really critical and particularly even around CEO succession. What is the right step and cadence to this? What is the board's involvement? What role does the incoming CEO play? And what hasn't been studied or looked at or really understood is the experience of that person who's so pivotal to the organization.

The person who has been at the helm of the organization, setting the strategy, managing the strategy, creating the organizational culture. How does that person's experience in transitioning out of the role really impact that?

the organization, the succession experience, as we are really very much focused on the incoming CEO. I think we often also see that there's a bit of this tension between how urgent something is and how important it needs to be. And so CEO succession for a board and possibly the top team as well is important.

something that is extremely important, but not very urgent because these decisions tend to happen well in advance unless there was an emergency situation. And so what a board will do is they're going to focus on the day-to-day and naturally non-urgent important things are always going to get pushed off. And I would bucket succession in that category. And as a result, it's not always top of mind.

And then it becomes top of mind very quickly, often. In your research, you found that 83% of CEO successions were initiated by the CEO themselves, which kind of surprised me a little bit. You kind of feel like these people are supposed to be in the hot seat, and if they're not performing, they're out, and we need to get somebody else in. And really, it's kind of like mostly, largely on their timelines. Yeah.

Yeah, I had seen some research. I think they plotted the performance trajectories of CEOs, those that were performing well and those that weren't. And then they kind of looked at whether or not they initiated succession or if they were sort of forced out. And they're actually, that isn't a strong predictor. So in recent years, the performance of the CEO doesn't always have that direct consequence.

contribution to whether or not they stepped down. And so I think that sort of plays into why mostly we found in our sample, it's CEO initiate and it aligns to what you can gather from public CEO data on at least why CEOs or why boards reference CEO stepping down is it's a retirement decision. Yeah. I would say we were also quite surprised at the number of

of CEOs who self-initiated the succession. I mean, if you go through any kind of board governance training, you really know that succession is supposed to be really top of mind and not a last minute decision in and around who will be the next successor, but this should be a real process around identifying early

building up the capabilities of internal successors and running through different scenarios to be able to put the right person in the role. And very much a good portion of our sample, and you referenced 83%,

Many of them self-initiated. And what we found was also fascinating was that they really surprised the board. Yeah, you had a story in the article of a board that met like eight times to try to convince the CEO to stay when they needed to be spending that time on...

not trying to arm twist an unwilling executive to be unhappy longer, but go out and find the replacement. - And some of the reasons that CEOs were initiating the succession were reasons that

The board could have and should have had better insight into long before the CEO made that declaration. So things like we talk about temporal reasons, age and tenure in role. Those are easy things that a board can have regular ongoing conversations with the CEO about. A couple of the other reasons CEOs want.

announced their readiness for succession were really around, they saw that there were future needs of the organization that they couldn't necessarily or shouldn't necessarily be the ones delivering on.

And they also recognized that they could potentially be a blocker to succession and that there were people ready or really should be in the process of being ready for that CEO role. And they didn't want to block their opportunity. And so these are two things that really stood out to us because a lot of what has been written about success

CEO succession speaks to the ego that's involved in being at the top of the house and not wanting to relinquish that seat for others. And in actual fact, there were some really important and different ideas that came through these conversations that boards should really be talking to the CEOs about and not worried to the same extent that it is purely a

you know, ego driven or a hold on power that is keeping these CEOs in place. Yeah. No, I suppose stories of people being being forced out, you know, burning it all as they go. Right. Those are big things that scare boards and scare a lot of people. But it's probably few and far between when it's really somebody who just says it's time. I'm getting tired. They probably make the news more.

You've outlined the ways that they should be more proactive before this news comes. Once the news comes, what mistakes do you see boards make at that point? One that comes out through that research is the level of CEO's involvement.

in their own succession process. So in our research, we identified five things that they did all the way from just canvassing for candidates all the way to onboarding. And so if we leave aside onboarding, which most CEOs did have some degree of involvement there, we found nearly one in four CEOs were excluded from that process entirely. Leave it to us.

We didn't use this language in our paper, but it kind of reminds me of the RACI framework when it comes to project management. So you've got responsible, accountable, consulted, and informed. And the board is accountable for succession because the board will be there when the old CEO steps down and new one comes in. But who's responsible? I think we would say that it should be the outgoing CEO to some extent more than one

one and four being excluded entirely. And there's all these reasons we found why it's very important actually for the organization. Well, it just stands to reason for like any job, right? Like we've all left jobs and known that if you overlap with the person who's replacing you to help train them, that that's a very positive thing for an organization. And it's almost the same idea for CEOs. You go from one person to the next. So how do you handle that transition?

So what do you tell CEOs that are in this position? Like, what's your advice for them? Listen, ultimately, when done right, there is a role for them to play in the succession process, but that they do also have to recognize that they aren't going to have full control. The control here will ebb and flow throughout the process. And for them, what the connection is, is that the control piece is

we likened it to, or we connected it to mattering, that they are so used to having such a tremendous impact on every decision that the organization makes, that not having the ability to have some control or impact here actually connects to their ability to feel like they matter, like they have value, like they have input. And when they're

They're not given that kind of opportunity to weigh in. There's a deeper kind of psychological need in and around wanting to show that they still have some value here to add. It's kind of an interesting dance, right? Should they offer information? Should they wait till they're asked? Right. What is the protocol there?

Much of that has to do with how they operate with the board in any other matter. One of the strongest findings that we found is the connection and the strength of relationships between the CEOs and boards were predictive, and I say predictive, predictive air quotes. This was a qualitative study, not a causative exploration, but predictive.

The strength of the relationship between the boards and the CEOs really impacted the overall experience of the CEOs in the succession process. It's like when you want to ask for a favor from someone in your network, it's much more helpful and productive if you've had an existing relationship with them and then the request comes. But sometimes we have friends in our network where they only come to us when they need something.

and that to me might be akin to a CEO board relationship, which is quite, there's quite a bit of a chasm between it. And so they're only communicating when there are things that need to be discussed. And so now you've got this big thing that we have to work with in theory together. And it's like not the first time they're meeting, but the relationship is so new and you're trying to build this relationship at that

very tricky point in time where there is so much risk even on a good day and a well thought out succession process. Well, it makes it sound like then it's also incumbent on the outgoing CEO to be communicating with the board earlier so that it isn't a surprise. Yes. And that emotions don't flare up when they do give that announcement. That's right.

That's right. It should be a long, ongoing conversation and CEO succession should not be considered kind of a momentary or moment in time. It should be a years in the making, ongoing conversation between the CEO and the board and real identification and preparation of key successors along the way.

should make the board feel confident that they've got optionality, that the CEO is on top of this and helping and developing these folks, that the board has visibility to them. And so when the CEO then announces their willingness and readiness for succession, the board should really feel like they've got

a line of sight to who those high potentials and those potential candidates are, that they've been built up over the years, that they have clarity around what that profile looks like. And yes, there might be tweaks along the way, but it shouldn't come as such a shock and surprise that this is happening. Yeah. I think the implication too for any manager of a team or a leader in an organization is to always have a strong bench.

We're not expecting boards to be not surprised when a CEO says they want to step down. We're not asking boards to not try and persuade and shift the timeline a little bit, but they should be prepared for that very inevitable outcome.

And so for any leader or manager, you should have a deep bench. An example is the Vancouver Canucks were just in a playoff run. This is an NHL hockey team. Yes, NHL hockey team. The goalie was the backup to the backup. That was the one who ended up playing because the first goalie was injured and then something happened with the second goalie. So, yeah.

We're thinking that all sports team managers, they have an awareness of where they're going to pull talent. Now, whether or not it comes to fruition like this case, it's not always going to be a success story.

but at least having an awareness of the key players that you can pull on when needed is very important. And when it comes to CEOs, especially so, because there is so much that is on their shoulders when they step into that role. What did your research find for the best practices for outgoing CEOs? I'll share a story. One CEO said that

to more clearly demarcate their roles and responsibilities at the end of time at which one person was officially going to be enrolled. So this particular CEO had said they felt they were quite clear that I'm still CEO until a certain date, then you're going to step in. But it seemed to blur. And in fact, you could see the board members and certain top team members shift their allegiance completely.

to the new individual. And so there's a bit of almost encroaching of responsibilities. So more clearly demarcating whose responsibility is going to stop and start when that was fairly notable. And I would say Rebecca is probably part of the transition phase of succession.

Yeah, I would say two related things. One is many of them talked about taking their successor with them to any meetings, external meetings, vendors, suppliers, board meetings, etc. So that they could really get the benefit of the outgoing CEO's relationships and the tie to whatever relationship they were fostering.

This clarity in demarcating roles and responsibilities is true for the board with the CEO and really kind of laying out what that transition plan should be and look like.

what the timeline is, what the responsibilities are. And some of them even talked about, and few, but some of them did talk about the board having a role in that being their end of the day performance review of how much have you kind of helped support your successor in transitioning. Now, no matter how clear the role is,

It's still hard, right? Like you may have it very clearly demarcated when the other person takes over, but then they take over and their priorities are different. The things that you've really thought are important as CEO all of a sudden are maybe, you know, lower down on the priority list. Even though you've, you know, you want to leave the role to see somebody else do things differently. There's got to be tough emotions there.

There is a tremendous amount of emotion throughout the entirety of this process. A real roller coaster, again, buffered by the strong trusting relationship with the board. But I'll give you a sense of what that roller coaster looked like.

The outgoing CEOs were very much managing their own emotions as well as the board's emotions, the senior team's emotions as well. Prior to announcing the succession process, it can be quite lonely for CEOs, for outgoing CEOs, knowing that they will be at some point exiting that role.

lonely, I say, because they're not necessarily able to share the news that they will be finding a successor initially. And there's not that many people or places that they can turn to share some of that emotion. It can feel dishonest in some way. But post-announcement, there can be excitement about handing over to the next successor. We heard stories of grief and distress in giving up the job. There can be

frustration with lack of involvement in the senior team kind of like turning away from the outgoing CEO, even if they were still in the seat. Sort of a lame duck kind of response. That's right.

They can feel guilty if they're blamed for this process going poorly. One of the CEOs who we spoke to even talked about like the stages of grief, having to give up that seat. And this CEO actually didn't fully exit from the organization, stayed on in an executive chair role. And so it was still tied to the organization in some way, and yet still likened the experience of

moving out of that role, it was his decision, but moving out of that role and still feeling like this was a tremendous emotional impact. And so, you know, when asked about how, you know, how do you deal with that? How do you kind of recognize that? He said, like, even just naming the experience and being aware or cognizant that this could and very likely impact

You know, that this roller coaster of emotions is present and can impact you. Leaning into that a little bit more, we're kind of taught there's no emotions in the boardroom. But in actual fact, this is a very real human experience. It's very personal. And so it's really critical to have good trusted advisors to talk through that experience to recognize that it may impact

very easily happen and have some plan around how you're going to manage that kind of feeling and emotion. Yeah, I want to give my wife, Alana, credit for this. She's a clinical psychologist in training. She says, name it to tame it with regards to emotions. So just simply being able to have a label for it is actually quite impactful in understanding what it is. And emotions in general, I think, especially in business,

we talk about how important emotional intelligence is, but we don't actually create or facilitate an environment where people are comfortable to talk about their emotions. And so it's a little paradoxical to expect someone to have that skill, but there's no opportunity to really kind of practice it. And then when there's something as major as a succession, when you probably should be fully ready to utilize those skills, well,

you never had any opportunity to practice up until that point. And we're asking the CEO that they actually can't talk about at all. So it's this weird dynamic they have to deal with. With that CEO that Rebecca had just mentioned too, he raised a good point that

you might want to be aware of just what your triggers are, and you might not know what they are until you see them. So for that individual, what really struck them initially was when their office was no longer in the center of their building. So it was when they were more on the periphery physically, that's when he felt, okay, this is real, this is significant, and I'm sort of the old guard leaving. And so I think that

It speaks to an earlier question you had about just what a CEO can do. The outgoing CEO and the incoming CEO is being aware of the symbolic nature of executive leadership at the top. And so this CEO actually made a concerted effort to move his office.

away from the center and still he was hurt. That symbolic nature is very important and it can both help people support the incoming CEO and sometimes unexpectedly can make it very real for the outgoing CEO that it's, you know, it was very real and it's, it's time for you to step down.

Yeah, you've gone from being a very, very important person. It's a part of your identity. That's a big identity change. It's interesting you call that out. One of the key questions that we asked our participants is, is CEO something you do or did or something you are? And it's very hard at the top of the house to really be able to separate and

and identity. These CEO jobs are 24 hours, seven days a week, you're all in. And when we asked that question, there was kind of a rough split. 47% said that it is something that they did and 43% said it was something that they were. The rest were kind of like a bit of both.

And that's telling. I mean, even for the folks who had what we would say very low ego, you know, kind of salt of the earth, very humble folks who would describe their role as CEO at the bottom of the organization. It was still a very personally challenging.

challenging roller coaster experience to navigate. And many of them felt it was really helpful to have the reflection, the time to reflect on that experience because very few people actually, as you're going through it, you're not taking the time to reflect on it. And then you've left the role and there's very little that people kind of want to know and understand of your experience through that.

But yet it was helpful to both understand and then for them in their next role iteration, whether it's as another CEO or on a board, to actually have really strong sentiment and feeling about how this should go and what feels right beyond the specific governance of it was helpful and impactful for them. What are some of the

best lessons here for other executives or really anybody leaving a job and handing it over to somebody else that you think we all can learn from? I'd say relevant even well before you're leaving a job is to not fully tie your identity to either your job or role. I think that has particular implications with AI and it's

potential risk of displacing certain workers and at a minimum changing the job that they're doing in ways that we can't necessarily forecast. So Microsoft and LinkedIn came out with a work trends report just very recently, and they found that on LinkedIn's fastest growing jobs in the US, many of them, I think maybe the number is like two thirds, weren't in existence 20 years ago.

So you don't even actually know what job you might do in the future. And so if you tie your identity and sense of self to what you're doing right now in the organization you're in, it's going to make that process of letting go, stepping down or changing jobs much more difficult.

So I'm not saying don't tie it to it, but I'm saying, you know, consider it a little bit differently. So what do you tie it to? I read a story in a book by Dan and Chip Heath, they're brothers. One of them, at least, is with Stanford. And they shared a story of Floyd Lee, who was a retired Marine Corps and Army chef. He was 25 years in service, had retired, then the Iraq War happened. So he actually re-enlisted as a chef to help out.

Typically, army food is very bland. The mess hall he was leading was pristine food. Things were beautiful. Food tasted great. People would come from outside of that mess hall on weekends to eat his food. He said, for him, it's not that he's in charge of food. He's in charge of morale.

And so if you align your identity to that kind of message for you and your role, I'm in charge of morale, then if for whatever reason you can't be a chef anymore, there are still other ways in which you can satisfy that personal value and need of being in charge of morale.

But if you're tied exclusively to being a chef, an army chef for that individual in particular, then it makes stepping down very hard if that job no longer exists in the future. I would just add, and we asked this of some of the CEOs, what kind of advice would you have for folks? Part of it is...

Like Navio mentioned, finding your intrinsic purpose. What is the value that you want to add? Where do you get the most joy? Many of the CEOs in our sample did not step down and retire. They went on to do other things. There was also this question of avoiding just creating some busy work because you're kind of worried you've got such a full work life that

And many can step on wanting to keep that pace up, not recognizing that it's

you know, without true planning and kind of recognizing what next. They're very strategic in their work life, but not very strategic in kind of planning their personal life outside of this key role. And so thinking about that, having regular conversations, planning for it before the last day is really important. We also heard about spouse and family renegotiations. What? You're around now more? Like, what does this look like? Or we said we would travel and now you've kind of thrown yourself into

I hardly know you. Yeah. Yeah. Bored work, busy work. So there's some renegotiation that needs to happen as well. But it does go hand in hand with like really purposely thinking about and planning for that next stage. Rebecca and Navio, thanks so much for coming on the show to share your research and to talk about this really important transition. Thank you. It was our pleasure. Pleasure. Thanks for having us.

That was Rebecca Slanger-Russellum and Navio Kwok of the executive search and leadership advisory firm Russell Reynolds Associates in conversation with Kurt Nickish on HBR IdeaCast. We'll be back next Wednesday with another handpicked conversation about leadership from Harvard Business Review. If you found this episode helpful, share it with your friends and colleagues and follow our show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. While you're there, be sure to leave us a review.

And when you're ready for more podcasts, articles, case studies, books, and videos with the world's top business and management experts, you'll find it all at hbr.org. This episode was produced by Mary Du and me, Hannah Bates. Kurt Nikish is our editor and music by Coma Media. Special thanks to Maureen Hoke, Rob Eckhart, Erica Truxler, Ramsey Gabbaz, Nicole Smith, Anne Bartholomew, and you, our listener. See you next week.